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Posts Tagged ‘hunger’

Feeding Hungry People While Feeding the Future

Friday, March 11th, 2011
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Below is the second installment of MFAN’s blog series highlighting the reform aspects of Feed the Future, the United States Government’s global hunger and food security initiative. Feed the Future incorporates many key reform principles such as components of country ownership, strong monitoring and evaluation, and leveraging partnerships for enhanced results. To read the first blog in the series, Feed the Future: A Promising New Model of Development, click here. In this week’s post, Rick Leach, President and CEO of World Food Program USA focuses on both the short and long-term goals for food security as well as the importance of a comprehensive approach.

As Mr. Leach says, “This comprehensive approach makes foreign assistance more effective and leads to increased economic growth, which can open new markets for U.S. products and create new jobs at home.”

A Guest Blog Post by Rick Leach, President and CEO

World Food Program USA

The United States has been a long-standing leader in providing emergency food assistance to people in need around the world. From the food assistance provided under the Marshall Plan, which helped ensure prosperity for a generation of Europeans, to the lifesaving food provided in the wake of last year’s devastating earthquake in Haiti, U.S. food assistance has enjoyed decades of bipartisan support.

In recent years, support for food assistance has been unprecedented, as its efficiency and effectiveness continues to improve. Food is now reaching hungry people in need more quickly and more efficiently than ever before. The United States has increased the flexibility of food assistance by expanding prepositioning, so food is nearby when emergencies strike. And with U.S. cash-based assistance food also can be purchased locally, helping to revive and support local economies.

Now, with the administration’s new Feed the Future Initiative, the United States has matched its longstanding commitment to saving and rebuilding lives during emergencies with robust support for efforts to tackle an underlying cause of hunger.

AFG_200306_WFP-Alejandro_Chicheri_0014WFP/Alejandro Chicheri

During the 2008 food price crisis, the world witnessed the destabilizing effects that food insecurity had on the world’s poorest people, causing riots in 40 countries. In response the United States and G8 leaders issued a call to action: improved global food security would require a comprehensive approach, one which combined short-term food assistance with long-term development initiatives. This call to action has resulted in an unprecedented consensus on how to effectively address global hunger, from government leaders to recipient countries and international development organizations. The U.S. response to this call to action is Feed the Future, which complements U.S. food assistance with investments in nutrition and agricultural development to comprehensively address the short and long-term impacts of hunger.

The United States and its partners are now employing this multifaceted approach to solve hunger in countries around the world, including Afghanistan where the United States is tailoring its assistance to meet diverse needs on the ground. In cities, such as Kabul, where markets continue to function, the most food insecure families receive vouchers, which enable them to purchase food from local retailers, thereby bolstering local markets. In order to maintain food security and rebuild lives and communities after emergencies, vulnerable populations are provided with food in exchange for their participation in training programs or infrastructure projects, which helps strengthen the capacity of the Afghan people and build the Afghan economy.

U.S. anti-hunger initiatives also provide children in Afghanistan with food assistance specific to their needs. If children do not receive proper nutrition during the first 1,000 days of life (from conception to two years of age) they can suffer permanent mental and physical damage. Therefore, young children and mothers receive nutrient-rich food and nutritional products to ensure proper early development. In support of national efforts to strengthen the education system, school-age children are also encouraged to attend school with the promise of a meal. This not only increases enrollment, especially for girls, but also improves cognition so children are able to learn and retain information.

Finally, the United States and its partners are now embarking on a global effort to expand agricultural and rural development. One example of an innovative program is the World Food Program’s (WFP) Purchase for Progress initiative, supported by the United States and other donors, which has begun purchasing wheat directly from small-scale Afghan farmers. This initiative is increasing the productivity and income of small-scale farmers, improving their long-term food security. In turn, the wheat purchased by WFP has been used to provide assistance to Afghan families affected by flooding and to produce fortified biscuits for school meals programs.

This comprehensive approach makes foreign assistance more effective and leads to increased economic growth, which can open new markets for U.S. products and create new jobs at home. And by more effectively addressing emergency needs and transitioning countries to stable, productive societies, the United States is also building peace around the world. This means improved national security and as Defense Secretary Robert Gates has said, “development is a lot cheaper than sending soldiers.” These investments are small but the reward is great. Providing food for hungry people today while growing food to feed future generations is not just the right thing to do, it’s the smart thing to do.

Feed the Future: A Promising New Model of Development

Thursday, March 3rd, 2011
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A Guest Blog Post by Mannik Sakayan,

Senior Policy Analyst, Bread for the World

Every day, troubling data suggests that the ranks of hungry and poor people around the world are again expanding. For organizations who work to shed light on global hunger and poverty, the data is not news. Yet we hold in our policy cache smart, sustainable solutions to addressing the root causes of persistent global hunger and poverty.

Over the years, Bread for the World has joined forces with other global hunger advocates in calling for sustainable solutions to a path out of hunger and poverty for millions of men, women, and children in developing countries. We have done so by calling for focused agricultural development investments that take into consideration local needs and wants. And we have called for efforts to scale up and replicate the programs that work in order to get the most for our investments.

Fortunately, Feed the Future, the administration’s comprehensive food security and agricultural development initiative that launched in 2009, holds the promise to re-establish U.S. leadership in global agricultural development. It also holds the promise to address the root causes of global hunger through sustainable economic growth. It aims to achieve this through inclusive agricultural sector growth and improved nutritional status of women and children.

We have seen successes. New and innovative approaches to agriculture have helped save hundreds of millions of lives in Asia and Latin America. Yet the promise of alleviating hunger and poverty for people throughout the developing world should have served as an impetus to do more and to commit targeted resources to the programs that worked well. Instead, over the last few decades, changing global circumstances and priorities resulted in a gradual decrease in funding for agricultural development. With declining investments came diminished capacity in U.S. technical expertise. Rebuilding our technical capacity and recommitting the necessary resources will certainly be a heavy lift, but not an impossible one.

Feed the Future takes an innovative approach to bilateral assistance and offers a new model of development that takes stock of global needs as well as our own strengths in order to maximize the impact of the investments. Through country-led investment strategies, the United States will work in partnership with developing country governments to strengthen their agricultural capacity, with particular focus on smallholder farmers. Feed the Future calls for a consultative process with national stakeholders that best understand local needs and wants.

Feed the Future also includes a multilateral component, the Global Agriculture and Food Security Program (GAFSP), housed at the World Bank, to leverage donor contributions from other governments, foundations, and the private sector. Similar to Feed the Future, GAFSP allocates resources based on country-led proposals.

Both Feed the Future and GAFSP offer a new model of development that holds substantial promise. It is a sound development strategy based on targeted investments and measurable results. It has the all-important elements of reform—rigorous standards for monitoring and evaluation, accountability and transparency, country-led programming, and consultation—that are greatly needed to bring U.S. development policy into the 21st century.

Now is not the time to squander the momentum for lasting change. Hunger has never been a partisan issue. Now is not the time to make it one. Our leadership and commitment to save lives and prevent political instability around the world are at stake.

The way forward is to build broad, bipartisan support for enacting legislation that would codify the goals of Feed the Future so that it lives beyond this administration and truly becomes the cornerstone of U.S. global development policy.

Bread for the World Institute Launches 2011 Hunger Report

Tuesday, November 23rd, 2010
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20101122_HungerReportLaunch_078FbOn November 22, 2010, Bread for the World Institute held an event for the release of its 2011 Hunger Report, which focuses on the global response to the 2007-2008 food price crisis that led to a dramatic rise in hunger and poverty, and U.S. leadership in galvanizing the international community.  Roger Thurow, Senior Fellow at The Chicago Council on Global Affairs, moderated the panel which included Dr. Rajiv Shah, USAID Administrator; David Beckmann, President for Bread for the World and MFAN co-chair; Inger Anderson, Vice President of Sustainable Development at the World Bank; and Carolyn Miles, Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer at Save the Children USA.

The 2011 Hunger Report frames 2011 as a “time of opportunity to achieve lasting progress against global hunger and malnutrition.”  The report applauds the new U.S. government initiative, Feed the Future, which takes a country-led approach to addressing hunger and poverty through empowering small farmers.  It also aims to address the impact of child malnutrition on long-term economic development.

The report underscores that Feed the Future is affected by some of the same structural weaknesses that limit the effectiveness of other U.S. development assistance programs.  One such weakness is the loss of technical expertise at USAID.  The report suggests that the structural weaknesses facing USAID can only be overcome by rewriting the Foreign Assistance Act to reflect the realities and challenges of the 21st century, a core MFAN objective.

Dr. Shah stated, “The 2011 Hunger Report aptly reminds us that in order to tackle the root causes of hunger and malnutrition, we need to invest in smallholder farmers and focus on integrating nutrition and agriculture development through a country-led approach.  Feed the Future…does just that.  We are proudly leading a global movement to reverse decades-long neglect of agriculture-led development.”  Shah highlighted USAID Forward and its various components that aim to modernize the agency and make it more effective.  See Shah’s full remarks at the 2011 Hunger Report launch here.

Major Takeaways Include:

  • Fighting hunger and malnutrition effectively requires a comprehensive approach that focuses on small farmers, haitiempowers women, and deals quickly with hunger emergencies;
  • When providing development assistance, the U.S. government should allow transparency and accountability of funding, help build national government capacities to sustain progress, and build civil society’s capacity to hold national governments accountable;
  • Congress should rewrite the 1961 Foreign Assistance Act to improve the effectiveness and flexibility of U.S. development assistance to respond to the needs of partner countries;
  • The U.S. should take the lead in strengthening international institutions to address global problems.

Partner Series: Women Thrive Travels to Burkina Faso

Thursday, July 1st, 2010
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Women ThriveIn our next blog post looking at the work of MFAN’s Partners, we will highlight the work of Women Thrive Worldwide, a non-profit organization seeking to shape U.S. policy in order to foster economic opportunities for women in developing countries. Women Thrive believes that women are the key to ending global poverty, and investing in women and girls is one of the most efficient uses of U.S. foreign aid. Research has proven that women are more likely than men to invest any income they receive in food, clean water, education and health care for their children, creating a positive cycle that can lift entire communities out of poverty. And now more than ever world attention has turned toward empowering women through a variety of initiatives, including the Obama administration’s Global Health Initiative, which makes women’s health interventions a top priority.

Last month, Ritu Sharma, President and Co-founder of Women Thrive and an MFAN Principal, traveled to Burkina Faso to learn more about the challenges that women farmers face in trying to feed their families. Many Burkinabe women spend their days performing difficult fieldwork to grow food and crops, all while caring for children.  Yet, because customary law excludes women from owning land, most are unable to invest in the tools and resources that would allow them to better feed their families. In her travel diary, Ritu explains why even Burkina’s newest land laws are designed to keep most benefits of land reform from reaching women farmers, what she calls “discrimination, plain and simple.”

Learn more about Ritu’s trip to Burkina Faso and read an excerpt from her travel diary after the jump:

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MFAN Statement: MFAN Congratulates Bread for the World and Rev. David Beckmann on 2010 World Food Prize

Wednesday, June 16th, 2010
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June 16, 2010 (WASHINGTON)This statement is delivered on behalf of the Modernizing Foreign Assistance Network (MFAN) by Co-Chair George Ingram:

On behalf of my fellow MFAN Principals and the entire network, I offer my most sincere congratulations to our friend and colleague Rev. David Beckmann for winning the 2010 World Food Prize.  Throughout his career as President of Bread for the World and, more recently, as MFAN’s Co-Chair, David has been a tireless advocate for millions around the world suffering from extreme poverty and hunger.  His strong and compelling voice has also helped drive unprecedented progress on foreign assistance reform, which will directly benefit those poor and hungry worldwide.

After the announcement, David commented on foreign assistance reform in the context of the award:

“Right now, we have exceptional opportunities to win changes in Congress to provide help and opportunity to hungry people in our country and around the world.  For example, we have the best chance we have had in decades to reform U.S. foreign aid so that we’ll make the best possible use of tax dollars and get more of our aid to people who really need help.  Getting more serious about ending hunger in this country and around the world would be good for our nation and good for our souls.”

I believe David’s prize will help energize the entire reform movement as we push for President Obama to deliver America’s first-ever Global Development Strategy and work with Congress on new foreign assistance legislation that will make our development efforts more effective and accountable than ever before.