Why food and nutrition security matters for inclusive structural and rural transformation
2016
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Title
Why food and nutrition security matters for inclusive structural and rural transformation
Access
English: 76ceeb1c-477b-4e60-b4c5-d8ea5b1d8b3e - PDF ;
Summary
The prevalence of undernourished people in the world has declined steadily over the last few
decades, but almost 800 million people remain undernourished. Deeper and more rapid progress
against food and nutrition insecurity is urgently required. Structural and rural transformation
must play its role. In theory, inclusive structural and rural transformation – i.e. a transformation
that delivers widely held benefits – implies expanded food and nutrition security, which,
in turn, supports the transformation. In fact, where structural and rural transformation has
been significant, it has been accompanied by wide and deep improvements in food and
nutrition security, with food availability, food access and food utilization all registering
significant improvements. Higher labour and land productivity linked to commercialization,
specialization and mechanization of production processes has boosted food supplies.
Livelihood options have expanded – especially off-farm – and incomes have risen, allowing
households to increase the quantity and quality of food they consume. This has led to
improved health and education outcomes, affirming and advancing core drivers of structural
and rural transformation. But there are important exceptions and caveats. Even where
structural and rural transformation has been rapid and sustained, incomes have increased
and food supply has been relatively easy with comparatively low and stable prices, and food
and nutrition insecurity has persisted, with undernutrition, overnutrition and micronutrient
deficiencies coexisting in several contexts. Implications for policy centre on nutrition-specific
and nutrition-sensitive measures and investments that render rapidly transforming food
systems better able to deliver and support healthy and nutritious diets for all consumers, but
especially for pregnant women and young children for whom malnutrition has long-lasting
consequences. Also key are policy measures to counter the effects of forces and conditions
that militate against expanded participation by small-scale farmers and traders in commercial
food production and trade – effects that, by extension, hinder this central dimension of
inclusive structural and rural transformation.
Authors
Series
Date
Rome, Italy: IFAD, 2016
Description
27 pp.
ISBN / ISSN
9789290726760
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