IFPRI launches new global food policy report
Hunger Notes
(Washington, April 23, 2012) The International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) launched the inaugural Global Food Policy Report, the first in a new annual series. The Report provides a comprehensive overview of major policy changes at the global, regional, national, and local levels, as well as their significance for food and nutrition security.
For most of 2011, global food prices and food price volatility remained high. Droughts, floods, and earthquakes threated food security for the poor, and increased hunger and malnutrition in the areas hit by these natural disasters. Yet 2011 saw significant gains in support of agriculture, food and nutrition security, and global poverty reduction. Agriculture moved to the forefront of the international development agenda, and investments in the sector rose. Emerging economies like Brazil, China, and India, as well as the private sector and philanthropic organizations also increased their voice in the global food system through global platforms such as the G20 meeting and the World Economic Forum.
Looming large for 2012 will be continued high and volatile food prices, increased oil prices, the threat of extreme weather events exacerbated by climate change such as drought in the Sahel, and financial crises in the US and Europe—all of which have and will continue to affect the food and nutrition security of the poor and hungry. However, there are concrete actions that will help improve food policy actions and decisions in 2012 and beyond, including
“The G8 and G20 meetings can serve as a platform for developed and developing countries to tackle food security issues together, working across borders to maximize results, and Rio+20 will leverage agriculture for broader development outcomes including with food, water, land, and energy,” said Shenggen Fan, director general of IFPRI. “These meetings provide a great opportunity for policymakers to move from last year’s commitment to agriculture issues to implementation and action that can reduce poverty and hunger.” The Report makes the case for keeping food policy issues high on the global agenda, and can serve as a reference to policymakers and stakeholders as they undertake discussions on global development.
Access the 2011 Global Food Policy Report