Monday, July 6, 2020

Covid-19 triggers largest disruption of livelihoods in human history

The Covid-19 pandemic in South Asia has triggered the largest disruption of livelihoods in human history, affecting over 1.7 billion people. The disruptions to supply chains, lack of access to health and nutrition services, and overwhelmed social protection system is leading to increased food and nutrition insecurity in the region. To address many of the long-standing issues underpining food insecurity and poverty the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) officially released the 2020 Global Food Policy Report (GFPR) today.
The IFPRI 2020 Global Food Policy Report (GFPR) highlights the central role that inclusive food systems play in meeting global goals to end poverty, hunger, and malnutrition, and offers recommendations for making food systems more inclusive for four marginalised groups including smallholders, women, youth, and conflict-affected people. The report also provides analysis on transforming national food system in several countries like Bangladesh and Ethiopia, and advice on development of food system in different regions worldwide.
 “Over the past two decades, Nepal has gone through atypical structural transformation, marked by desertion of agriculture and epic out-migration of young people,” chair of IIDS and former vice-chair of NPC Swarnim Wagle said, adding that after Covid-19, reliance on remittances will fall, and there is urgency to find gainful jobs for millions. “Renewed agriculture can become a source of inclusive growth if we incentivise high-value-to-weight products and food processing, streamline the subsidy regime through targeted digital transfers, and invest heavily to combat deficits in hard infrastructure as well as the softer menace of childhood malnutrition.”
“These efforts need to be undergirded by enhanced capacities across all tiers of Nepal’s newly federated governance structure,” he added.
“Food systems provide opportunities to improve food and nutrition security, generate income, and drive inclusive economic growth, but even in prosperous times too many people are excluded from fully participating in them and securing these benefits,” said director general of IFPRI Johan Swinnen. “In times of crisis like today, inclusion is an even greater imperative for protecting the most vulnerable.”
“Covid-19 has struck the world at a time when experts were already deliberating on the need for a paradigm shift in the agri-food sector that could address the broader challenges of sustaining the humanity,” member NITI Aayog of India Ramesh Chand said, adding that Covid-19 is expected to lead to a significant shift in dietary preferences, adding new dimensions to the food system thinking.
South Asia’s steady progress has reshaped the region’s diverse food systems over the past decade. This regional transformation has been marked by strong economic growth, rising real wages, and the expansion of nonagricultural sectors. In recent years in South Asia the growth rate of high-value foods has been greater than that of cereals. The increase in income and greater diet diversity has also led to growth of the food processing sector. Yet post-harvest losses continue to be high in South and Southeast Asia compared to other regions.
“South Asian economies are transforming. Real wages are rising, shares of agriculture in GDP are declining, and nonfarm employment in much of the region has surpassed that of farm employment,” director of South Asia, IFPRI Shahidur Rashidsaid, adding that these structural changes will bring about changes in food system with new challenges, the challenges of ensuring that food system transformation is efficient, inclusive, and sustainable.
The report recommends three key policy levers which will be critical in making the food system transformation inclusive and sustainable: (1) reforming agricultural input subsidies and price supports; (2) improving the targeting of social protection programs; and (3) building effective institutions for governing the emerging food system. Reforming some of the age-old programs on agricultural subsidy and price policies could free up public funds, to invest in fostering more inclusive, equitable, and gender- and nutrition-sensitive food systems.
In South Asia, social safety net programmes can be effective platforms for making food systems inclusive. “IFPRI-WFP’s Transfer Modality Research Initiative in Bangladesh found that providing young mothers cash transfers combined with nutrition behaviour change communication reduced child stunting by three-times the national average decline,” senior research fellow and country representative of IFPRI-Bangladesh Akhter Ahmed said, adding that this is substantial evidence on the potential of social transfers to enhance nutrition.
Establishing effective institutions for food system governance is another strong policy lever for inclusive food systems. “Food system governance have significant potential for promoting an inclusive food system but the political will is required to provide adequate funding and to respond to bottom-up pressure from consumer rights groups and civil society organisation,” programme leader at the Pakistan Strategy Support Programme of IFPRI Abdul Wajid Rana said.
“Indian agriculture has shown great resilience during the Covid-19 pandemic,” secretary at the DARE and director general at ICAR Trilochan Mohapatra said, adding that it has, however, also highlighted the needs for policy thinking beyond staple food to ensure nutritional balance and environmental sustainability. “The current pandemic will accelerate the process of nutrition-sensitive, inclusive and sustainable agricultural growth.”
The report also features chapters analysing developments in agri-food systems in Africa south of the Sahara, the Middle East and North Africa, Central Asia, and Latin America and the Caribbean.
A virtual event was co-organised by IFPRI South Asia, Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR) and Trust for Advancement of Agricultural Sciences (TAAS) yesterday, to present the highlights of the report in the South Asian context. The policy makers and thought leaders shared their perspectives in light of the Covid-19’s impacts on our food systems.
The Covid crisis has accelerated the importance to reshape our food systems making them more inclusive, sustainable, and resilient. The disruptions to supply chains, lack of access to health and nutrition services, and overwhelmed social protection system have led to increased food and nutrition insecurity in the region. Consequently, the awareness and need to work towards inclusive food systems have been amplified for all countries in the region.

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