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FOOD SECURITY C oncepts, Basic Facts, and Measurement Issues

FOOD SECURITY C oncepts, Basic Facts, and Measurement Issues. June 26 to July 7, 2006 Dhaka, Bangladesh. Rao 1b: Stability of FS; Emerging Challenges to FS.

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FOOD SECURITY C oncepts, Basic Facts, and Measurement Issues

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  1. FOOD SECURITYConcepts, Basic Facts,and Measurement Issues June 26 to July 7, 2006 Dhaka, Bangladesh

  2. Rao 1b:Stability of FS; Emerging Challenges to FS • Learning: An understanding of stability as a constant aspect of each of the dimensions of FS, of vulnerability and typical vulnerable groups, and of demand. Familiarity with principal global challenges to FS from a FAO perspective.

  3. Brief Contents • stability of FS: chronic vs transitory, temporary vs seasonal • vulnerability and resilience; sources of risk; typical vulnerable groups • the value of FS • consumption patterns and demand determinants • emerging challenges to FS (based on FAO, Towards 2015/2030)

  4. Stability of Food Security • "STABILITY" of FS incorporates ability to withstand shocks = RESILIENCE • Lipton has introduced the concept of the ultra poor, those who have to use 80% of their income to achieve less than 80% of their food requirements. In fact, households who allocate over 70% of their income to food almost certainly have little flexibility in reallocating resources to meet an entitlement shock.

  5. Vulnerability and Resilience • Must distinguish chronic(all the time) FIS VS.transitory(unpredictable or periodic) FIS • Transitory FIS further divided: temporary(sudden shocks e.g., drought, unemployment) seasonal (predictable e.g., lean agricultural season) • Risk Factors • Characteristics of Vulnerable Groups • Variability of Entitlements

  6. Vulnerable Groups • Can be classified according to: • Geographic - administrative zone, urban, rural • Ecological - by climatic conditions, accessibility • Economic - occupation, level of income, formal or informal sector, landholding, types of crop grown, migrant worker, female-headed household • Demographic - male, female, pregnant, lactating, pre-school and school-aged children, elderly.

  7. Typical Vulnerable Groups • RURAL unskilled landless subsistence farmers (deficit) low-income farmers (food crop) low-income farmers (cash crop) pastoralists remote area dwellers • URBAN informal sector/self-employed unemployed/migrants • GENERAL female-headed households

  8. Table 1.1: Sources of Risks to Household Food Security

  9. The Value of Food Security (1):Productive Consumption, Consumptive Production That which is produced through consumption [productive consumption CAPABILITY] is that which produces consumption [consumptive production  PRODUCTION] Production of material goods is consumption of capability [LABOR] + material inputs [NATURE] Consumption of material goods is production of capability [LABOR]

  10. The Value of Food Security (2): The Consumption-Effort Link

  11. Food Consumption Patterns Figure 1.3 Percentage Distribution of Calorie Source by Level of per Caput GNP

  12. Food Consumption Patterns • ENGEL'S LAW • Food, clothing, shelter, etc. • Agriculture, industry, services • “Wagner’s Law”: Rising share of government • Changes in tastes vs. laws of consumption

  13. Figure 1.4: Consumption of Starchy Staples by Income Group in Peru

  14. Observed Demand Patterns and DEMAND FORECASTING • Income and Price Elasticities of Demand INCOME elasticity: εD, y = (ΔD/D) ÷ (Δy/y) PRICE elasticity: εD, p = (ΔD/D) ÷ (Δp/p) • Three major factors in forecasting demand: • the rate of growth of the population (n) • the rate of growth of real per cap income (gy) • the rate of change of real prices (gp)

  15. A Formula and an Example gF = n + εD,ygy + εD,pgp Example: gF = 0.015 + 0.3(0.065) – 0.2(0.1) = 1.45%

  16. Trends Through the Last Century Till mid-70s, world in chronic food crisis By mid-70s, however, peak of crisis behind By mid-80s, global cereal stocks almost doubled Long-run production growth easily outstripped population growth But regional variations were highly significant

  17. FAOTowards 2015/2030 (2003) & OECD-FAOOutlook 2008-17 (2008) Production slowdown due to fall in demand growth, from 2.2% (1970-2000) to projected 1.5% (2000-30) Feedstock demand from growing bio-energy sector will be the most dynamic element in coming decades Rising share of luxury foodsis another major source that will reduce resources available for the staples Finding that food demand leads food supplytogether with stubborn persistence of hunger and under-nutrition well into this century underscores crucial point that food needs go unmet because they fail to materialize as effective market demand

  18. Meeting DemandVS Meeting Requirements

  19. Real Food Price Trends Most troubling forecast is expected rise in trend of global real food prices through 2017: 18% for wheat, 32% for coarse grains, 8% for rice, 37% for oilseeds, 55% for vegetable oils Both directly (from rising prices of the crops that serve as fuel inputs) And indirectly (rising prices of food crops that lose land & other resources to the fuel crops, including the important instance of livestock products from higher animal feed costs)

  20. Effects on FS & Food Dependence Sharply rising real food prices will rapidly raise share of undernourished above the current 40% Since average HH expenditures on food in low-income countries exceed 50% of income, MDG-1(eradicate extreme poverty and hunger) must fail Among the ultra poor(about one billion) who spend 60-80% on food, this could spell disaster Projected rise in import dependence will mean hardships from world price volatility, foreign exchange constraints, political vulnerability to export embargos and economic vulnerability from export restraints that may be invoked in times of crisis.

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