WORLD FOOD SECURITY - PROSPECTS AND TRENDS

Authors
Citation
Rs. Chen et Rw. Kates, WORLD FOOD SECURITY - PROSPECTS AND TRENDS, Food policy, 19(2), 1994, pp. 192-208
Citations number
10
Categorie Soggetti
Economics,"AgricultureEconomics & Policy","Food Science & Tenology","Nutrition & Dietetics
Journal title
ISSN journal
03069192
Volume
19
Issue
2
Year of publication
1994
Pages
192 - 208
Database
ISI
SICI code
0306-9192(1994)19:2<192:WFS-PA>2.0.ZU;2-R
Abstract
A food-secure world produces enough food for its population and provid es access to food for all its people. It must therefore ensure not onl y a balance between food availability and requirements, but also an en d to famine, little seasonal or chronic undernutrition, and virtually no micronutrient deficiencies and nutrient-depleting illness. In 1990, we estimate that 15-35 million people were at risk of famine, 786 mil lion were vulnerable to chronic undernutrition, and hundreds of millio ns suffered from micronutrient deficiencies, diarrhoea, measles, malar ia, parasites, and other nutritional impairments. A normative scenario to achieve food security in the warmer, more crowded, more connected, but more diverse world of 2060 requires widespread acknowledgement of food as a human right, large increases in food production and income, a pervasive global safety net, and the capacity to cope with surprise . Some elements of these requirements are already in place. This norma tive scenario results in fewer than 100 million hungry people compared with other 'business as usual' scenarios that project a hungry popula tion of 641 million in 2060 under current climate and 629-2087 million with climate change. Speculative and clearly optimistic, our normativ e scenario offers multiple pathways for achieving a food-secure world.