Obesity and malnutrition, the twin threats to Asia-Pacific
Tackling undernourishment and better nutrition, especially for
children, requires more public awareness campaigns and targeted
investments in health, education, water and sanitation infrastructure, a
new ADB study said.
OTTAWA, Canada: Asia and the Pacific's drive for food security has
focused too narrowly on quantity, with a surge in obesity and still high
levels of malnutrition in some countries highlighting the need for a new
approach, said a new Asian Development Bank (ADB) study.

Enjoying a sumptuous meal |
"Many developing countries in the region face the twin burdens of
under and overnutrition," said ADB Assistant Chief Economist, Cyn-Young
Park. "Improving nutritional standards rather than just boosting calorie
intake is essential if the region wants a secure and healthy food
future."
The study, Food Security in Asia and the Pacific, said the region's
growth boom has been accompanied by sharp dietary changes and uneven
food access.
The affluent have developed an appetite for protein rich and
processed foods, including more meat and dairy products. At the same
time, more than half a billion people remain undernourished, more than
the total in Africa. Childhood stunting rates are above 40% in several
countries, and there are high levels of vitamin A deficiency in
Cambodia, India, Myanmar, Nepal and Pakistan with several other
economies close behind.
Obesity, in contrast, has been rising fast in urban centres and in
some Pacific Islands, where the rates are among the highest in the
world.
The shift to rich, often sugar-based, foods has seen a spike in
diabetes and other diet-related diseases. The demand for meat is also
changing agricultural land use patterns.
Resolving these challenges goes hand-in-hand with tackling other food
security issues such as fast rising populations, strains on land, water
and energy, and the growing threat from climate change.
Asia and the Pacific currently account for 60% of the world's
population, and it will have added over 850 million people by 2050,
requiring vastly more food, but expanding cultivated land in nearly all
countries in the region is no longer a viable option.
The solutions must be wide ranging and sustainable, and include
domestic and broader measures. High yielding crops and other
technologies are needed to produce more food from the same amounts of
land, and small poor rural landholders must get support to become more
productive with better access to quality seeds, finance and other
inputs.
The region's policymakers must find ways of buffering the poor from
price spikes in food - which accounts for up to 70% of their income -
and ensuring they fully benefit from economic growth.
Social safety nets provide a crucial support mechanism for low income
groups, and targeted food aid and cash transfer programs among others,
reduce the vulnerability of poor households, especially in crisis
periods. Currently social protection spending amounts to less than 2% of
total GDP in a third of 31 Asian countries.
Setting up national and regional food reserves as buffers during
shortages, and emergency funds and insurance products to cushion against
disasters, food trade liberalisation, and investment in agricultural
research are other ingredients that must be considered.
Tackling undernourishment and better nutrition, especially for
children, requires more public awareness campaigns and targeted
investments in health, education, water and sanitation infrastructure.
The study was compiled by the ADB with Foreign Affairs, Trade and
Development Canada, Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation and the Liu
Institute for Global Issues at the University of British Columbia. |