Food crisis in the Developing World

by cynthia yoo | April 13, 2008 at 09:10 pm
437 views | 2 Recommendations | 4 comments

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Making ends meet

Making ends meet

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uploaded by Nora Younis

While we in the West complain of the rising price of Cheerios, the world's poor are facing a food crisis of immense proportions.

The rapid rise in food prices could push 100m people in poor countries deeper into poverty, the head of the World Bank, Robert Zoellick, has said.

His warning follows that from the leader of the International Monetary Fund, who said hundreds of thousands of people are at risk of starvation.

Mr Zoellick proposed an action plan to boost long-run agricultural production.

There have been food riots recently in a number of countries, including Haiti, the Philippines and Egypt.

"Based on a rough analysis, we estimate that a doubling of food prices over the last three years could potentially push 100 million people in low-income countries deeper into poverty," Mr Zoellick said.

His proposal for a "new deal" to tackle the international food crisis was endorsed by the World Bank's steering committee of finance and development ministers at a meeting in Washington.

The World Bank and its sister organisation, the IMF have held a weekend of meetings that addressed rising food and energy prices as well as the credit crisis upsetting global financial markets.

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jayr_patron

Correction on the report...no food riots in the Philippines.  The situation though is volatile.

Please read Food Riots Unlikely in the Philippines

Thanks for sharing Cynthia!

PEP
PEP
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 05:01 on April 14th, 2008

cynthia yoo, I like this story. It's good stuff.

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PEP

One of the chores I absolutely hate the most is food shopping, for many reasons. The hard floors hurt your knees. The shiny floors and flourescent lights are bad for those with migraines.

But when I go, I'm often re-astounded by all that's there. Why do we need so many choices in shampoo and soap? How many different types of corn flakes must we have?

Sometimes I wonder if maybe just part of all that money spent on development, packaging, advertising, transporting, stocking, etc. basically the same products with little difference could instead be channeled to providing cheap food resources for starving people.

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Mona-aaa

Hundreds gathering at religious shrines in Pakistan in hope for free food. With extreme shortages of rice, wheat and now cooking oil along with sky rocketing prices, many cant afford staples anymore

Mona-aaa has contributed a photo to this story.

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First Flagged at 5:01 AM, Apr 14, 2008 by PEP
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