Bread January-February 2014 | Page 2

from page 1 Joseph Molieri/Bread for the World FOOD AID Bread’s 2014 Offering of Letters features the story of Catarina Pascual Jiménez and her children. This family in Guatemala has benefitted from the early days of a U.S. food-aid program. fiscal year, such emergency funds would have most likely already been spent on other disasters. Fifty-five tons of nutritious emergency food was rapidly airlifted to the Philippines from the United States. One hundred tons of rice, prepositioned in Sri Lanka just for such an emergency, arrived within a month after the disaster. It would have taken three months if American ships were used to transport rice from the U.S. to the Philippines. For more than 50 years, U.S. food aid has been an effective response to humanitarian crises caused by conflict, famine, and natural disasters. Food aid has benefitted more than 3 billion hungry and malnourished people in more than 150 countries over those years. Today, our country is the largest provider of food aid, and we are needed now more than ever. U.S. food aid has played a significant role in preventing hunger and starvation, but we can do better. Bread is seeking reforms to U.S. food aid in its 2014 Offering of Letters because: Americans support effective development. Almost 90 percent of Americans believe that improving health for people in developing countries should be one of the top priorities of U.S. foreign assistance, according to a 2012 poll by the Kaiser Family Foundation. Nearly two-thirds of those individuals specifically prioritize reducing hunger and malnutrition. Americans feel strongly that we have a moral and financial responsibility to help end hunger and poverty. Flexibility saves dollars and lives. The practice of obtaining food close to the source of need, called local and regional purchases (LRP), allows for better-quality food aid 2 Bread | January-February 2014 that reaches people in need more quickly. Reaching women and children in the 1,000-day window between pregnancy and a child’s second birthday with timely food aid is crucial. It’s also less expensive—on average, 30 percent cheaper than food aid that is shipped from the United States and other countries, which is the current practice. LRP would promote long-term food security because it supports local farmers’ efforts to improve their lives. A 2008 pilot to implement and study LRP activities in both emergency and non-emergency settings showed savings in both money and time. Using cash and vouchers where appropriate can also increase efficiency in delivering food aid. Having more options like these will enable specialized food aid products and vitamins and minerals to be adjusted and targeted to the most vulnerable people, giving them better nutrition. Nutritional quality of food aid is essential. The types of food aid distributed by the United States and other donors do address hunger by providing needed calories but can fall short in addressing nutritional needs. Ensuring good nutrition to vulnerable populations has not been a high priority partly because emergency programs are seen to address immediate food shortages. Good nutrition early in life lays a foundation for health and productivity later in life and decreases people’s risk of hunger. Adequate funding for food assistance and nutrition is crucial. Despite the continued importance of the government’s food-aid programs for alleviating hunger, particularly among women and children, funding has been cut significantly over the past several years. The cuts have come about in two ma [