Briefing Papers Number 4, July 2008 | Page 2

A s a result of rising food prices, an additional one hundred million people around the world have fallen into poverty and are at risk of hunger. This tremendous setback serves as a stark reminder that despite substantial progress in recent years, developing countries, particularly the poorest, face significant challenges to reducing hunger and poverty. The global hunger crisis also shows more plainly than ever that the world is deeply and irreversibly interconnected. Rich and poor countries, U.N. food agencies and international financial institutions, such as the World Bank, all must do what they can to respond. But so far, the global response has not been equal to the scale of the crisis. Poor people are now making more difficult choices than ever: reducing the amount of food they consume; choosing less expensive, less nutritious foods; skipping meals; reducing spending on other important items such as health services or sending their children to school. The poorest of the poor are coping by shifting to one meal a day and by eating famine foods: roots, grass, mud cakes. The United States and other rich countries can help. In fact, their leadership now is crucial. The United States has always been generous in its response to emergencies overseas, spearheading the very successful child survival interventions of the 1980s and continuing to provide lifesaving humanitar- ian assistance, which is as important now as ever. But equally important in responding to the global food crisis, and preventing it from happening again, is assistance for long-term development goals, especially increasing agricultural productivity in poor countries. Foreign Aid and Development The global hunger crisis might have been averted by greater investment over the years in improving agricultural productivity in developing countries. Unfortunately, too much of the non-emergency aid the United States gives is driven not by what developing countries need, but by shortterm U.S. political and economic objectives. Funding for these purposes is important from the U.S. perspective, but it can work against what is good for poor people in developing countries and undermine the effectiveness of U.S. development programs. To make development gains, like reducing infant mortality or increasing girls’ educational achievement, a top priority must be reducing poverty and promoting longterm development. Effective U.S. development assistance would target resources toward enabling poor people around the world to provide for their families free from the suffering caused by debilitating malnutrition, illiteracy, and epidemics of disease. Other Briefing Papers by Bread for the World Institute 2  Briefing Paper, July 2008 Available at www.bread.org