Don’t let COVID-19 Become A Hunger Game
The COVID-19 pandemic is
putting enormous strains on the public health systems around the world, and
millions of people in the world’s most advanced economies are in some form of
quarantine.
We know the human toll will be
high, and that massive efforts to turn the tide carry a heavy economic cost.
To reduce the risk of an even
greater toll - shortage of food for millions, even in affluent countries - the
world must take immediate actions to minimize disruptions to food supply
chains.
A globally coordinated and
coherent response is needed to prevent this public health crisis from
triggering a food crisis in which people cannot find or afford food.
For now, COVID-19 has not
entailed any strain on food security, despite anecdotal reports of crowded
supermarket sieges.
While there’s no need for panic
- there is enough supply of food in the world to feed everyone – we must face
the challenge: an enormous risk that food may not be made available where it is
needed.
The COVID-19 outbreak, with all
the accompanying closures and lockdowns, has created logistical bottlenecks
that ricochet across the long value chains of the modern global economy.
Restrictions of movement, as
well as basic aversion behavior by workers, may impede farmers from farming and
food processors (who handle most agricultural products) from processing. Shortage of fertilizers,
veterinary medicines and other input could also affect agricultural production.
Closures of restaurants and
less frequent grocery shopping diminish demand for fresh produce and fisheries
products, affecting producers and suppliers, especially smallholder farmers,
with long-term consequences for the world’s increasingly urbanized population,
be they in Manhattan or Manila.
Uncertainty about food
availability can induce policymakers to implement trade restrictive measures in
order to safeguard national food security.
Given the experience of the
2007-2008 global food price crisis, we know that such measures can only
exacerbate the situation.
Export restrictions put in
place by exporting countries to increase food availability domestically could
lead to serious disruptions in the world food market, resulting in price spikes
and increased price volatility.
In 2007-2008, these immediate
measures proved extremely damaging, especially for low income food deficit
countries and to the efforts of humanitarian organizations to procure supplies
for the needy and vulnerable.
We should all learn from our
recent past and not make the same mistakes twice.
Policy makers must take care to
avoid accidentally tightening food-supply conditions.
While every country faces its
own challenges, collaboration – between governments and the full gamut of
sectors and stakeholders - is paramount. We are experiencing
a global problem that requires a global response.
We must ensure that food
markets are functioning properly and that information on prices, production,
consumption and stocks of food is available to all in real time. This approach will
reduce uncertainty and allow producers, consumers, traders and processors to
make informed decisions and to contain unwarranted panic behavior in global
food markets.
The health impacts of the
unfolding COVID-19 pandemic on some of the poorest countries are still unknown.
Yet, we can say with certainty that any ensuing food crisis as a result of poor
policy making will be a humanitarian disaster that we can avert.
We already have 113 million
people experiencing acute hunger; in sub-Saharan Africa, a quarter of the
population is undernourished. Any disruptions to food supply
chains will intensify both human suffering and the challenge of reducing hunger
around the world.
We must do everything possible
to not let that happen. Prevention costs less. Global markets are critical
for smothering supply and demand shocks across countries and regions, and we need
to work together to ensure that disruptions of food supply chains are
minimized as much as possible.
COVID-19 forcefully reminds us
that solidarity is not charity, but common sense.
BY QU Dongyu
Director-General of the Food
and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)
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