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About IFPRI

The International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), a research center of CGIAR, provides
research-based policy solutions to sustainably reduce poverty and end hunger and malnutrition in low- and
middle-income countries. IFPRI was established in 1975 to identify and analyze alternative national and
international strategies and policies for meeting the food needs of the developing world, with particular
emphasis on low-income countries and on the poorer groups in those countries. Partnerships, commu-
nications, capacity strengthening, and data and knowledge management are essential components for
translating IFPRI’s research to action and impact. The Institute’s regional and country programs play a criti-
cal role in responding to demand for food policy research and in delivering holistic support to country-led
development. IFPRI collaborates with partners around the world.

www.ifpri.org

About CGIAR
CGIAR is a global partnership for a food-secure future dedicated to transforming food, land, and water
systems in a climate crisis. CGIAR science is dedicated to reducing poverty, enhancing food and nutri-
tion security, and improving natural resources and ecosystem services. As the world’s largest agricultural
innovation network, its research is carried out by 15 CGIAR Centers working around the world in close
collaboration with hundreds of partners, including national and regional research institutes, civil society
organizations, academia, development organizations, and the private sector.

www.cgiar.org
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Recommended citation: International Food Policy Research Institute. 2023. 2023 Global Food
Policy Report: Rethinking Food Crisis Responses. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research
Institute. https://doi.org/10.2499/9780896294417

This is a peer-reviewed publication. Any opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and are not
necessarily representative of or endorsed by the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). The
boundaries and names shown and the designations used on the maps do not imply official endorsement or
acceptance by IFPRI.

International Food Policy Research Institute


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ISBN: 978-0-89629-441-7
ISSN: 2329-2873
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2499/9780896294417
Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available from the Library of Congress.

Photo credits
Cover: Lumiereist / Shutterstock.com.
Chapter images: p. 6 hikrcn / Shutterstock.com; p. 20 Bumble Dee / Shutterstock.com;
p. 34 Martin Mecnarowski / Shutterstock.com; p. 36 Abdul Majeed / European Union; p. 44 Andre Nery /
Shutterstock.com; p. 52 Dominic Chavez / World Bank; p. 62 Riccardo Mayer / Shutterstock.com;
p. 72 ymphotos / Shutterstock.com; p. 82 fivepointsix/ Shutterstock.com.

Book layout: Jason Chow


Editorial manager: Pamela Stedman-Edwards

iv  
Contents
FOREWORD���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 3

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 5

Chapter 1 The Road to Resilience: Rethinking Responses to Food Crises���������������������������������������������������� 6


Johan Swinnen and Katrina Kosec

Chapter 2 Food Crisis Risk Monitoring: Early Warning for Early Action���������������������������������������������������� 20
Rob Vos, Arif Husain, Friederike Greb, Peter Läderach, and Brendan Rice

Chapter 3 Crisis Resilience: Humanitarian Response and Anticipatory Action����������������������������������������������� 36


Sikandra Kurdi and Sandra Ruckstuhl

Chapter 4 Agrifood Value Chains: Building Resilient Food Systems������������������������������������������������������ 44


Bart Minten, Ben Belton, and Thomas Reardon

Chapter 5 Social Protection: Adaptive Safety Nets for Crisis Recovery����������������������������������������������������� 52


Kalle Hirvonen

Chapter 6 Gender: Promoting Equality in Fragile and Conflict-Affected Settings��������������������������������������������� 62


Hazel Malapit and Lynn Brown

Chapter 7 Forced Migration: Fragility, Resilience, and Policy Responses��������������������������������������������������� 72


Manuel A. Hernandez, Olivier Ecker, Peter Läderach, and Jean-François Maystadt

REGIONAL DEVELOPMENTS������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ 82
Africa������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 84
Samuel Benin, Wim Marivoet, Harriet Mawia, and John Ulimwengu

Middle East and North Africa����������������������������������������������������������������������������� 90


Kibrom Abay, Xinshen Diao, David Laborde, and Mariam Raouf

Central Asia�������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 97
Kamiljon Akramov

South Asia�������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 102


Anjani Kumar and Shahidur Rashid

East and Southeast Asia�������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 108


Kevin Chen, Yunyi Zhou, and Rui Mao

Latin America and the Caribbean������������������������������������������������������������������������ 112


Eugenio Díaz-Bonilla and Valeria Piñeiro

NOTES������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ 117
Foreword
The past decade has been marked by multiple, often overlapping, crises. The COVID-19 pandemic, various
natural disasters, and the ongoing war in Ukraine have all threatened the fabric of our global food sys-
tems. This string of crises has left an indelible mark. In too many places, progress in reducing poverty and
malnutrition has been reversed, with long-term implications for people’s health and livelihoods. While in
some ways our food systems have also proved surprisingly resilient, as both the private and public sectors
have stepped up to meet new needs, the challenges are huge. As climate change worsens and geopoliti-
cal strife grows amid the threat of more frequent pandemics, crises may well become more common and
more devastating.
Now is the time to rethink how we address food crises. Many governments, donors, and international
organizations have called for moving beyond humanitarian responses that are implemented only after a cri-
sis begins, toward better prediction, preparation, and resilience building that will make future crises less
devastating. While discussions of a humanitarian-development-peace approach have been underway for
years, this report aims to provide a solid policy basis for moving forward.
The 2023 Global Food Policy Report explores a growing body of evidence on how diverse policy
responses can reduce both the immediate and longer-term impacts of food crises, and improve livelihoods,
incomes, and food security and nutrition for the future. Drawing on research from IFPRI and other CGIAR
centers, it provides evidence-based policy recommendations for governments, donors, and nongovern-
mental organizations.
We hope that this year’s report will help shape a transformation in how we respond to the shocks that
threaten our food systems, by contributing evidence and policy options to inform discussions among local,
national, and global policymakers. We look forward to engaging with many partners around the world to
expand this research work and support action for better crisis response.

JOHAN SWINNEN
Director General, IFPRI
Managing Director, Systems Transformation, CGIAR

  3
Acknowledgments
The 2023 Global Food Policy Report was prepared under the overall leadership of Johan Swinnen,
Katrina Kosec, and a core team comprising Charlotte Hebebrand, Pamela Stedman-Edwards, Sivan Yosef,
Claire Davis, and Jamed Falik.

Contributions were made by Kibrom Abay, Kamiljon Akramov, Ben Belton, Samuel Benin, Lynn Brown,
Kevin Chen, Eugenio Díaz-Bonilla, Xinshen Diao, Olivier Ecker, Friederike Greb, Manuel Hernandez,
Kalle Hirvonen, Arif Husain, Anjani Kumar, Sikandra Kurdi, David Laborde, Peter Läderach, Jessica Leight,
Hazel Malapit, Rui Mao, Wim Marivoet, Harriet Mawia, Jean-François Maystadt, Brian McNamara, Bart Minten,
Valeria Piñeiro, Miriam Raouf, Shahidur Rashid, Thomas Reardon, Brendan Rice, Sandra Ruckstuhl,
John Ulimwengu, Rob Vos, Sivan Yosef, and Yunyi Zhou.

Production of the report was led by Pamela Stedman-Edwards. Jason Chow was responsible for design and
layout. Editorial assistance was provided by Claire Davis and Gillian Hollerich.

We would like to thank IFPRI’s donors, including all those who supported IFPRI’s research through their
contributions for the CGIAR Fund: https://cgiar.org/funders/

  5
CHAPTER 1

The Road to Resilience


Rethinking Responses to Food Crises
JOHAN SWINNEN AND KATRINA KOSEC
Johan Swinnen is managing director, Systems Transformation, CGIAR, and director
general, International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). Katrina Kosec is a senior
research fellow, Development Strategies and Governance Unit, IFPRI.

KEY MESSAGES ■ Social protection systems are essential to reducing the impact of crises;
they can build resilience prior to a crisis and facilitate recovery when
Calls to rethink responses to food crises have arisen from recent overlap-
they are flexible, shock-responsive, and carefully targeted. Integrating
ping shocks to food systems — including the COVID-19 pandemic, increased
social protection with gender and climate goals can further empower
food prices, conflicts, and natural disasters — and from concerns that crises
women and promote sustainability.
are becoming more frequent, complex, and protracted. Now is an oppor-
tune moment to develop more permanent responses to food crises, guided ■ Improvements in collecting gender-disaggregated data, particularly
by strong evidence on the impact of policies, programming, tools, and gov- amid crises, and tracking progress toward clear gender targets can
ernance approaches. Drawing on research from IFPRI and colleagues, this promote gender equality. Likewise, including women’s voices in policy-
report provides a broad set of evidence-based recommendations for better making and programming decisions can help ensure that crisis responses
predicting and preparing for crises, addressing crises when they occur, and improve rather than erode gender equality.
building equity and the resilience of food systems.
■ Forced migration can create both challenges and opportunities for
■ Early warning systems can facilitate preemptive, rapid, and development. Migrants can provide benefits for both the host and
context-appropriate responses, provided they are well coordinated and sending communities when policies facilitate their integration into host
based on frequent monitoring of key indicators and understanding of communities and support those who remain.
how structural risks can aggravate shocks to food security.
■ The resilience of food systems depends critically on good governance; gov-
■ Anticipatory action frameworks, which help prepare and organize ernance determines the ability to implement and sustain effective policies
humanitarian aid before crises strike, show promise both for mitigating and programming to offset negative shocks, curb incentives for violent con-
crises and supporting long-term development efforts. flict, and support the functioning of markets and private sector investments.

■ Agrifood value chains can support livelihoods and food security during ■ Recent events have highlighted the need for crisis response funding
crises when governments maintain a business environment that fosters to be expanded and used more efficiently. Repurposing agricultural
flexibility and technical and financial innovation, and provide essential support funds and better leveraging private sector funds could bolster
infrastructure and targeted assistance for at-risk value chain actors. investment in long-term resilience.

6  Rethinking Responses to Food Crise


I
n 2022, the world faced multiple crises. Globally, poverty reduction and food security. While these
disruptions to food systems continued amid a advances hold potential, the global community
protracted pandemic, major natural disasters, still needs a better understanding of how food sys-
civil unrest and political instability, and the grow- tems and their various actors respond to crises, and
ing impacts of climate change, all while the war which policy interventions could successfully sup-
in Ukraine exacerbated a global food and fer- port households and food value chains in different
tilizer crisis. Yet some aspects of food systems countries and crisis contexts.
have proved surprisingly resilient in the face of Over many years, IFPRI has built a wealth of
crisis. The International Food Policy Research evidence on policies, programming, tools, and
Institute’s (IFPRI’s) 2021 Global Food Policy Report: approaches that reduce hunger and poverty and
Transforming Food Systems after COVID-19 promote sustainable development and wom-
showed, for example, that adopting new business en’s empowerment, including during crises. With
models helped to keep food value chains function- this report, we present some of our most recent
ing during the pandemic, and expanding social research in response to the growing call for a
protection programs reduced negative impacts on more holistic approach to preparing for, detect-
food security. ing, averting, mitigating, and responding to crises.
Moving forward, a range of promising Heeding this call will require a shift from simply
approaches have already been identified to pro- responding to crises with humanitarian assistance
mote resilience along with other development to a concerted approach that strengthens the
goals. For example, IFPRI’s 2022 Global Food Policy humanitarian-development-peace nexus, supports
Report: Climate Change & Food Systems out- and empowers the most vulnerable, and builds
lines several policies, such as rural access to clean more resilient food systems for the future.
energy, trade reforms, and landscape governance, In this first chapter, we highlight the vulnerability
that address climate change while also supporting of food systems to frequent and damaging shocks

The Road to Resilience  7


Figure 1 Prevalence and number of undernourished worldwide, 2000–2021
Prevalence of undernourishment Number of people undernourished

18% 900

16% 768 800

796
14% 700

Millions
Percent

12% 13% 600


618
572 9.8%
10% 500

8% 400

7.8% 8%
6% 300
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021

Source: FAO, IFAD, UNICEF, WFP, and WHO, The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World 2022 (Rome: FAO, 2022).

Note: Values for 2021 are projected; the figure shows the mid-point of the projected ranges. These figures reflect chronic hunger; see Chapter 2 on different
measures of food insecurity.

that are affecting growing numbers of people. The marked change following several decades of dra-
chapter presents key recommendations from the matic declines in hunger and poverty. In 2014,
report’s thematic chapters, which explore how gov- 572 million people were undernourished — a
ernments and other key stakeholders can better record low. But by 2019, this number had grown to
prepare for and respond to shocks and crises. We 618 million, largely due to conflict, weather-related
also consider the cornerstones of a more effective disasters, and economic downturns in many coun-
response to crises: effective governance and suf- tries (Figure 1).1
ficient and flexible funding. The regional section During the past few years, multiple shocks have
of the report reviews how crises have impacted six worsened this reversal in progress. The pandemic
major world regions in recent years, and how these triggered a global recession, widespread labor
developments signal new challenges and opportu- shortages, food losses, and transport bottlenecks,
nities. We hope this report helps to advance a new which affected both the quantity and quality of
paradigm for crisis mitigation and response, one available food. This likely increased the number of
that facilitates robust recovery and improved stabil- undernourished by 196 million people, raising the
ity for all. total to 768 million by 2021.2 In 2020, an astound-
ing 3 billion people could not afford a healthy diet.3
This constellation of factors also set back achieve-
VULNERABILITY OF FOOD
ment of gender equality by more than 30 years,
SYSTEMS AND FOOD SECURITY
as measured by changes in the World Economic
Food systems were facing threats well before the Forum’s Global Gender Gap Index between 2020
COVID-19 pandemic. In the years before the pan- and 2022.4
demic, global development progress had started As the recovery from COVID-19 began, prices
stagnating and even reversing in some places — a surged for food, fuel, and fertilizer, creating new

8  Rethinking Responses to Food Crise


Box 1 FOOD AND FERTILIZER CRISIS, 2021–2022

In 2021, food prices rose to their highest levels in a decade as a result of weather shocks, strong demand associated with
recovery from the COVID-19-induced recession, lingering supply chain disruptions, and record low inventories for wheat, corn,
and soybeans. High natural gas and coal prices also pushed fertilizer prices to record highs. In the aftermath of the February
2022 invasion of Ukraine, food and fertilizer prices spiked even further, causing serious harm not only to wheat-importing
countries, many in the Middle East and North Africa, but also to many other low- and middle-income countries. Even though
many international commodity prices began to fall by mid-2022, they still remain above the historical pre-COVID-19 average,
and domestic inflation remains rampant in many low-income countries.1
The impacts on food and nutrition security and poverty are likely to be dire. Simulations run by IFPRI researchers show
that the global price shocks may have caused national poverty headcount rates to rise by as much as 7.7 percentage points and
undernourishment by up to 4.4 percentage points.2 In Egypt, for example, 48 percent of households have already reported
eating less food to reduce expenses, and 75 percent have reported eating less chicken and eggs, key sources of protein.3
The outlook for 2023 remains critical.4 Global stock-to-use ratios for grains remain at or below the lows of recent years.
These could reach critical levels if global staple food production falls due to greatly reduced harvests in Ukraine, projected
drought conditions in the Southern Hemisphere, decreased fertilizer application resulting from relatively high fertilizer
prices, new weather shocks, or other shocks caused by the war in Europe or elsewhere (Figure). Moreover, many low-income
countries face significant macroeconomic problems, and the share of low-income countries in debt distress has increased
by 60 percent since 2015. Efforts to respond to this crisis could be improved with robust early warning systems, donor
transparency and coordination, and a shift toward crisis resilience.

Global ending stocks, excluding China


2020/21 2021/22 2022/23

70

60

50
Days of use

40

30

20

10

0
Maize Soybeans Rice Wheat

Source: Data from US Department of Agriculture, Foreign Agricultural Service, Production, Supply, and Distribution online,
accessed January 2023.

The Road to Resilience  9


Figure 2 Trends in extreme weather events, droughts, and floods, 1900–2022
Extreme weather events Droughts Floods

250

200
Number of events

150

100

50

0
1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020

Source: Data from EM-DAT, accessed January 2023. https://emdat.be/

Note: Extreme weather includes severe storms, tornadoes, sandstorms, and extreme temperatures, among other events.

problems that were exacerbated when Russia of a food crisis). Whether a community, country, or
invaded Ukraine in February 2022. International food region is resilient to a shock — or is at risk of a food
prices subsequently rose another 32 percent,5 and crisis — depends on many factors. Past experiences
fertilizer prices tripled (Box 1).6 Of the countries that show that crises rarely arise from isolated shocks
were already in a food crisis in 2021, more than half to food systems. They are often compounded, and
depended on Russia and Ukraine for wheat imports, their negative effects intensified, by long-term
heightening risks for their populations.7 International sources of fragility, including poverty, climate
food and fertilizer prices have since fallen but remain change, gender and social inequalities, poor gover-
high by historical standards, and many low- and nance and lack of trust in public sector institutions,
middle-income countries (LMICs) are plagued by ris- and lack of social cohesion.
ing domestic inflation and depreciating currencies. Threats from climate change loom especially
As a result of these compounding crises, as many large for many countries, especially those in Africa.
as 205 million people in 45 countries experienced Climate change is rapidly intensifying, increasing
crisis-level acute food insecurity or worse by 2022, pressure on food systems, rural livelihoods, and
a number that has nearly doubled since 2016.8 Most ecosystems more broadly.9 While some places may
recently, in early 2023, a severe earthquake killed benefit from a longer growing season amid ris-
tens of thousands across Syria and Turkey and left ing temperatures, changing weather patterns and
many homeless, further intensifying the level of crisis advancing desertification have reduced the aver-
for these countries. age growth in agricultural productivity by as much
Shocks to food systems can take many different as 21 percent since 1961. This decline in growth,
forms and vary dramatically in their impacts. When which is expected to worsen, is most harmful to
they lead to severe disruptions that cause a surge in tropical agriculture.10
acute food insecurity, these shocks are deemed a Climate change is also triggering more fre-
food crisis (see Chapter 2 for the technical definition quent and extreme weather events (Figure 2), with

10  Rethinking Responses to Food Crise


devastating impacts on food systems and human populations bear the brunt of crises. These
lives, especially in more densely populated and groups — which include rural smallholders, the
water-scarce regions of LMICs. In 2022, flooding urban poor, the landless, IDPs, and refugees — can
in Pakistan displaced more than 33 million peo- be made even more vulnerable by other com-
ple, and an ongoing drought in the Horn of Africa pounding factors, such as gender, age, ethnicity,
killed 7 million livestock.11 Climate change, along and social class.
with poor agricultural practices, can increase the Food system shocks are felt most severely
risk of plant diseases, pests, and zoonotic diseases. in fragile and conflict-affected settings, where
Projections from IFPRI’s IMPACT model find that 1.5 billion people currently live. The 2021 UN
65 million more people will be undernourished by Food Systems Summit (UNFSS) underscored this
2030 and as many as 72 million more by 2050 with burden, noting, “most hungry people are in fragile
climate change, as compared to a scenario without and conflict-affected places…[where] it is espe-
climate change.12 cially difficult to transform food systems and to
Climate change also affects conflict and dis- meet the needs of the most vulnerable and mar-
placement in multiple ways.13 In 2020, about ginalized people.” On average, 30 percent of
three-quarters of internally displaced people people in countries facing protracted crisis situa-
(IDPs) were forced to relocate by disasters — mostly tions live in extreme poverty — a situation that can
weather-related.14 Conflict accounts for the other prevent them from adapting to and recovering
quarter, including in Somalia and Yemen, where from shocks.17
famine warnings have recently been issued. In Coping strategies can affect food and nutri-
many places, conflict and climate change both tion security, as well as long-term well-being.
contribute to crisis situations, most notably in Shifting to cheaper, less nutritious staple foods,
Syria, Afghanistan, and South Sudan, where num- for example, is a common coping response
bers of IDPs and refugees are high. Countries among the poor, a practice that has increased
enduring conflict are particularly vulnerable to amid pandemic-related food shortages and ris-
climate-induced shocks,15 which can act as a threat ing prices driven by the Russia-Ukraine war. Other
multiplier that further increases insecurity, vio- damaging strategies include selling off produc-
lence, and migration as resources become scarce. tive assets and reducing spending on education
Recent events highlight this complex relationship: and health — particularly for girls. Earlier marriage
of the more than 200 million people facing acute of girls is another response that leads to last-
food insecurity in 2022, most live in protracted ing harm.18 Migration, either voluntary or forced,
crisis situations — that is, situations marked by pro- can have negative health implications and create
longed civil strife and conflict, repeated weather challenges for livelihoods and access to produc-
shocks, and economic decline, or some combina- tive resources, for both migrants and their host
tion thereof.16 communities. However, migration can also help
households escape crises, diversify risks, and
expand income-generating activities.19
UNEQUAL IMPACTS
Forced migrants — including IDPs and refu-
ECONOMIC VULNERABILITY gees — are among the most vulnerable. By 2022,
Recent crises highlight the vast differences in how a projected 103 million people were forcibly
food system shocks affect the rich and the poor — displaced worldwide (Figure 3). Of this group,
both countries and their vulnerable populations. 80 percent experienced acute food insecurity and
In general, LMICs have fared worse throughout high levels of malnutrition.20 Russia’s invasion of
many recent shocks, due to limited budgets to Ukraine has triggered Europe’s largest refugee cri-
enact stimulus and social protection measures, sis since World War II, with nearly 8 million people
reduced remittances from high-income countries, fleeing the war. Despite this, LMICs host 83 percent
and rapidly rising import bills for food and agri- of the world’s international refugees, many of whom
cultural inputs. Within these countries, vulnerable have been displaced for years and even decades.21

The Road to Resilience  11


Figure 3 Forcibly displaced people worldwide
120

100

80
Millions

60

40

20
1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018 2020 2022

Source: UNHCR, Refugee Data Finder, updated October 2022. https://www.unhcr.org/refugee-statistics/

Note: Includes internally displaced people as of end-2021, refugees as of mid-2022, asylum-seekers as of mid-2022, and other people in need of international
protection as of mid-2022.

The number of IDPs is almost double that of inter- technologies, and services needed for agricultural
national refugees, with about half living in Syria, production and participation in the food system.25
Colombia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, For example, having less social capital can limit
and Yemen. women’s access to technology (such as modern
agricultural inputs, mechanization, labor-saving
GENDER AT THE CENTER OF FOOD CRISES technologies, and information and communications
Women are disproportionately harmed by cri- technology [ICT]), agricultural extension and advi-
ses, given the structural and normative barriers sory services, and financial services (credit, formal
that limit their resilience and ability to respond savings, and insurance). Crises can intensify these
effectively. More so than for men, shocks reduce gender gaps — as resources become increasingly
women’s access to food and dietary diversity, scarce, women’s access is likely to decline further.
decision-making power within their households, Shocks can also intensify the burden of unpaid
assets, services like healthcare, and physical safety, care work for women, such as providing food, col-
and also deepen their time poverty.22 These vul- lecting water, and caring for the sick, and increase
nerabilities stem from women’s already limited gender-based violence.
access to resources, technologies, and services — Shocks and crises can also disrupt critical social
which is intensified by shocks and crises — as well protection structures and support. For exam-
as to channels of power and influence that could ple, extreme weather events or a pandemic like
help them benefit from crisis response policies and COVID-19 can prevent women from accessing
programming.23 government identification cards needed for relief
Rural women in LMICs face barriers not only programs, or make it difficult to collect payments.
to accessing land, water, and other productive In times of crises, governance structures may also
resources,24 but, just as importantly, to accessing prove more dysfunctional or reduce funds for
and benefiting from complementary resources, social protection.

12  Rethinking Responses to Food Crise


Migration further complicates gender issues. anticipatory action programs, forecast-based
Women and girls account for about 50 percent financing, and the scaling-up of innovative social
of IDPs and refugees, but in some places they safety nets. The upward trend in migration has,
make up a much larger share. In addition, children when managed well, expanded job opportunities
account for more than 40 percent of all displaced (particularly for youth) and helped households sup-
people.26 However, when women remain at origin port their livelihoods, make investments, and build
and men migrate — as often occurs with eco- resilience.30 Taken together, these developments
nomic shocks — women may shift from contributing warrant policies that capitalize on their capacity to
as family workers to become primary farmers.27 support resilience.
Without access to key resources or greater
decision-making power, this increase in responsibil-
A NEW, MORE PERMANENT RESPONSE
ities and workload can leave women worse off.28
As the world reflects on lessons learned from recent
food system shocks, now is an opportune moment
A WAY FORWARD: BUILDING
to rethink our approach to food crisis response by
ON WHAT WORKS
building on existing innovations and exploring new
Although the rise in food insecurity and poverty is solutions. Traditional crisis response has focused on
alarming, food systems showed major strengths humanitarian and emergency food aid, but a more
during recent crises. Understanding these systematic and sustainable approach is needed to
strengths can help stakeholders rethink the way address protracted crises, which are likely rising.31
forward and build on successes as they respond to Research tools are already available to the interna-
new crises. tional community and national governments to help
In recent decades, a range of transformational them not only predict, monitor, and respond to cri-
developments has increased the resilience of food ses, but also to govern for resilience and equity.
systems. Trade has helped countries to secure alter- Shifting toward longer-term and more permanent
native suppliers during supply shocks, though export “crisis resilience” is critical.
restrictions during crises can still pose a threat.29 The thematic chapters in this report explore
Urbanization and rising incomes in LMICs have some of the promising policies, programming, and
sparked demand for more diverse foods, including tools for developing a strong response to increas-
animal-source foods and fruits and vegetables. In ing and intensifying shocks. These can help us
response, value chains have expanded and diversi- better predict and prepare for crises, address cri-
fied, potentially improving the ability to meet food ses when they occur, and build more resilient and
and nutritional needs in the face of shocks, while equitable food systems.
creating new livelihood opportunities. Value chains
also provide inputs and services to rural producers, PREPARING FOR CRISES
which can increase resilience in the agriculture sec- Early warning systems, especially in combina-
tor. In rural and urban areas, social safety nets have tion with anticipatory action efforts, can facilitate
been more widely adopted, providing food security both immediate humanitarian responses and the
and better economic opportunities for women and integration of aid with longer-term development
men. In many places, the growing empowerment of strategies. Existing systems must be improved
women has strengthened their decision-making role to better address the growing complexity of
in food systems, helping them to derive greater ben- crises, including climate-related events and con-
efits from these systems. flict situations.
In addition, efforts have been expanded to pre- Early-warning, early-action (EWEA) systems
dict crises and proactively reduce their impacts alert policymakers and international humanitar-
through programming and effective gover- ian agencies to sudden and significant increases
nance and institutions. Several new approaches in acute food insecurity, signaling food crises,
have been tested around the world, including and provide guidance on where and when to

The Road to Resilience  13


target humanitarian efforts. A timely and effective and a clear decision support system, especially
response depends on accurately identifying and in fragile settings where government authority
tracking different food crisis situations; understand- may be weak. Its effective delivery also depends
ing how they affect different populations, sectors, on robust governance arrangements, which can
and places; and addressing the pressures exerted ensure appropriate targeting and deployment.
on people and food systems. When more broadly conceived, anticipatory action
Multiple systems are already monitoring chronic can help shift the focus of crisis response toward
and acute food insecurity as well as trends in agri- longer-term resilience and development by incor-
food markets, such as sudden changes in the prices porating nutrition-sensitive programming, making
of international agricultural commodities and fer- use of local procurement, and supporting local
tilizers. This information is extremely useful, but institutions and more permanent safety nets. This
ideally it should be consolidated and improved to approach could play a crucial role in mitigating
shape responses more precisely. This will require food system shocks, but currently makes up only a
filling gaps in monitoring and analysis, particu- small percentage of humanitarian aid.
larly to understand and track the drivers of crises To increase adoption of these programs, more
in diverse contexts, including compound crises. data and research are needed on the effectiveness
It will also require better integration of existing of different humanitarian assistance approaches
systems to ensure that policymakers and others and anticipatory action programs for protecting
receive clear, timely warning signals of potential cri- food and nutrition security — particularly in fragile
ses and guidance on priority setting. Finally, new and conflict-affected settings. Chapter 3 discusses
processes are needed that allow for faster classifi- the potential of anticipatory action and innovative
cation and response to crises, especially to identify types of humanitarian assistance, how these can
famine, where immediate response is most cru- align with development strategies, and how further
cial. Chapter 2 considers the role of early warning data collection and analysis can support them.
systems in crisis response and suggests ways to
assist policymakers with defining and prioritiz- CREATING RESILIENT FOOD SYSTEMS
ing responses. Social protection systems, including safety net
The vast majority of humanitarian response is programs that provide food or cash transfers, can
activated after a crisis occurs, delivering life-saving both build resilience prior to a crisis and facili-
aid but at relatively high costs. During crises, tate crisis recovery. They are most effective when
rapid response is critical to reach households they are flexible, shock-responsive, and well tar-
before they deplete savings or engage in dam- geted. Before a crisis, safety nets help households
aging coping strategies, and before widespread and communities build assets, increase productive
repercussions occur, such as increased fragility. investments, and diversify income sources. During
Anticipatory action frameworks help prepare and crises, social safety nets can prevent negative cop-
organize humanitarian aid before crises strike by ing strategies that pose risks to long-term health
allocating funds, responsibilities, and supplies in and livelihoods. Many LMICs have dramatically
advance. These frameworks, along with innovative expanded their social safety nets in recent years,
forms of humanitarian assistance, show promise but as the COVID-19 pandemic and recent food
for mitigating crises at lower costs and supporting price spikes showed, coverage is low in the poor-
longer-term development efforts. Once triggered est countries, and many cannot access these safety
by an early warning system, the anticipatory action nets — particularly the urban poor.
plan can be implemented smoothly and without A proactive approach is needed to develop
lengthy delays. social protection systems that are highly adap-
Anticipatory action requires monitoring data tive, flexible, and inclusive, and can be quickly
that illuminate risks, exposure, and vulnerability; expanded when crises strike. Support can be
information services that can reach vulnera- scaled up more quickly and effectively by inte-
ble people and advise them on how to respond; grating these “shock-responsive” social protection

14  Rethinking Responses to Food Crise


systems with EWEA systems and humanitarian differences in how crises affect various actors,
aid, and creating unified and digitized targeting including small and large enterprises and those
systems. In addition, integrating social protec- owned by women and men. It shows how the
tion with gender and climate goals can further capacity to innovate and policies that allow trade
empower women and promote environmental sus- and innovation to continue are critical to both quick
tainability. Given the great need to expand safety recovery and long-term resilience.
net programs, new ways to cover costs should be
explored, such as integration with green financing SUPPORTING AND EMPOWERING
schemes, as well as ways to reduce implementa- THE MOST VULNERABLE
tion costs, including cash transfers and mobile Building resilience among the most vulnera-
payments. Chapter 5 considers the role of social ble populations, particularly women and forced
protection in both resilience building and cri- migrants, can reduce the impact of crises when
sis response, exploring how these programs have they occur and speed recovery. Food system resil-
evolved over time and how best to ensure their ience must therefore include a strong focus on
longevity by examining financial realities, new enhancing livelihoods and inclusion. These efforts
modalities, and a greater focus on inclusion. must prioritize the needs of the most vulnerable in
The successful functioning of food systems the short term, ensuring access to food and vital
relies on agrifood value chains, including the pro- services, but also build their resilience and capacity
duction, processing, transport, and marketing of for the longer term.
food. These value chains differ greatly in their struc- Empowering women amid crisis situations
ture and local contexts, which in turn affects the is particularly important, given that they shoul-
impact of shocks and value chain responses. Given der a disproportionate share of negative impacts
these differences, crisis responses are likely to be and often deplete their assets or compromise
more effective when tailored to the type of shock, their diets as a coping mechanism. A first step
the particular context and value chain, and if possi- to increase equity involves improving the qual-
ble, the size of the affected enterprises. ity of gender-disaggregated data collected
The experience of the COVID-19 pandemic before and during crisis situations, including on
highlights the importance of flexibility for all types women’s access to programs meant to support
of value chains and their actors. Almost every- them. Innovative methods, such as phone sur-
where, food-related businesses that were able veys, can facilitate data collection in fragile and
to digitize and develop new marketing mecha- conflict-affected settings. When decision-makers
nisms amid pandemic-related restrictions proved have more specific information about the different
hardier that those that were not.32 Private sector women who are enduring various negative effects,
actors can increase their businesses’ resilience by policies and programming can be tailored to bet-
investing in improved and innovative tools, such ter support them. Effective policy responses along
as climate-smart agriculture and new forms of with legal protections will also need to account
insurance. Governments can provide support by for the barriers that women face to participat-
creating a regulatory and business environment ing in food systems, their domestic work burdens,
that fosters value chain innovations and ensures and the likelihood of gender-based violence, all of
that women-owned enterprises can take advan- which are likely to increase amid crises.
tage of them. Governments can also support an Efforts must also be made to increase women’s
open trade policy to facilitate the diversifica- political participation and amplify their voice and
tion of value chains. Before and during crises, agency in their communities. In particular, wom-
government monitoring can help to ensure the en’s voices must be included in peace processes
continuation of private trading and guide it and high-level positions where policymaking and
where needed. programming decisions are made, so that cri-
Chapter 4 explores the strengths and vulner- sis responses improve rather than erode gender
abilities of value chains, with a close look at the equality. Such policy responses can empower

The Road to Resilience  15


and create opportunities for women while also development, such as by aligning social protection
addressing the adverse impacts of crises. Finally, and climate action objectives to mutually sup-
supporting women’s access to resources and tech- port peace, security, and sustainability. Attention
nologies, including mobile phones, can help them must also be paid to those who remain behind,
better weather crises. because they often lack the resources or social net-
Being explicit about gender targets and track- works needed for migration, and are least capable
ing progress is central to promoting gender of recovering from a crisis. Chapter 7 reviews key
equality amid crises. For the long term, effec- facts about forced migration and provides rec-
tive gender-focused interventions including ommendations to ensure that policies increase
cash transfers, self-help groups and other civil the benefits of migration and reduce detrimental
society organizations, and/or technical and voca- impacts on migrants, host communities, and send-
tional training, among others, can help women ing communities.
in diverse settings build resilience to shocks and
crises. Chapter 6 explores what we know about
FOUNDATIONS FOR BETTER
the gendered impacts of crises, reviews the
CRISIS RESPONSE
most important data gaps, and provides recom-
mendations for ensuring that crisis responses Improving international and national responses to
address inequities. food crises cannot be done without accountable
Conflict and climatic and economic crises often governance and effective institutions, policies, and
trigger forced migration (Chapter 7), creating chal- programming, as well as reliable funding and over-
lenges and opportunities for migrants and their sight to ensure that responses address immediate
sending and host communities. Although people needs and long-term resilience.
forced to migrate often face high risks and food
insecurity, migration can play an important role GOVERNANCE
in improving individual livelihoods and economic Effective governance at all levels is critical to advanc-
development. Forced migrants and refugees have ing early warning, anticipatory action, and policy
been shown to make positive contributions to their responses that are sustainable and responsive to
host communities’ economies, and remittances the compounding drivers of crisis. Institutions and
to sending communities can provide substantial public sector incentives must support government
benefits as well.33 Thus, all stand to benefit from accountability (that is, responsiveness to citizens’
policies that facilitate economic and social integra- needs and preferences), as well as the equitable,
tion, including cash transfers, training programs, reliable, and cost-effective provision of infrastruc-
and the right to work and choose a place of resi- ture and services. This requires making the best use
dence. However, forced migration can strain host of government investments (rather than wasting
communities when resources and opportunities or squandering them), and ensuring the effec-
are limited, requiring efforts to limit migration tive deployment, communication, and continuity
from sending communities while strengthening the of anticipatory action, humanitarian assistance,
absorptive capacity of host communities. social protection, and other programs that are criti-
Governments, NGOs, and development orga- cal to averting and addressing shocks and crises.34
nizations can better address the root causes of Effective governance can also minimize market dis-
forced migration through innovative data collection ruptions and incentivize private sector investments
and research, especially on irregular migration and to promote resilience. Finally, it can more broadly
the needs of women. They can build the capacity of contribute to trust and social cohesion to help
host communities by investing in infrastructure and avoid internal conflicts and future crises.35 The pil-
services and designing policies that expand the lars of the UN’s far-reaching Sendai Framework for
benefits of migration and limit harms. Innovative Disaster Risk Reduction integrate good governance
approaches hold great potential to accelerate the structures, and many measures of crisis prepared-
transition from humanitarian action to longer-term ness include some version of governance, whether

16  Rethinking Responses to Food Crise


viewed as the provision of planning services or the global food crisis — far more is needed, espe-
effective communication between leaders and their cially for crisis preparedness, resilience building,
citizens.36 In many instances, good governance and support for humanitarian-development-peace
mechanisms have been shown to improve disaster approaches. Smart investments to build resil-
preparedness.37 ient food systems, while costly, are far more
Many promising approaches exist to build effec- cost-efficient and effective than reacting to crises
tive governance. For example, transparency and after they occur.
the free flow of information, including through ICT The finance lever of the UNFSS estimates
that connects government with citizens, can help that it would cost between US$300 billion and
make governments more accountable.38 Improving $400 billion per year through 2030 to transform
the incentive environment for bureaucrats and food systems for sustainability and resilience.41
frontline service providers can ensure that they Some of this investment can be used to expand
are hired and promoted for delivering what mat- credit market access to smallholders and small
ters to citizens. Education, training, and transparent and medium enterprises in LMICs. Credit can pro-
policymaking can help guarantee that the voices of vide these businesses with a short-term financial
women and other vulnerable groups are included cushion during shocks and an opportunity for
in crisis responses to broadly support gender long-term investment in resilience-enhancing tech-
equality and social inclusion. To hold governments nology and practices. For example, producers can
accountable, international and local actors can use use credit to invest in solar power, cold storage,
research tools to track social, economic, and envi- or drought-resistant crop varieties that will help
ronmental risks and to monitor and evaluate policy address climate threats. At the national and inter-
responses to crises. national levels, financial flows should be redirected
toward more crisis-resilient technology, prac-
FINANCING MECHANISMS FOR CRISIS tices, and infrastructure. Forecast-based finance
PREVENTION, PREPAREDNESS, AND RESPONSE schemes, currently being implemented by some
The developments of the past few years have agencies, could be expanded and deployed in
dramatically increased the need for better crisis fragile settings for beneficiaries and locations that
response funding. In 2023, the UN Office for the have been identified ahead of time.
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs appealed for A key strategy to redirect these funds involves
US$52 billion in funding for humanitarian assistance repurposing the more than $600 billion in global
and protection, a 461 percent increase since 2012. spending that goes for agricultural support.
Funding received in 2022 amounted to $24 billion, Currently, much of this financing supports activi-
or only 47 percent of the need.39 Governments ties that are inefficient and unsustainable. Some
were forced to spend record amounts on social funds could be reallocated to incentivize the adop-
protection in response to compound crises, even tion of more sustainable practices such as no-till
as programs faced disruptions due to these very farming, and invested in agricultural research and
shocks. In 2022, 170 economies announced, imple- development aimed at traditional targets such as
mented, or enhanced more than 1,000 social productivity gains, as well as new targets such as
protection and associated programs to mitigate improved resilience.42
the impacts of inflation, a fourfold increase from Policymakers can also do more to shift private
April 2022 to December 2022. About $711 billion, investment toward crisis prevention and resilience,
equivalent to 0.7 percent of global GDP, was given that private sector investment in food sys-
invested in social protection in 2022.40 tems far outweighs that of governments. Both the
This funding must be increased to meet grow- quantity and quality of private sector funding for
ing needs. Although some crisis funding increased resilience can be improved by creating an enabling
in 2022 — such as the International Monetary Fund’s environment for private sector actors to invest,
(IMF’s) opening of a temporary food shock window and incentivizing investments that support liveli-
to quickly channel funds to countries impacted by hoods and sustainability. Business opportunities

The Road to Resilience  17


to implement Sustainable Development Goal development community, and the private sector to
actions related to food and agriculture could gar- move quickly in times of need. Increasing crises in
ner $2.3 trillion annually for the private sector by human systems and the natural world will not abate
2030, while requiring an annual investment of only in coming years — the time to step up our efforts to
$320 billion.43 Conversely, enacting rules for private develop a more permanent, sustainable response
investors, such as requiring publicly traded compa- is now.
nies to disclose environmental and climate-related
risks, could more closely align financial incentives
with the SDGs and the Paris Climate Agreement.44
Development banks could also use their funds to
de-risk and crowd-in private investment through
blended finance or food systems bonds. For exam-
ple, the Bridgetown Agenda, promoted at the
recent climate COP27, called for $500 billion in IMF
Special Drawing Rights to be used to attract private
investment in resilience for low-income countries at
the frontlines of the climate crisis.45 Ultimately, all
such changes to current financial flows would pre-
vent even greater future costs in the form of crisis
response, economic disruption, and loss of life.

CONCLUSION
The first years of this decade exposed the many
vulnerabilities of our food systems, which employ
2 billion people and sustain and nourish all of
the world’s 8 billion people.46 Food systems are
not only susceptible to increasingly complex and
compounding shocks, but are also closely inter-
twined with other essential systems — climate and
environmental services, trade and the economy,
infrastructure, governance, healthcare, and social
protection. Failures within these systems can cause
crises in our food systems, and in turn, weaknesses
in our food systems can drive environmental degra-
dation, conflict, economic disruptions, and poverty
and inequity.
Using food systems to build a more proactive
response to disaster — one that is anticipatory, flex-
ible, and inclusive — can produce multiple benefits
for food and nutrition security, poverty, liveli-
hoods, equality, and political stability. The process
of building and improving crisis responses should
be rooted in high-quality evidence: robust data,
state-of-the-art tools, and policy analyses and sce-
narios developed by research organizations and
networks like IFPRI and CGIAR. This evidence
can help policymakers, donors, the international

18  Rethinking Responses to Food Crise


Now is an opportune
moment to rethink our
approach to food crisis
responses by building on
existing innovations and
exploring new solutions.
CHAPTER 2

Food Crisis Risk Monitoring


Early Warning for Early Action
ROB VOS, ARIF HUSAIN, FRIEDERIKE GREB,
PETER LÄDERACH, AND BRENDAN RICE

Rob Vos is director, Markets, Trade, and Institutions Unit, International Food Policy
Research Institute (IFPRI). Arif Husain is chief economist and director of Research,
Assessment and Monitoring, World Food Programme. Friederike Greb is an economist,
Research, Assessment and Monitoring, World Food Programme. Peter Läderach is
CGIAR co-lead for climate security, The Alliance of Bioversity and CIAT. Brendan Rice is a
research analyst, Markets, Trade, and Institutions Unit, IFPRI.

KEY MESSAGES To increase the effectiveness of early warning systems, it is important to:

■ Early-warning, early-action systems provide alerts of potential food ■ Expand the country coverage and frequency of consensus-based acute
crises — identified as sudden and substantial increases in acute food food insecurity analysis.
insecurity — as well as guidance to policymakers and international
■ Revise the protocol for declaration of a famine to ensure it is operational
development agencies about needs for humanitarian action.
in conflict-affected locations.
■ Use of different methodologies and varying coverage of vulnerable
■ Better integrate the various types of early warning systems for food
populations mean different early warning systems for acute food inse-
crises through much stronger collaborative efforts across responsible
curity can yield dissimilar estimates of the severity of food crises.
international organizations, with support from the research commu-
■ Local food security monitoring systems are poorly connected to sys- nity and in consultation with policymakers, development agencies, and
tems that track global food and agriculture market trends. Monitoring local actors.
of acute food insecurity and chronic food insecurity are poorly inte-
■ Improve monitoring of risk factors and structural causes of crises to sup-
grated at the country level. This leads to differing interpretations of the
port the development of real-time early warning systems that are able
nature and magnitude of food crises.
to anticipate and potentially help prevent food crises through timely
■ Existing systems pay insufficient attention to structural vulnerabilities and well-targeted responses.
that determine how different shocks, including global price shocks,
■ Strengthen analysis of factors driving crises in particular places —
affect food insecurity in particular contexts and compound other causes
including global supply and price shocks, how these are transmitted
of acute food insecurity, such as poverty, conflict, and climate change.
to local contexts, what structural vulnerabilities increase or mitigate
■ Famines are the catastrophic expression of severe food crises. Today’s their impact, and how they affect acute and chronic food insecurity — to
famine-like contexts are mostly driven by conflict. Conflict typically inform long-term responses that build resilience and reduce the risk of
impedes the data collection required by existing protocols for declaring food crises.
famine, which can delay humanitarian action, at the expense of a pre-
ventable human toll.

20  Early Warning for Early Actio


G
lobal and national agrifood systems are vul- (WFP), which considers more countries, suggest that
nerable to a variety of shocks that have caused as many as 349 million people in 79 countries faced
major disruptions to food production, mar- acute food insecurity in 2022.1
kets, and livelihoods over the past two decades, This rapid rise in food insecurity has placed
and have set back efforts to reduce poverty, food tremendous pressure on governments and human-
insecurity, and malnutrition. Currently, the world itarian and development partners to respond,
is contending with the global repercussions of the despite limited financial resources. These actors
Russia-Ukraine war. In many countries, the impact are also hindered by insufficient information
of the war is compounded by local conflict, weather needed for prioritizing policies, investments, and
shocks, lingering effects of COVID-19, macro- other interventions and for balancing responses to
economic instability, and weak coping capacity. immediate impacts with investments in longer-term
These concurrent crises have led to a sharp rise in resilience. Governments and international agen-
both acute and chronic food insecurity since 2017, cies increasingly need more effective early warning
especially in developing countries. According to systems that provide timely and accurate pro-
estimates from the United Nations agencies, chronic jections to inform policies for immediate and
food insecurity — measured as the number of people longer-term responses.
with prolonged insufficient food energy intake — Multiple early warning systems exist to monitor
rose from around 573 million in 2017 to as many as food crisis risks. Among those that directly monitor
828 million in 2021 (Figure 1A). Acute food insecu- acute food insecurity, there is considerable overlap
rity — measured as food deficiency affecting lives at and sometimes seemingly conflicting information
any given point in time — almost doubled between because of differences in methods, population
2016 and 2022, from 108 million people in 2016 coverage, and frequency of data collection. Other
to 205 million in 2022 in 45 food crisis countries warning systems focus on global food and agricul-
(Figure 1B). Estimates of the World Food Programme tural market trends, providing useful information

Food Crisis Risk Monitoring  21


Figure 1 Chronic hunger and acute food insecurity

A. PEOPLE FACING CHRONIC HUNGER, 2000–2021

People suffering hunger (millions) Prevalence of undernourishment (PoU) (%)

900 14%

800
12%

700
10%
600

500 8%
Millions

400 6%

300
4%
200

2%
100

0 0%
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021

B. PEOPLE FACING CRISIS-LEVEL OR WORSE


ACUTE FOOD INSECURITY, 2016–2022

250

200

150
Millions

100
Source: For Figure 1A, FAO, IFAD, UNICEF, WFP, and WHO, The
State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World 2022 (Rome: FAO,
2022); For Figure 1B, FSIN and GNAFC, 2022 Global Report on Food
50 Crises: Joint Analysis for Better Decisions (Rome: 2022); and FSIN
and GNAFC, 2022 Global Report on Food Crises: Mid-Year Update
(Rome: 2022).

Note: In Figure 1A, numbers for 2020 and 2021 indicate the pro-
0
2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022P jected range. In Figure 1B, number for 2022 is projected.

22  Early Warning for Early Actio


Box 1 DEFINING FOOD INSECURITY

Food insecurity is broadly defined as the lack of secure access to sufficient safe and nutritious food needed for normal human growth and
development and for an active and healthy life.1

Chronic food insecurity describes a situation where people are unable to meet their minimum food requirements (usually defined as
minimum intake of calories) over a sustained period of time — usually over the course of a year or longer. Chronic food deprivation is most
closely associated with “hunger,” that is, the prevalence of undernourishment, as monitored by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the
United Nations (FAO) and other international organizations.2

Acute food insecurity is defined as any manifestation of food insecurity at a specific point in time of a severity that threatens lives, livelihoods,
or both, regardless of the causes, context, or duration.3 Acute food insecurity is highly susceptible to change and can manifest in a population
within a short amount of time, as a result of sudden changes or shocks that affect determinants of food insecurity and malnutrition.4 Acute
food insecurity can be transitory, in the sense that it reflects a short-term or temporary inability to meet food consumption requirements
related to sporadic crises, which suggests a capacity to recover. However, situations of severe acute food insecurity often emerge in contexts
where widespread chronic food insecurity already exists and where affected people have little to no capacity to recover without assistance.

about risks to (global) food availability and afford- EARLY WARNING SYSTEMS
ability, but do not directly link to national and
localized food security risks. Better integration of Food security is a growing global concern demand-
these types of early warning systems and expanded ing policy solutions. A “food crisis” is generally
capacity for data collection and analysis of complex identified when rates of acute food insecurity surge
drivers of food insecurity are needed to inform pol- at the local, national, or global level (Box 1).2 Of the
icies and rapid action to reduce the impact of, or 45 countries and territories covered in the most
even prevent, food crises. recent Global Report on Food Crises, 10 reported
This chapter provides an overview of the main that the number of people facing acute food insecu-
early-warning, early-action (EWEA) systems now in rity increased by more than 50 percent during 2022,
place for identifying food crisis risks and inform- owing to escalating food prices, weather extremes,
ing responses. We describe what works, as well as and conflict or insecurity (Figure 1B).3 For exam-
the shortcomings of present systems. The chapter ple, at present, a compound crisis is unfolding in the
then discusses how better integration of currently Horn of Africa, where an unprecedented multisea-
disjointed food crisis monitoring and analysis mech- son drought that began in late 2020, combined with
anisms could create a more effective, real-time conflict, displacement, and macroeconomic shocks,
monitoring mechanism for identifying and under- has put the region on the brink of famine.
standing global and national threats to food security. Increases in global food prices can be an import-
This would allow not only swift palliative action ant driver of food insecurity, though the impacts
but — importantly — could also inform the design of are mediated by local conditions and vulnerabili-
preventative and preemptive responses that create ties. Food prices surged in 2021 as markets faced
resilient food systems and livelihoods and reduce supply bottlenecks during the COVID-19 recovery
food crisis risks. As such, it would overcome the costly and spiked further in the first half of 2022 as a con-
drawbacks of traditional approaches that limit early sequence of the Russia-Ukraine war.4 Countries
action to humanitarian assistance, which saves lives already facing protracted food crises before the
but does not address the structural vulnerabilities that pandemic and the war have been hardest hit by the
may contribute to the recurrence of food crises and to recent surge in food prices (see Chapter 1, Box 1).
the protracted nature of many food crisis situations. Populations in all 45 crisis contexts saw the cost of a

Food Crisis Risk Monitoring  23


Figure 2 Share of analyzed populations in crisis-level or worse acute food insecurity in 45 countries/territories, 2022

Percentage of the analyzed populations (ranges) in Crisis or worse (IPC/CH Phase 3 or above) or equivalent
<5% 10–24.99% ≥50% Country not selected for analysis
5–9.99% 25–49.99% No 2022 data Indicates migrants/refugee populations
(color coding as shown in key)

Source: Reproduced from FSIN and GNAFC, 2022 Global Report on Food Crises: Mid-Year Update (Rome: 2022).

basic food basket increase by at least 10 percent by food crisis — when the IMF opened its Food Shock
April–June 2022 (up from the five-year average), but Window only after food prices had been falling
people in Ethiopia, Haiti, Sierra Leone, South Sudan, for more than four months. Consequently, govern-
Sudan, Syria, Yemen, and Zimbabwe faced annual- ments of food crisis countries have little scope to
ized food cost increases of more than 75 percent.5 expand social protection or other support to vulner-
Many are also suffering high general price inflation able populations. Protracted civil strife and weather
(driven by the cost of energy and other basic needs), shocks have compounded economic woes in many
further eroding their purchasing power. of these countries, such that the total number of
Most food crisis countries are highly depen- people facing acute food insecurity at crisis level or
dent on food imports and have little capacity to worse (Box 2) in 45 food crisis countries increased
insulate their populations from imported food infla- from 155 million in 2020 to 205 million by mid-2022.6
tion, given their low foreign currency reserves, high In Afghanistan, South Sudan, Somalia, Yemen, and
public debt burdens, and/or depreciating national parts of the Democratic Republic of the Congo
currency. International support to address this con- (DRC), more than half of the analyzed populations
straint (such as through additional aid, debt relief, or at risk are considered to face acute food insecurity
improved access to contingency financing) is often or worse, and famine warnings have been issued for
overlooked as a necessary companion to food assis- Somalia and Yemen (Figure 2).
tance. Even if this support comes, it typically arrives We focus here on two main types of early warn-
late and is inadequate, as we saw during the 2022 ing systems: acute food insecurity early warning

24  Early Warning for Early Actio


Figure 3 Agricultural market and food insecurity early warning systems by type and frequency of information
Agricultural information systems
Real time Mixed information systems Food security information and early warning systems

FSP1
FSP2 VAM1

FSP3
Frequency of information

FAS
VAM 3
AMIS FSP4
Monthly

GIEWS
GEOGLAM,
CropWatch VAM2 IPC/CH

FAOSTAT
FEWSNET
Infrequent

Agricultural Mixture Food security

Type of information

Source: Table A.1 (end of this chapter) and N. Haan, M. Van Dijk, and W. Rossi Cervi, Food Security and Agriculture Information Systems
Landscape Analysis (London: CASA and UK Aid for the Foreign Commonwealth & Development Office, 2021).

Note: FSP1, FSP2, FSP3, and FSP4 refer to, respectively, IFPRI’s Food Security Portal’s (1) commodity price and volatility monitoring system;
(2) trade and fertilizer restrictions trackers; (3) domestic food price tracker, and (4) vulnerability dashboard and food crisis risk monitoring panel.
VAM1, VAM2, and VAM3 refer to, respectively, WFP’s (1) VAM/HungerMap LIVE and nowcasting tool; (2) CARI; and (3) Market Monitor.

systems, which directly estimate degrees of food in local contexts. These systems have been use-
insecurity; and agricultural market information early ful in identifying the need for food assistance and
warning systems, which focus on supply and mar- other humanitarian and development aid to stave
ket conditions that could endanger food security. off the worst consequences of food crises. The
In addition, we indicate how these systems relate to Integrated Food Security Phase Classification/
the monitoring of chronic food insecurity. Figure 3 Cadre Harmonisé (IPC/CH), often referred to as
(and Table A.1 at the end of the chapter) charts the the gold standard for classifying degrees of food
most important early warning systems by type of insecurity,7 uses a five-phase scale, with Phase
information provided (food insecurity or agricul- 3 considered “crisis level,” where emergency
tural markets) and frequency of monitoring (annual, food assistance is needed; Phase 4 is desig-
weekly, or daily). We discuss these below. nated “emergency,” with urgent action needed
to save lives; and Phase 5 identifies a “catastro-
ACUTE FOOD INSECURITY EARLY WARNING phe,” or famine (Box 2). The USAID-supported
MECHANISMS Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS
Existing EWEA systems, developed and run NET) incorporates IPC/CH indicators in its
by several international agencies, humanitar- forward-looking analyses of populations at risk of
ian organizations, and governments, have been acute food insecurity.
instrumental in monitoring acute food insecu- The warning systems that monitor current food
rity as well as the drivers of food insecurity spikes insecurity conditions in countries identified as

Food Crisis Risk Monitoring  25


Box 2 THE INTEGRATED FOOD SECURITY PHASE CLASSIFICATION (IPC):
CONSENSUS-BASED IDENTIFICATION OF FOOD CRISES

IPC sets a common standard and shared language for classifying the severity of acute food crisis situations using a five-phase scale, and
provides information on the number of people affected and on the drivers of food insecurity.1 IPC classifications at the country level are
based on a convergence of evidence, which works from the premise that various unrelated sources and types of data can “converge” toward
strong conclusions. The Cadre Harmonisé (CH) is the IPC-compatible measure applied to food security conditions in West Africa. We refer to
IPC/CH as one entity in this chapter. The table describes the five phases of acute food insecurity and the type of priority action expected from
governments and the international community for each situation.

IPC/CH acute food insecurity phase description and priority response objectives

Phase Phase description and priority response objectives

Phase 1 Households are able to meet essential food and nonfood needs without engaging in atyp-
None/Minimal ical and unsustainable strategies to access food and income. Action required to build resil-
ience and for disaster risk reduction.

Phase 2 Households have minimally adequate food consumption but are unable to afford some
Stressed essential non-food expenditures without engaging in stress-coping strategies. Action
required for disaster risk reduction and to protect livelihoods.

Phase 3 Households either have food consumption gaps that are reflected by high or above-usual
Crisis acute malnutrition, or are marginally able to meet minimum food needs but only by deplet-
ing essential livelihood assets or through crisis-coping strategies. Urgent action required
to protect livelihoods and reduce food consumption gaps.

Phase 4 Households either have large food consumption gaps that are reflected in very high acute
Emergency malnutrition and excess mortality, or are able to mitigate large food consumption gaps but
only by employing emergency livelihood strategies and asset liquidation. Urgent action
required to save lives and livelihoods.

Phase 5 Households have an extreme lack of food and/or other basic needs even after full employ-
Catastrophe/Famine ment of coping strategies. Starvation, death, destitution, and extremely critical acute mal-
nutrition levels are evident. (For Famine classification, area needs to have extreme critical
levels of acute malnutrition and mortality). Urgent action required to revert/prevent wide-
spread death and total collapse of livelihoods.

Source: Reproduced from FSIN and GNAFC, 2022 Global Report on Food Crises: Joint Analysis for Better Decisions (Rome: 2022).

at-risk — including IPC/CH and FEWS NET — typ- about acute food insecurity situations and reports
ically provide only annual or, at best, quarterly its assessments in the semi-annual Global Report
assessments, which international aid agencies on Food Crises. The GNAFC, which brings together
consider too infrequent to adequately address multiple donors and international and regional
acute situations. Both mechanisms rely on com- organizations, uses the report’s findings to priori-
binations of primary and secondary information tize places for assistance.
sources to identify vulnerable populations accord- While the various acute food insecurity early
ing to the IPC/CH classification system. The Food warning systems are similar, they take different
Security Information Network (FSIN) and the Global approaches to generating alerts. IPC/CH looks
Network Against Food Crises (GNAFC) are import- at the current acute food insecurity situation
ant users of these monitoring mechanisms. FSIN and then projects improvement or deteriora-
integrates data from IPC/CH, FEWS NET, WFP, tion based on evidence and consensus of expert
and other sources to reach interagency consensus opinion convened at the country level (including

26  Early Warning for Early Actio


key stakeholders from national governments, the IPC/CH and VAM1, the Food and Agriculture
United Nations, and nongovernmental agencies).8 Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and WFP
FEWS NET projects how risk factors — such as also issue joint early warnings on acute food inse-
rainfall, price changes, conflict, and harvest pros- curity through quarterly identification of “hunger
pects — are likely to affect the extent and severity hotspots,” with country-specific recommendations
of acute food insecurity in the near term, typically for anticipatory action and emergency response.12
an eight-month period.9 FEWS NET’s analysis fur- These early warnings are based on projections of
ther differs from IPC’s in that it does not include a populations at risk, considering the presence of
consensus-based process. natural hazards, conflict, displacements of peo-
The Vulnerability Analysis and Mapping ple, and economic shocks that are likely to drive
(VAM) instrument, which includes Food Security acute food insecurity to crisis levels or worse. In
Assessments, a Market Monitor, and a Seasonal the projections for October 2022 to January 2023
Explorer, is a central element of WFP’s early (issued in September 2022), FAO and WFP iden-
warning mechanism. The VAM brings together tified 19 hunger hotspots with 195.5 million
assessments of household-level food security con- people projected to be at risk of seriously wors-
ditions, local and global market trends in food ening acute food insecurity. Of greatest concern
supply and prices, harvest prospects, and food are Afghanistan, Ethiopia, Nigeria, Somalia, South
security risks associated with geopolitical and eco- Sudan, and Yemen, where some vulnerable pop-
nomic shocks (VAM1 in Figure 3). The system now ulations are already in or projected to suffer
also experiments with mobile technology, artificial famine-like conditions.
intelligence, and data analytics to facilitate near The hunger hotspot mechanism is a good exam-
real-time food security monitoring across countries, ple of existing interagency collaboration in early
accessible through the HungerMap LIVE.10 warning systems for acute food insecurity and
Like FEWS NET, WFP’s monitoring mechanisms could provide a way forward for avoiding over-
combine geospatial, economic, and household lap and duplication. Similar collaborative efforts
data to analyze food security in the organization’s are also needed to better align the monitoring of
80 countries of operation. For its acute food inse- acute and chronic food insecurity — which is import-
curity assessments, WFP uses its Consolidated ant for avoiding confusion about the two concepts
Approach for Reporting Indicators of Food Security and thus about the magnitude of food insecurity
(CARI, referred to as VAM2 in Figure 3), which problems — and to support alignment of humani-
combines food consumption scores, economic tarian and development action in the fight against
capacity indicators, and data on livelihood cop- hunger. Currently, mechanisms for monitoring
ing strategies to generate snapshots (“nowcasts”) chronic food insecurity are disconnected from the
of existing acute food insecurity.11 Nowcasts are early warning mechanisms for acute food insecu-
used to identify the need for emergency interven- rity. Standard indicators of chronic food insecurity
tions, including where and how food assistance are the prevalence of undernourishment (PoU) and
is needed. WFP’s assessments are used as inputs severe and moderate food insecurity as measured
to the acute food insecurity estimates of all the through the Food Insecurity Experience Scale
countries covered by IPC/CH, but also cover many (FIES).13 As indicated in Figure 1, many more people
more food insecurity contexts. As a result, WFP’s face chronic shortage of adequate food intake than
global estimate for the number of people facing face acute food insecurity. At present, these esti-
crisis-level or worse acute food insecurity is much mates of chronic food insecurity are not suitable for
higher, 349 million in 79 countries in 2022 com- early warning purposes as they are available only
pared with 205 million in 45 countries identified in with a time lag of a year and only include national
the Global Report. aggregates and averages (for this reason, they are
WFP’s assessments feed into its internal cor- not included in Figure 3). Moreover, conceptually,
porate alert system to trigger early responses. the undernourishment and FIES indicators differ
At the same time, drawing on information from starkly from those for acute food insecurity. These

Food Crisis Risk Monitoring  27


fundamental differences hamper any analysis of the traffic-light system that is updated daily (see page on
extent to which the risk factors linked with acute IFPRI monitoring tools following this chapter). This
food insecurity and those linked with chronic condi- warning system has provided early signals of market
tions coincide, and thus, also hinder the alignment tightness and of the impacts of export restrictions
of humanitarian and development efforts. on global market prices (see Chapter 4). Several
additional tools and dashboards have recently
AGRICULTURAL MARKET EARLY WARNING SYSTEMS been added to the Portal, most notably a Food
Agricultural market early warning systems moni- and Fertilizer Export Restrictions Tracker (FSP2),
tor market trends, such as global price and supply a Fertilizer Market Dashboard, a Domestic Food
shocks, that affect the stability of food availability Price Monitor (FSP3), and a Vulnerability Analysis
and affordability. In many countries, the agriculture tool (FSP4). These were developed in response to
sector is a key driver of food security, as it is both the series of recent food system shocks caused by
the main supplier of food and a critical source of COVID-19, multiple climate-related disasters, and
income. Adverse shocks to food supplies — caused the Russia-Ukraine war.
by weather calamities such as droughts, fluctua- Other agricultural market early warning mecha-
tions in global and local food prices, policies such nisms with long data series include the information
as export restrictions, or other problems — can have on international and national agricultural markets
significant impacts on food security in vulnerable and policies provided by the U.S. Department of
regions. Unlike most acute food insecurity early Agriculture’s Foreign Agricultural Service (FAS) and
warning systems discussed above, several of these the International Grains Council’s monitoring of
information systems use high-frequency or near grains, rice, and oilseeds market conditions, includ-
real-time data to provide alerts of the risk of supply ing daily publication of its Grains and Oilseeds
and price shocks (Figure 3). Index. FAO provides regular updates on market
Several of these mechanisms were developed conditions for internationally traded agricultural
in the wake of the 2007/08 food price crisis. The commodities, including through its monthly Food
most notable is the Agricultural Market Information Price Index, and on domestic food market condi-
System (AMIS), an interagency platform launched tions and dependence on food imports through
in 2011 by the G20 Ministers of Agriculture.14 AMIS its Global Information and Early Warning System
provides monthly assessments of global food sup- on Food and Agriculture (GIEWS). The GIEWS con-
plies and identifies needs for coordinated policy tinuously monitors food supply, demand, prices,
action (such as avoiding export bans or manag- and other key indicators at global and national
ing food reserves) in times of market uncertainty. levels and provides basic information for the
The GEOGLAM Crop Monitor, a related mecha- pre-identification of (potential) food crisis countries
nism, is an international effort to provide open covered by IPC/CH and the Global Report.
and timely remote-sensing information on global
crop-growing conditions and agroclimatic factors, GAPS AND SHORTCOMINGS
both for major food import and export regions and While both types of warning systems provide vital
for countries where food security is at risk.15 Similar information, better integration among these exist-
global information services are also provided by, ing systems, addressing key data and analytic gaps,
for instance, CropWatch of the Chinese Academy of and a redefinition of famine criteria would boost
Sciences, which also feeds into GEOGLAM’s early their usefulness for humanitarian and develop-
warning system.16 ment responses.
IFPRI’s Food Security Portal is another import-
ant platform developed in response to the 2007/08 NEED FOR INTEGRATION
crisis. The Portal tracks food price volatility in inter- Insufficient integration of existing agricultural
national markets, and its Excessive Food Price early warning systems with the acute food insecu-
Variability Early Warning System (FSP1 in Figure 3) rity warning systems is a critical shortcoming. Joint
provides alerts of above-normal volatility through a FAO/WFP Crop and Food Security Assessment

28  Early Warning for Early Actio


Box 3 GLOBAL FOOD PRICE SPIKES AND FOOD CRISES

The global food price spike of 2007/08 caught major development donors by surprise. As prices spiraled upward, the
uniform response from donors was to provide more food assistance. Donors also recognized that underinvestment in R&D
in prior decades had contributed to slow productivity growth and price spikes, and they committed to increasing funding for
agricultural research. Despite this commitment, global food prices spiked again during 2010/11. However, the focus on global
price shocks left donors blind to the 2011 famine in Somalia — which was driven by conflict and repeated drought, and cost the
lives of a quarter of a million people before adequate emergency aid arrived.
The international price surges of 2007/08 and 2010/11 have often been referred to as “global food crises.” This jump
to identify a food crisis reflects a common presumption that higher prices in world markets are directly transmitted to
domestic markets, raising domestic prices and eroding food access for vulnerable households. However, such price
transmission is mediated by many factors, meaning that a spike in global food prices may not be adequate grounds for
identifying a food crisis.
Will this time be different? When the Russia-Ukraine war began, food and fertilizer prices spiked in international markets
during February–May of 2022. Many observers saw this as a “global food crisis,” and most of the response so far has focused
on increasing humanitarian assistance. Yet, the impacts of COVID-19 and the war in Ukraine on global food markets have
highlighted the diverse vulnerabilities of food supply chains and other factors contributing to inadequate resilience of
vulnerable populations. Better monitoring and understanding of those risks and how they can drive up food insecurity and
hunger should be a priority for improving early warning systems.

Missions, which analyze countries’ agricultural pro- Conflict and food insecurity. Conflict is known
duction alongside household food security, and to be a primary driver of acute food insecurity (and
the link between the FAO’s GIEWS and IPC/CH identified as such in the main EWEAs for acute food
are among the few examples of connection points insecurity), and growing evidence on the two-way
between these two types of early warning sys- causal relationship between conflict and food inse-
tems. Also, WFP’s VAM/Hunger Map LIVE, IPC/CH, curity is becoming available.17 But major research
and FEWS NET draw on data from the agricultural gaps remain, particularly in fragile contexts and sit-
market warning systems. At present, however, uations of extreme food insecurity (see Chapter 7).
these links remain weak. AMIS, for instance, only Conflict is inherently a complex and politically sen-
monitors staple food price trends in global mar- sitive phenomenon, and studying food security in
kets and does not provide alerts regarding how conflict situations is difficult. Yet, understanding
(potential) shocks may be transmitted to domes- how conflict and food security interact is vital for
tic food prices at the consumer level (such as analyzing and forecasting future food security sce-
those for flour and bread) to signal food security narios, as well as for conflict mediation, which is an
risks. This disconnect may underlie the mistaken essential part of comprehensive intervention strat-
tendency to immediately interpret global supply egies. Lack of clear insight into how climate change
or price shocks as a “food crisis” (Box 3), with- heightens the risk of conflict increases this chal-
out examining how local contexts may moderate lenge. CGIAR’s Climate Security Observatory and
their impacts. Climate Security Dialogues dashboard could be
instrumental in helping to fill this void and strength-
GAPS IN DATA AND ANALYSIS ening the analysis of drivers of acute food insecurity
At least four critical gaps in the data and anal- as undertaken, for instance, for FAO and WFP’s
ysis used by early warning systems need to hunger hotspot assessments.
be addressed.

Food Crisis Risk Monitoring  29


Livestock and fisheries production and mar- trigger early action, most importantly where there
kets. Existing early warning systems include almost is a risk of famine. However, the present proto-
no indicators to monitor conditions in livestock col for declaring famine is no longer sufficiently
and fisheries production and markets. These are operational in current contexts. The existing
important to the livelihoods of many poor and food IPC protocol is designed to gather information
insecure people, as well as increasingly important in slow-onset emergencies, such as prolonged
components of diets. drought. However, in many of today’s food emer-
gencies, conflict is the major driver pushing
Transmission of global agricultual market people to the brink of starvation. In these con-
shocks. Understanding remains limited of how, flict contexts, information to determine whether
and to what degree, these shocks are transmitted there is famine must be collected within just a
to domestic food supplies and prices, and how this few hours at most. A revision of famine criteria is
affects the food security of vulnerable populations needed to allow for a consensus-based judgment
(Box 3). The transmission of global shocks var- call without time-consuming collection of detailed
ies greatly across countries and commodities and, survey data.
hence, responses cannot be enacted with a broad
brush. For example, a recent IFPRI study shows that
ACHIEVING REAL-TIME MONITORING
the supply shock to global wheat markets from the
OF RISKS AND VULNERABILITIES
Russia-Ukraine war was only very partially and grad-
ually reflected in domestic price surges in most While the current suite of early warning systems
countries, though the impact was dramatic in some provides valuable food insecurity projections,
(see Chapter 1, Box 1).18 Such analyses of shock addressing the shortcomings could improve pre-
transmission from the global to the more local con- dictions and make them more useful for early
text should be part of agricultural market early action. How do we get there?
warning systems and should facilitate linkages with First, a stronger, clearer analytical framework
food insecurity warning systems. for weighing the various risks and assump-
tions that go into short-term forecasts of both
Consistency in estimates of acute food inse- agricultural market conditions and acute food
curity. As mentioned, the existence of different insecurity would improve the quality of predic-
estimates of the global number of acutely food tions. Assumptions about how current conditions
insecure people is a source of confusion, reducing may relate to risk of future food crises should
the credibility of the numbers and making it harder be analyzed systematically. By focusing on risk
to communicate the magnitude of the world’s hun- factors, vulnerabilities, and resilience, such a
ger problems — ultimately slowing responses. framework would better inform responses that
Country coverage is the main reason underly- address both immediate needs (acute food inse-
ing the difference between the global estimates curity) and structural conditions that determine
for crisis-level acute food insecurity of the Global vulnerabilities and coping capacity.
Report (205 million in 2022) and WFP (349 million). Second, for these early warning systems to
Hence, while costly in terms of information gather- support early action that builds resilience before
ing, expanding coverage of the consensus-based a potential crisis occurs or a current food crisis
IPC/CH analyses to all of the nearly 80 commonly intensifies, future food security outcomes must
recognized food-crisis countries would lead to a be estimated many months in advance to give
convergence in country coverage and consistency decision-makers time to plan interventions (see
in estimates of acute food insecurity. Chapter 3). The need for early alerts, along with the
complexity of the factors shaping food security out-
AN ACTIONABLE DEFINITION OF FAMINE comes, complicates the work of projecting food
A shared understanding of the situation on the crisis risk to inform early action. Most current sys-
ground is essential for an early warning system to tems are not equipped for this, though FEWS NET

30  Early Warning for Early Actio


and WFP’s VAM have taken important steps toward HungerMap LIVE. Real-time monitoring through
forward-looking estimation of acute food insecurity daily interviews with local informants conducted by
based on risk analysis.19 call centers is active in 40 countries and comple-
Third, models should be developed for more mented by predictive modeling that identifies food
integrated, quantitative EWEA systems. Some crisis risks for another 53 countries. The modeling
efforts in this direction are already being made. uses acute food insecurity data as well as other rel-
The World Bank’s Famine Action Mechanism (FAM) evant indicators, such as a rainfall–vegetation index,
was set up in partnership with IPC/CH and FEWS conflict reports, market prices, macroeconomic sta-
NET, as well as other organizations, to scale up bility indicators, and nighttime light intensity (an
anticipatory (preventative) and early emergency indicator of economic development).25 The near
action for emerging food crises. The FAM has real-time nowcasts of the HungerMap build on
explored statistical analysis and machine learn- machine-learning algorithms to yield information
ing to help predict crises and inform responses to monitor key drivers of food security risks and to
through a new financing modality (Crisis Response make short-term forecasts of populations at risk of
Window Early Response Financing, under IDA acute food insecurity. Compared with traditional
19).20 Although this initiative’s approach to predict- information systems, real-time information makes
ing crises in real time shows promise for the use it possible to identify deterioration in food security
of forecasting technology, it has not yet produced much more quickly, enhancing the early warning
results that could credibly underpin early action. systems needed for anticipatory action and emer-
Nonetheless, the FAM has used the framework to gency response. Various research centers are
inform country-level consultations in Afghanistan, engaging in similar efforts,26 but these either focus
Chad, Somalia, South Sudan, and Yemen that only on a subset of risk factors or are as yet far from
aimed to identify anticipatory and early action pro- operational for use as part of EWEA systems. Much
gramming. These consultations led to Somalia’s more work is needed to improve and tailor these
shock-responsive safety net,21 but unfortunately, efforts to support effective EWEA mechanisms that
this response did not prevent a renewed famine can inform concerted responses and align actions
warning from being issued for large parts of the along the humanitarian-development nexus.
country in 2022.
The FAM shares features with risk-contingent
CONCLUSION
credit lines, like the World Bank’s Catastrophe
Deferred Drawdown Option,22 and “forecast-based There is simply not enough funding available to
finance” (FbF)23 schemes that are being imple- address the increasing number of crises and bene-
mented by some disaster relief and humanitarian ficiaries already in need, and the deepening climate
assistance agencies, including WFP, to anticipate crisis will widen this funding gap. If interventions
disasters and prepare for action.24 These schemes instead remain focused on emergency relief, the
support EWEA decision-making and trigger access world will have to provide more and more assis-
to humanitarian funding for early action based on tance with every lean season. Better EWEA systems
in-depth forecast information and risk analysis. would allow governments and international
Under an FbF plan, participating agencies agree in agencies to tackle food crises earlier and more
advance on the allocation of financial resources for effectively, and to reorient interventions toward
early action, as well on the specific forecast thresh- resilience building.
old that will trigger release of those resources, and More work is needed to integrate — or at least
roles and responsibilities of everyone involved (see to better explain — the different approaches and
Chapter 3). FbF schemes are often deployed in methodologies currently used by EWEAs to iden-
well-defined fragile settings, for predefined bene- tify acute food insecurity, monitor chronic food
ficiaries and geographies. WFP’s FbF scheme and insecurity, and incorporate the key information
other early action responses by governments and provided by agricultural market warning systems.
humanitarian aid agencies are informed by the More intensive cooperation between existing

Food Crisis Risk Monitoring  31


platforms, such as AMIS, on the one hand, and enhanced to include real-time monitoring of key
FSIN and GNAFC, on the other, will be needed to risk factors and vulnerabilities that affect food
move forward. The importance of adequate agri- access in rapidly changing global and national con-
cultural market information and food security texts, along with analyses of how those risk factors
monitoring mechanisms has been repeatedly reit- and vulnerabilities increase the likelihood of food
erated by multiple global platforms and gained crisis situations. Most importantly, they must inform
prominence with the 2022 global food crisis, as policy recommendations for buffering the most
reflected in the 2022 G20 Leaders’ Declaration harmful impacts of those shocks in the short run
and the initiative of the G7 Development Ministers and for building sustainable resilience for the long
for a Global Alliance for Food Security.27 This inter- term. The chapters that follow explore both the
nationally concerted support is essential but will types of early action that early warning systems can
be most effective if it drives the improvement and facilitate and short- and long-term policy responses
integration of existing mechanisms rather than that can reduce the frequency and impact of
creating new ones. food crises.
To effectively and efficiently support responses
to food crises, early warning systems must be

Table A1 Description of early warning and other relevant monitoring systems

Name Organization Description Link

IPC/CH — Integrated Food and Agricul- The IPC provides decision-makers with core estimates of http://www.ipcinfo.org/
Phase Classification/ ture Organization severity and magnitude of acute and chronic food insecurity
Cadre Harmonisé (FAO), World Food and malnutrition using evidence and consensus-based
Programme (WFP), analysis to inform emergency responses as well as medium-
and multiple and long-term policy and programming.
partners

FEWS NET — Famine U.S. Agency for FEWS NET provides unbiased, evidence-based analysis to https://fews.net/
Early Warning System International governments and relief agencies that plan for and respond to
Network Development humanitarian crises. Its analyses also support resilience and
(USAID) development programming. FEWS NET posts monthly reports
on several dozen countries, primarily in sub-Saharan Africa.

VAM1 — Vulnerability WFP VAM1 provides vulnerability data for food security analysis and https://dataviz.vam.wfp.org/
Analyses and Mapping monitoring and real-time “nowcasting” of food security situations
https://hungermap.wfp.org/
and Hunger Map LIVE in more than 80 countries to inform WFP planning and resourcing.

VAM2/CARI — WFP WFP’s CARI provides “snapshots” of acute food insecurity https://www.wfp.org/publications/
Consolidated Approach situations based on multiple indicators, including food consolidated-approach-reporting-
for Reporting Indicators consumption scores, food energy shortfall, poverty status, food indicators-food-security-cari-
of Food Security expenditure shares, and livelihood coping strategies. WFP uses guidelines
this information to identify need for emergency interventions.

VAM3 — WFP Global WFP WFP’s monthly Global Market Monitor provides information https://www.wfp.org/content/
Market Monitor on changes in the cost of basic food baskets, alerts for price market-monitor
spikes in local markets, and domestic inflation and currency
movements as well as an overview of global food commodity
price developments. Price information is publicly available
and covers more than 1,500 markets.

GIEWS — Global FAO GIEWS continuously monitors food supply, demand, prices, and http://www.fao.org/giews/en/
Information and Early other key indicators at global and national levels for assessing
Warning System the overall food security situation in most countries of the world.

32  Early Warning for Early Actio


Table A1 continued

Name Organization Description Link

FAOSTAT FAO FAOSTAT provides free access to food and agriculture data http://www.fao.org/faostat/
for more than 245 countries and territories and covers all FAO en/#home
regional groupings, from 1961 onward. It includes annual
crop production, agricultural trade, and food balance sheets,
among other data.

GEOGLAM — Crop GEOGLAM GEOGLAM provides open, timely information on crop conditions https://cropmonitor.org/
Monitor of the Group in support of market transparency for the G20 Agricultural Market
on Earth Observations Information System (AMIS) as well as an early warning system for
Agricultural Monitoring countries at risk of food production shortfalls.

CropWatch Chinese Academy CropWatch assesses national and global crop production and http://www.cropwatch.com.cn/htm/
of Science related information using remote sensing and ground-based en/index.shtml
indicators.

AMIS — Agricultural AMIS (multi- AMIS is an interagency platform, composed of G20 members http://www.amis-outlook.org/
Market Information agency, plus Spain and 7 additional major exporters and importers
System multi-country/ of agricultural commodities, to enhance food market
G20) transparency and policy responses for food market stability.

FAS — Foreign U.S. Department FAS links US agriculture to global agriculture and food supplies https://www.fas.usda.gov/
Agricultural Service of Agriculture information to enhance export opportunities and provide
(USDA) information about prospects for global food security.

FSP1 — Food Security IFPRI The FSP provides a real-time early warning system for price https://www.foodsecurityportal.org/
Portal (FSP) Excessive trends and price volatility in international markets for key tools/excessive-food-price-variability-
Food Price Variability agricultural commodities. International prices and the volatility early-warning-system
Index index are updated daily.

FSP2 — Food Security IFPRI The FSP provides daily updates of food and fertilizer trade https://www.foodsecurityportal.org/
Portal (FSP) Food restrictions, monthly updates of fertilizer prices and market tools/COVID-19-food-trade-policy-
and Fertilizer Trade conditions, and monthly updates of global supply and stocks tracker
Restrictions; Fertilizer of key staple foods.
https://www.foodsecurityportal.org/
Market; and Production
node/1947
and Stocks Trackers
https://www.foodsecurityportal.org/
node/1734

FSP3 — Food Security IFPRI The FSP provides a dashboard with trends in domestic https://www.foodsecurityportal.org/
Portal (FSP) Domestic food prices (aggregate and by main food items) with most node/2089
Food Price Monitor prices updated monthly. It also includes a dashboard to
track transmission of international price trends and other
determinants of domestic food price inflation.

FSP4 — Food IFPRI The FSP provides a dashboard identifying food insecurity https://www.foodsecurityportal.org/
Security Portal (FSP) hotspots and vulnerability to different types of global market tools/control-panel-for-risk-monitoring
Vulnerability Analysis shocks and other risk factors.
Dashboard

Food Crisis Risk Monitoring  33


TOOLS AND MODELS

I
FPRI has developed a wide set of tools to support early warning, analysis, and food crisis response. The Food Security
Portal provides access to databases and alert systems that monitor changes in agrifood markets, fertilizer markets,
agricultural production, and stocks as well as country-level vulnerability, and that track policy responses to crises.
IFPRI also supports analytic models that provide projections of crisis and policy impacts.

EARLY WARNING AND DATA TRACKING TOOLS

FOOD SECURITY PORTAL EXCESSIVE FOOD PRICE


Facilitated by IFPRI and supported VARIABILITY EARLY WARNING
by the European Commission, SYSTEM
the Portal provides food secu- Identifies high volatility in mar-
rity alerts and open access to kets, which can jeopardize food
country-level data, analytic tools, security, to alert farmers, traders,
and research products to help policymakers and processors, and policymakers of upcoming uncer-
other stakeholders respond to developments in the tainty in prices for staple crops.
world food system. The tools described here, along https://www.foodsecurityportal.org/tools/excessive-
with many others, are available through the Portal. food-price-variability-early-warning-system
https://www.foodsecurityportal.org/

EARLY WARNING HUB CONTROL PANEL FOR RISK


Brings together a number of major MONITORING
early warning systems from inter- Allows real-time monitoring of risk
national organizations, providing factors for food crises, including
information on the latest food data on conflict, COVID-19, crop
security alerts and situations on conditions, and climate-related
the ground. satellite data.
https://www.foodsecurityportal.org/tools/ https://www.foodsecurityportal.org/tools/control-
early-warning-hub panel-for-risk-monitoring
FOOD AND FERTILIZER EXPORT FERTILIZER MARKET
RESTRICTIONS TRACKER DASHBOARD
Tracks records country policies Provides several datasets to mon-
that restrict food exports and itor fertilizer markets including
chemical fertilizer exports that can the latest monthly prices of major
contribute to food insecurity, and fertilizers and natural gas — a key
their likely impact in terms of US dollar value and input in fertilizer production — and country profiles
kilocalories. of fertilizer trade and use.
https://www.foodsecurityportal.org/tools/COVID-19- https://www.foodsecurityportal.org/node/1947
food-trade-policy-tracker

PRICE SHOCK TOOL PRODUCTION AND STOCKS


Allows interactive exploration of MONITORING SYSTEM
the impact of commodity prices Provides data on four major com-
changes on poverty for a set of modities, covering production,
vulnerable countries. domestic consumption, ending
https://www.foodsecurityportal.org/ stocks, and stock-to-use ratios by
node/1627 country and across time, to monitor
vulnerability of world food markets.
https://www.foodsecurityportal.org/node/1734

MODELS

RIAPA IMPACT MODEL


IFPRI’s Rural Investment and To explore the long-term challenges
Policy Analysis (RIAPA) modeling policymakers face in sustainably
system offers forward-looking, reducing hunger and poverty, IFPRI
economywide country-level anal- developed the International Model
ysis that serves as a simulation for Policy Analysis of Agricultural
laboratory for different policies, investments, or Commodities and Trade (IMPACT) Model. IMPACT is a
economic shocks. RIAPA covers over 30 countries network of linked economic, water, and crop models,
and includes detailed representation of agrifood allowing it to account for environmental, biophysical,
systems that allows analysts to measure impacts to and socioeconomic trends in simulations of national
food systems, national economies, and global mar- and international agricultural markets. It covers 44
kets. A series of RIAPA analyses on the impact of commodities that make up nearly all of the world’s
the Russia-Ukraine war are found here: food production and consumption. Information on
https://www.ifpri.org/spotlight/food-prices-war- IMPACT and simulation results are found here:
ukraine https://www.ifpri.org/project/ifpri-impact-model
CHAPTER 3

Crisis Resilience
Humanitarian Response
and Anticipatory Action
SIKANDRA KURDI AND SANDRA RUCKSTUHL
Sikandra Kurdi is a research fellow, Development Strategies and Governance Unit,
International Food Policy Research Institute. Sandra Ruckstuhl is special advisor to the
director general and a senior researcher, International Water Management Institute.

KEY MESSAGES To improve the impact of humanitarian response and anticipatory action, it
is important to:
■ The vast majority of humanitarian response is activated after a cri-
sis occurs, delivering lifesaving aid, but at relatively high costs ■ Increase data collection and analysis, including impact assessments, of
and in a framework that prioritizes short-term solutions over humanitarian assistance and anticipatory action programs in different
long-term resilience. contexts, particularly in fragile and conflict-affected settings.

■ Better evidence can help align humanitarian aid delivery with ■ Develop anticipatory action frameworks that pre-identify vulnerabilities
medium- and long-term development strategies and with resil- and funding triggers, ensure regular data collection for risk monitoring,
ience building. define clear roles and responsibilities, and identify available financial
resources before crises hit.
■ In the anticipatory action approach, costly delays and suffering can be
avoided. Pre-allocating financial resources and preplanning responses ■ Assess the targeting of the humanitarian assistance to identify what
to be activated when a trigger level is reached in a risk-monitoring sys- groups are being missed and ensure their inclusion.
tem ensure efficient responses to crises.
■ Support interventions that reflect the humanitarian–development–
■ Beyond the narrow definition of anticipatory action as a preplanned peace nexus, such as nutrition-sensitive programming, use of local
emergency response, the broader conception of promoting resilience procurement, support for local institutions, and transitioning aid
should guide policymakers in investing in long-term development toward more permanent safety nets.
goals even in fragile and conflict-affected contexts.

36  Humanitarian Response and Anticipatory Actio


I
n human, economic, and environmental terms, Even worse, shocks can stoke fragility, reduce
the total cost of disaster and crisis response is effectiveness and inclusiveness, and displace
extremely high, and the disastrous combina- standards of good governance, contributing to
tion of the food price crises coming on the heels a perpetual cycle of instability. Institutions and
of the COVID-19 pandemic and natural calamities researchers are increasingly grappling with find-
is straining public budgets and squeezing finan- ing the most efficient and effective ways to mitigate
cial options. In 2020, private and public losses disaster costs through preemptive action, pre-
from weather-related disasters alone exceeded a paredness, and relief.
total of US$258 billion globally — 29 percent above
the 2001–2020 average — making it the fifth cost-
HUMANITARIAN AID FLOWS
liest year on record, and rising temperatures are
expected to bring even more frequent and severe Globally, the United Nations Office for the
extreme weather events.1 At the same time, conflict Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA)
has become a leading contributor to humanitar- reports that US$41 billion was needed to reach
ian crisis situations — as seen most recently with 183 million people targeted for international
the food and energy crises precipitated by the humanitarian assistance in 2022. Most people in
Russia-Ukraine war and refugee flows driven by the need are living in countries affected by protracted
Syrian civil war.2 crisis and conflict, with the largest numbers of
Timely response to crisis situations is criti- targeted beneficiaries in Ethiopia (22.3 million),
cal. Households that have been displaced or lost Afghanistan (22.1 million), Yemen (16.0 million),
their livelihoods can rapidly deplete savings and and Syria (12.0 million).4 The gap between needs
engage in coping strategies of last resort, which and funding has grown significantly since 2019,
have long-term costs for well-being, with poor or with only 46 percent of the global appeal funded in
near-poor households particularly vulnerable.3 2021, and international aid funding is not projected

Crisis Resilience  37
to keep pace with increasing need. Maximizing consumption were significantly lower in Yemen
the efficiency of these aid flows is more important than in stable country contexts. This result may
than ever. reflect difficulties with program implementation
Humanitarian response to crisis and disaster or conflict-affected households’ greater desire to
situations is grounded in principles of indepen- maintain assets (in this case, livestock) as a buffer
dence, neutrality, and impartiality, which grew out stock for coping with future shocks.10
of longstanding concern about the risks of deliv- In a study on World Food Programme (WFP)
ering aid in situations where the normal local emergency operations amid the conflict in Mali in
political authorities are unable or unwilling to do 2013–2014, researchers showed that food assis-
so.5 These foundational principles allow humani- tance had a significant impact on micronutrient
tarian actors to deliver lifesaving aid in extremely availability. The increased availability of food
challenging circumstances, but by the same token, translated into gains for child height in areas less
they constrain delivery mechanisms and opera- directly affected by the conflict, while in the villages
tions in ways that prioritize meeting short-term most directly affected by conflict, the significant
emergency needs over building resilience and program impacts were on total household expen-
human development in the longer term.6 For exam- ditures rather than on child nutritional status.11 The
ple, investing in local institutional capacity or study also showed that in areas of Mali most highly
procurement from local suppliers, both import- exposed to conflict, both general food distribu-
ant for building resilience, invites questions about tion and school feeding programs led to increased
impartiality and independence, and program- school enrollment, but in areas less exposed to
ming that goes beyond the most immediate human conflict, school feeding programs increased enroll-
needs for survival may generate controversy with ment and educational attainment, while general
local authorities about how longer-term goals food distribution was negatively associated with
are prioritized. enrollment.12 These results highlight how impacts
of assistance can be affected by the specific emer-
gency context.
EVALUATING AID PROGRAM IMPACTS IN
While cash-based programs gained popularity
HUMANITARIAN RESPONSE CONTEXTS
in the developing world in the 2000s, cash-based
Compared with social assistance programs in sta- programming for humanitarian responses has
ble contexts, where research has long played a key emerged as a growing trend only in the past
role,7 there is relatively little rigorous research on decade. Cash transfers are easily scalable, fast to
the impacts of assistance in humanitarian settings. roll out, and usually considerably cheaper than
Donors, practitioners, and the academic commu- in-kind assistance and less distorting of local pro-
nity have called for more rigorous evaluation of duction systems. IFPRI research, including several
humanitarian assistance programs,8 and research- studies mentioned below, has been cited in good
ers from the International Food Policy Research practice guidelines for the use of cash transfers in
Institute (IFPRI) are major contributors to the small humanitarian response.13
but growing body of evidence in humanitarian and As part of an ongoing partnership with WFP,
crisis contexts.9 Studying humanitarian program- IFPRI conducted a comparative analysis of cash,
ming specifically is important because lessons from voucher, and food assistance using randomized
stable contexts do not always carry over into set- controlled trials in humanitarian response con-
tings where implementation is more challenging texts in Ecuador, Niger, Uganda, and Yemen.14
and where beneficiaries face more frequent and Cash or vouchers were found to be more effective
severe shocks. For example, the greater level of for improving dietary quality in most contexts, but
instability faced by beneficiaries in such contexts food distribution generally had greater impact in
may substantially change household investment terms of increasing calorie consumption. Yet the
and risk preferences. Among a series of similarly relative benefits of cash transfers or vouchers com-
implemented graduation programs, impacts on pared with equally valued food distribution varied

38  Humanitarian Response and Anticipatory Actio


considerably depending on the country, high- targeting by leveraging existing programs and
lighting the need for research in a wide variety of databases to increase assistance during crises
contexts to provide relevant guidance to humani- (see Chapter 5). However, it is important to keep
tarian operations. in mind that inclusion in national social protection
Two other recent studies in Yemen highlighted programs may be biased against some of the most
the nutritional impacts of cash transfers supported vulnerable, such as migrants, people lacking legal
by international aid: an emergency cash transfer status, women, and ethnic minorities.19
program combined with child nutrition program-
ming had significant impacts on child dietary
LINKING HUMANITARIAN RESPONSE
quality as well as reduced stunting for the poor-
WITH LONG-TERM DEVELOPMENT
est households during the current crisis; and cash
transfers during an earlier period of instability were At the 2016 World Humanitarian Summit, the global
associated with less wasting.15 humanitarian community recognized the impor-
tance of coordination and strategic thinking around
the humanitarian–development–peace “triple
ASSESSING THE TARGETING
nexus” of rapid response, long-term recovery and
OF HUMANITARIAN AID
growth, and political stability.
Another key challenge for humanitarian aid opera- In practice, the long-term development think-
tions is how best to target relief efforts. Compared ing that has been operationalized in humanitarian
with development programs in stable contexts, response includes: (1) ensuring that food relief is
humanitarian responders have far less administra- nutrition-sensitive to support long-term health; (2)
tive data, more mobile populations, and a much prioritizing local procurement and processing of
shorter timeline for identifying the neediest bene- food used in relief operations; (3) strengthening
ficiaries. Interagency evaluations of humanitarian local institutions such as schools and local NGOs
relief operations in Ethiopia, South Sudan, and as partners during aid delivery; and (4) designing
Yemen highlight challenges such as a lack of con- emergency aid programs in such a way that they
solidated databases across agencies and NGO can develop into national safety nets.20
clusters, insufficient geographic targeting of aid
due to difficulties with access, and perceptions Nutrition. In terms of nutrition-sensitive food aid,
(indicated by focus groups) that the selection of aid distribution of fortified foods targeted to young
recipients is arbitrary or unfair.16 While not all tar- children as part of the relief response in emer-
geting is efficiently organized and trusted even in gencies has been shown to prevent major losses
stable contexts, the greater local accountability for in nutritional status. Providing supplemental food
the implementing institutions in stable contexts items with key micronutrients to children under
may lead to more positive perceptions of the tar- two years old and to pregnant and lactating moth-
geting process.17 Rigorous assessment of targeting ers is particularly important to ensure nutritional
of humanitarian responses can clarify what groups adequacy for human development during the first
risk being missed by existing methodologies. For 1,000 days of life.21 Children who receive adequate
example, an assessment of a food distribution nutrition will have better health and earnings in
effort in Ethiopia showed that, in contrast to the the future, contributing to long-run development
national social protection program, which targeted well after the crisis that led to the food distribu-
households in the poorer quintiles of the wealth tion has ended. IFPRI and WFP jointly developed
distribution, local officials targeted humanitarian WFP’s nutrition-sensitive program guidance by
food assistance to households with more wealth, designing and evaluating nutrition-sensitive pro-
but which had experienced a negative shock in the grams across a range of sectors. This guidance was
past 12 months.18 rolled out in 2017–2018 and is being followed up
“Shock-responsive” social protection pro- by continued collaboration to assess the impact of
grams solve many of the challenges of emergency nutrition-sensitive programming.22

Crisis Resilience  39
Local procurement. Another way to keep the could be planned ahead of time? This is the goal of
long-run impacts in view when running emergency the anticipatory action framework.
response operations is to prioritize local procure- Now being piloted in multiple contexts, antic-
ment when possible. Relying solely on imported ipatory action aims to protect households and
staple foods for food distribution can risk distorting communities before disaster strikes. The approach
local agricultural markets by lowering the demand seeks to use humanitarian resources more effi-
for locally grown food. This distortion not only ciently by pre-allocating them to be spent in ways
harms local farmers, but in protracted crisis situa- that reduce the impact of anticipated disasters.27
tions can also reduce farmers’ incentives to invest This means using early warning or forecasting tools
in production of locally consumed food items.23 combined with predetermined decision-making pro-
An IFPRI evaluation of WFP’s Purchase for Progress tocols to inform early action for timely emergency
program — in which low-income farmers were con- response at the local, national, and/or international
tracted as suppliers and provided with storage levels (see Chapter 2). Triggers or thresholds are pre-
facilities — found significant increases in revenue for defined within data and risk monitoring systems.
the farmers in the program, achieved through both Figure 1 illustrates how initiating actions to address
higher prices and greater quantities sold.24 a crisis after early warning signs are detected, but
before the full weight of the shock is felt, reduces
Local institutions. International disaster aid the peak humanitarian need compared to traditional
has the potential to either undermine or support post-crisis humanitarian response.
local institutions. This is particularly concerning in Without an anticipatory action framework, fund-
weak states and conflict-affected contexts, where raising in emergency situations, while urgent, can
long-run recovery relies on the establishment of be complicated. Public and private sector actors,
good governance. Examples cited by researchers responders, and donors will need to reconcile their
of cases where aid undermined local governance own spending priorities in the context of human-
include the humanitarian crisis in Haiti after the itarian need and decision-making structures that
2010 earthquake and the failures of state building may be inadequate. As a result, humanitarian oper-
in Afghanistan and Iraq.25 ations may be slow to start or to reach necessary
capacity,28 and it can take weeks or months for
Social safety nets. In addition to creating humanitarian aid to reach people in need if the
shock-responsive safety nets pre-crisis, designing response is only started post-crisis, often worsen-
humanitarian aid to transition into a more perma- ing impacts. Potential bottlenecks include evidence
nent social safety net provides an opportunity for and data challenges, organizational mandates and
both strengthening local institutions and promot- operational policies, risk tolerance, and security
ing longer-term development goals (see Chapter 5). and access issues. The 2011–2012 Somali famine
For example, in Yemen, funneling emergency cash is a prime example. In this case, nearly 260,000
transfers through a preexisting social protection people died, more than half of whom were chil-
system has preserved national institutions and dren under five years of age. Analysis shows that,
maintained a basis for eventual reestablishment of despite clear warning signs, large-scale morbid-
the system post-crisis.26 ity, mortality, and displacement were caused by
delays in international aid.29 This has sparked major
debates and some changes in humanitarian aid pol-
ANTICIPATORY ACTION
icy and practice — including a critical view of early
With the overriding focus on meeting immedi- warning mechanisms that failed to generate a rapid
ate needs and maintaining access, humanitarian response. Taking this into consideration, antici-
responders may not always be able to deliver aid in patory action initiatives need to operationalize
ways that minimize costs and maximize long-term preplanned response protocols and resource distri-
development goals. But what if, instead of being bution strategies so that needs are met before they
organized on a tight timeline post-crisis, responses become critical and so impacts are mitigated.

40  Humanitarian Response and Anticipatory Actio


Figure 1 Benefits of anticipatory action framework

HUMANITARIAN
NEEDS

Traditional response

IMPACT
REDUCTION

Anticipatory action

Early warning Shock/


signs event

Trigger/ Humanitarian
parameters for action aid is provided

TIME

Source: Reproduced from OCHA Services, Center for Humdata, accessed February 1, 2023. https://centre.humdata.org/anticipatory-action/

For anticipatory action initiatives to be effective appropriate response agencies, and the vulnerable,
requires preparation in four areas: and recipients understand how to respond.30

Pre-identified vulnerabilities and trigger indi- Clear roles and responsibilities for
cators. Ensuring effective targeting and timely decision-making and response. Emergency
response requires an understanding of risks, expo- responses may include, but are not limited to, cash
sure, and vulnerability in the particular context. subsidies and insurance, in-kind aid distribution,
With these clearly defined, monitoring systems social protection services, humanitarian services
can be more appropriately designed, using bio- and supply deliveries, and shelter. Roles, respon-
physical, social, and economic data to determine sibilities, and procedures must be clear among all
triggers for action. These types of mechanisms are stakeholders involved in a humanitarian response
especially challenged in very dynamic conflict- and initiative, and the initiative should be embedded
migration-affected situations, where data on com- within a broader disaster risk management and
pound crises can be scarce and unreliable. In early social protection strategy. This can be especially
applications, this approach was primarily used for complex in fragile and conflict-affected settings, for
weather hazards, but has now expanded to a wider example when government authority or capacity
range of risks such as epidemics and pests. may be weak or nonexistent.

Impact-based risk-monitoring information Identify available financial resources and


services. Risk monitoring requires regular data col- resource mobilization strategies. The intent
lection and calculation of updated risk levels using of anticipatory action is to establish data-informed
some of the approaches discussed in Chapter 2. decision-support systems to trigger quick dis-
Information services should be designed to ensure bursement of resources in emergency situations.
forecasts are impact-based, warnings reach the Advanced planning can help identify needs and

Crisis Resilience  41
match financial resources with eligible beneficia- natural disasters, such as hurricanes, floods, cold
ries, earmarking local and international resources waves, and volcanic eruptions.35 The IDA Crisis
and establishing disbursement processes. Response Window similarly provides funding
conditional on reaching a trigger point for enact-
ing a previously prepared Food Security Crisis
INSTITUTIONAL INNOVATIONS
Preparedness Response Plan.
Despite broad agreement on the importance of
planning ahead to mitigate crises, the structure of
HOW MUCH AND WHAT TYPES
international humanitarian aid and government
OF ANTICIPATORY ACTION
disaster response has not favored preemptive
ARE COST-EFFECTIVE?
action. For example, some empirical evidence
supports the idea that traditional post-disaster The design and operation of anticipatory action
international aid creates a moral hazard problem — initiatives are highly contextual. Research on the
national governments that anticipate aid inflows are efficiency, effectiveness, and impact of these
under-incentivized to invest in disaster mitigation.31 schemes is scant, and there are especially few
Lack of coordination between agencies or minis- examples of initiatives incorporating conflict pre-
tries at both the national and international levels and vention, mitigation, and peacebuilding. Inherent
between those responsible for emergency response challenges arise in evaluating anticipatory action
and long-term investments has also been blamed for schemes and, because of the relative novelty of
the lack of attention to anticipatory action.32 this approach, indicators and evidence of success
Recent institutional innovations, however, are are still being defined. Data collection is challeng-
poised to facilitate funding for anticipatory action ing in quick-onset disaster situations, and the time
at the global level. The UN Food Security Cluster period over which the relative costs and benefits
Anticipatory Action Task Force has called for more are expected to be calculated can be extremely
donor funding to be dedicated to flexible uses long. But some attempts have already been made
or anticipatory actions,33 and the UN’s Food and to collect experiences with anticipatory action and
Agriculture Organization has initiated several antic- evidence to evaluate this approach.36
ipatory action pilot projects with a total budget of One clear benefit is the time savings in deploy-
US$6.2 million in 26 countries.34 In May 2021, the ing humanitarian response operations. Action plans
G7 Foreign Ministers announced a commitment to that include pre-positioning relief supplies, train-
“making the humanitarian system as anticipatory as ing first responders, and developing contingency
possible” through both existing pooled funds and plans for specific expected disasters can potentially
new financing solutions. Small-scale anticipatory allow relief to reach intended beneficiaries with
components have already been added to the UN better targeting, at greater speed and lower cost,
Central Emergency Response Fund, the International and in ways that are better integrated with local
Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies’ markets and institutions. Significant savings in both
(IFRC) Disaster Relief Emergency Fund, and the time and cost have been found in practice when
World Bank’s International Development Agency the IFRC used anticipatory action approaches to
(IDA) Crisis Response Window. flooding in West and Central Africa and when WFP
Anticipatory action mechanisms are based on pre-positioned essential commodities for distribu-
an action plan that is approved in advance and tion in several countries.37 The cost-savings free up
includes an agreed trigger for releasing funding to resources for long-term adaptation investments,
enact the plan, related to the expectation that a cri- providing an incentive for donors to advocate
sis is imminent. For example, the Forecast-based for the broader establishment of anticipatory
Action component of the IFRC Disaster Relief action systems.
Emergency Fund launched in 2018 provides Another way to measure the benefits of anticipa-
ready-to-go financing that can be released by early tory action is to look at the degree to which earlier
action protocols when triggered by forecasted responses serve to protect long-term household

42  Humanitarian Response and Anticipatory Actio


and social welfare by reducing reliance on neg- in resilience to crises is also a broader concept.
ative risk-coping mechanisms in the short term. Resilience is most commonly understood as
For example, the short-term impact of drought on the ability to withstand and recover from exter-
households may be income loss for farmers and nal shocks, ensuring that short-run shocks do not
production losses from crops and livestock, while have long-lasting adverse consequences. A wide
long-term impacts include negative health effects, variety of development goals — such as decreas-
greater gender disparities, and reduced educa- ing poverty, increasing access to basic services
tion, as well as increased migration, conflict, and and education, improving institutions, and, at the
political instability. Attempts to quantify such costs household level, investing in productive assets and
even at the level of aggregated estimates using an physical and mental health — can be viewed not
approach such as BACI (benefits of action–cost of only as ends in themselves, but also as means to
inaction) can be informative about the potential for improving households’ capacity to absorb or adapt
long-term savings from early investment in anticipa- to shocks, as demonstrated by a large and grow-
tory action.38 ing body of research.41 Despite this ongoing work,
Some limited quasi-experimental evidence on important knowledge gaps remain and new ques-
forecast-based financing provides more concrete tions have emerged from the most recent crises.
measures of the gains from anticipatory action.
Forecast-based financing is a type of anticipatory
GENERATING RIGOROUS EVIDENCE
action in which distribution of aid is conditional on
the forecast of an imminent crisis (see Chapter 2). A Monitoring, evaluation, and impact assessment
study of an IFRC forecast-based financing program (MEIA) remains a major gap in anticipatory action
in Mongolia showed that herder households who and, more generally, in humanitarian and develop-
received assistance prior to an extreme winter sea- ment interventions in fragile and conflict-affected
son lost less livestock than households that did not settings (see Chapter 7). More evidence is needed
receive assistance.39 A qualitative study of a similar on the impacts of different types of humanitar-
program in Bangladesh, which delivered govern- ian assistance in different contexts, particularly in
ment aid to communities identified as most likely to the most challenging places, and on targeting and
experience flooding in the upcoming season, found shock-responsive social programming, integrat-
that beneficiary households used the cash to main- ing emergency aid with long-term resilience, and
tain food consumption and fund evacuation costs.40 developing effective anticipatory action programs.
More research is also needed on how to measure
the cost-benefit ratio of investing in resilience.
PROMOTING CRISIS RESILIENCE
Operationalizing anticipatory action approaches
Anticipatory action shifts humanitarian fund- requires work on building data sources to mea-
ing availability from the response phase to an sure risks and on organizing stakeholder coalitions.
earlier point in time when it can be used for resil- A library of good practices, in addition to guid-
ience building. In some models of anticipatory ance for feasible and relevant MEIA techniques
action programs, emergency funds reach indi- for anticipatory action, is needed to help develop
vidual households before a crisis hits, allowing and inform crisis responses. To this end, a new
those households to make investments that pro- CGIAR Research Initiative on Fragility, Conflict,
tect their livelihoods and assets. In other cases, the and Migration will implement a work program aim-
emergency funds are not distributed directly to ing to strengthen anticipatory action in complex
households, but are used by local governments or crises and provide guidance to humanitarian pro-
other humanitarian actors to make investments in gramming on building long-run resilience. With
time to mitigate the worst effects of the crisis. evidence from this research program, policies can
While anticipatory action is usually narrowly be implemented to reduce human suffering in the
defined as a financing mechanism that is released wake of natural disasters and conflict events.
based on a predefined forecast condition, investing

Crisis Resilience  43
CHAPTER 4

Agrifood Value Chains


Building Resilient Food Systems
BART MINTEN, BEN BELTON, AND THOMAS REARDON
Bart Minten is a senior research fellow and leader of the Myanmar Strategy Support
Program, IFPRI. Ben Belton is a research fellow, South Asia Regional Office, IFPRI,
and an associate professor of international development, Michigan State University.
Thomas Reardon is university distinguished professor of agricultural, food, and resource
economics, Michigan State University, and a nonresident research fellow, IFPRI.

KEY MESSAGES To ensure agrifood value chains contribute to recovery and resilience, it is
crucial to:
■ Agrifood value chains have transformed in recent years through rapid
growth, increased diversity and complexity, and a revolution in logis- ■ Tailor crisis response to the type of shock, the particular context and
tics, storage, and retail. But they remain vulnerable to a variety of value chain, and when possible, different enterprise sizes.
crises, including disease, conflict, and natural disasters. Their resil-
■ Invest in improved and innovative technologies and tools that build
ience varies with the type of shock, the structure of the chain, and the
resilience, such as climate-smart agriculture and index-based insurance.
local context.
■ Create a regulatory and business environment that fosters the devel-
■ Value chain impacts can evolve over the course of a crisis. During the
opment and widespread adoption of value chain innovations, such as
COVID-19 pandemic, agrifood value chain actors first dealt with lock-
e-commerce.
downs, then with a downturn in demand, and finally with rising prices.
■ Provide opportunities to continue private trading during crises, for
■ Civil strife, conflict, and natural disasters disrupt food production and
example by avoiding trade restrictions and creating safe corridors.
markets, often leading to rising food prices. Risks to food security and
livelihoods can be reduced through flexible market mechanisms to sup- ■ Ensure that women are able to take advantage of financial and digital
port value chains as well as appropriate farming techniques and new innovations and have viable coping strategies.
insurance tools.
■ Conduct careful and frequent monitoring before and during crises to
■ Small, informal enterprises and women-owned enterprises are often target assistance to crucial value chain nodes.
more vulnerable to crisis impacts, as are producers and enterprises with
limited market options.

■ Agrifood actors respond to crises with short-term coping strategies and


long-term adaptations. Improving coping strategies and pursuing trans-
formation that facilitates adaptation are central to building resilience.

44  Building Resilient Food System


A
grifood value chains in the world’s low- and for technology upgrades, improving access to
middle-income countries (LMICs) have productivity-enhancing inputs and services, and
expanded rapidly over the past decade, sup- increasing off-farm employment in small and
plying an increasing volume and diversity of food medium enterprises (SMEs) in all value chain seg-
products. This transformation has been driven by ments. At the consumer end, the expansion of value
the fast growth of urban and peri-urban areas as chains is essential for feeding urban residents,
well as increasing demand from richer and more who now account for more than half the popula-
urban consumers for different, higher-quality, and tion in LMICs. But this transformation also brings
often more expensive food. More farmers than new challenges. As value chains have become lon-
ever are now connected to agrifood value chains ger, stretching from rural areas to cities and across
through markets for both agricultural inputs and countries, they have also become more vulnera-
outputs. These connections are not only increas- ble to shocks that disrupt markets, including crises
ingly numerous but also increasingly complex, created by climate change, disease, and conflict.
reflecting the greater diversity of products, inputs, All these shocks can have major impacts for actors
and services that farmers buy and sell. Midstream throughout the value chain, and consequently for
and downstream in agrifood value chains, a “quiet” livelihoods and consumers’ food security.
revolution has occurred in logistics, storage, trans- Some research has begun to look at understand-
port, wholesale, retail, and food services, with ing, anticipating, and alleviating the impacts of crises
fundamental and rapid changes in the structure, on agrifood value chains. For example, researchers
conduct, and performance of these value chain have identified five potential “hotspots” — aspects of
segments and the enterprises involved.1 value chains that can be particularly vulnerable to cri-
This transformation provides new opportuni- ses: (1) physical infrastructure (such as transport and
ties for farmers to increase their income and food storage), which affects risks to production; (2) geo-
security and nutrition,2 and is generating revenues graphic length of the supply chain, which affects

Agrifood Value Chains  45


potential disruptions such as road washouts along a of businesses and public institutions disrupted the
supply route; (3) perishability of the product, which flow of goods and services along global, regional,
can make it vulnerable to delivery delays; (4) prev- national, and subnational supply chains. For exam-
alence and robustness of physical capital, such as ple, lockdowns prevented or delayed delivery of
storage bins and cold chambers used by traders; and produce from farms to markets and inputs from
(5) “stranded assets,” that is, assets that are only profit- factories to farms. In many cases, these restric-
able in a particular end-market that the owner cannot tions raised food prices, at least temporarily. The
access because of a supply chain shock.3 Beyond initial containment policies implemented in devel-
these particular vulnerabilities, supply disruptions are oping countries often failed to consider the critical
determined by the nature and intensity of the shock role of domestic supply chains in national food
and the exposure of supply chain actors.4 systems; in sub-Saharan Africa and India, for exam-
Minimizing the inevitable disruptions will require ple, these supply chains deliver approximately
appropriate policy environments and investments 80 percent of the food consumed (by value).5 As a
all along the value chain, from the farm to the con- result, lockdowns caused major disruptions to the
sumer. In the face of increasingly frequent shocks, food supply in many African and Asian countries
the ongoing transformation will be essential to and for diverse food commodities.
improving the adaptive capacity of agrifood value The impacts of initially stringent lockdown
chains. To boost resilience, governments will need to policies on transport and mobility were mainly
create a business environment that fosters adapta- short-lived, however. Businesses soon introduced
tion and innovation. In the private sector, continued work-arounds, such as operating on new routes
investments in assets and good practices both in or opening outside of normal business hours, and
input supply chains (such as agro-dealers who pro- governments made quick policy adjustments,
vide inputs to farmers) and in the midstream of value often prioritizing movement of agrifood products
chains (including processors, logistics firms, and and farm inputs along with medicine and other
wholesalers) will be essential to supporting food essential products. Yet despite these adaptations,
security during crises. movement restrictions and related constraints on
In this chapter, we review some of the recent accessing materials and labor meant that many con-
evidence on the impact of three different types of sumers experienced declines in income and loss
crises — pandemics, conflict, and climate change — of employment, which led to a drop in demand for
on the functioning of agrifood value chains and food products. These impacts affected agrifood
distill some lessons learned for building resilience. businesses directly. For instance, in Nigeria, a sur-
vey of enterprises in poultry and fish supply chains
found that the main problems early in the pandemic
THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC
were access to inputs, transport, and markets,
COVID-19 — and the policies implemented to con- along with low consumer demand.6
tain it — constituted an unprecedented shock to Over time, this set of challenges faded, while
value chains worldwide. The challenges faced by rising input costs and financial constraints (that
agrifood businesses evolved over the course of the is, inability to access or recoup loans) became
pandemic, reflecting policy shifts, the evolution of more troublesome.7 In many places, the combi-
the disease, and changing economic conditions. nation of reduced consumer demand with rising
In LMICs, threats to value chains progressed from input and operating costs squeezed the profits
mobility restrictions during the initial lockdowns, to of farms and other supporting businesses, caus-
depressed demand as economic activity declined, ing them to reduce their output or turnover.8 Food
and most recently to price inflation. prices rose as a result of these pandemic impacts,
reaching the highest levels in a decade by the end
SHOCKS TO VALUE CHAINS of 2021, before rising even further in 2022 when
During the first half of 2020, restrictions on trans- the Russia-Ukraine war put additional pressure on
port and human mobility plus temporary closures global fuel and food prices.

46  Building Resilient Food System


RESILIENCE AND VULNERABILITY consumers) were expected to be more resilient
Some enterprises were more vulnerable to these than longer ones,16 but their response has proven
COVID-19 disruptions than others, and impacts were more complex. In Ethiopia, vegetable farmers who
often context-specific. Women-led agrifood enter- faced less competition from other areas (whether
prises were sometimes, but not always, less resilient domestic or international) due to pandemic-related
in the face of pandemic lockdowns than enterprises trade restrictions benefited through higher prices
led by men, varying by country and by product. In for their produce, while those who could no longer
Nigeria, for example, women-owned enterprises in access markets within the country fared worse.17
poultry and fish value chains were 11 percent more Among Australian agrifood businesses, those
likely to close than those owned by men between with both domestic and global value chain part-
2020 and 2021.9 However, a similar study of SMEs ners proved more resilient than those with only
in the midstream of potato and fish value chains global business partners.18 However, even in highly
in Kenya found no significant effect of the own- export-oriented sectors, firms with multiple poten-
ers’ gender on changes in business turnover during tial buyers tended to weather the crisis well. For
the pandemic.10 And a study of agrifood SMEs in example, the Norwegian salmon industry was able
17 countries found that although women-owned firms to redirect products to alternative national markets
were more likely to report a production decrease and target alternative market segments by chang-
of 30 percent or more as a result of the lockdowns, ing product forms, such as from fresh to frozen
no differences were reported in business earnings fish.19 In contrast, supply chains delivering prod-
between firms owned by women and men.11 ucts to a single end-market, whether domestic or
Small, informal firms were sometimes, but not for export, were likely to suffer serious disruption,
always, less resilient than larger, formal-sector particularly where gluts of seasonal production
enterprises. As with gender, the findings for firm coincided with movement restrictions, as hap-
size and COVID-19 impacts varied by context. In pened with potatoes in Kenya.20
some countries, food enterprises in the informal
sector (many of which are small and many owned by RESPONDING TO THE CRISIS
women) were disproportionately harmed by con- To address the diverse challenges related to the
tainment policies that favored formal businesses pandemic, businesses across all segments of
such as supermarkets.12 In Senegal, large, formal, agrifood value chains made two broad sets of
export-oriented vegetable farms fared better under adaptations: (1) short-term coping strategies, such
COVID-19 restrictions than small farms and trad- as pausing or reducing business activities, mini-
ers supplying domestic markets,13 while in Nigeria, mizing operating costs, drawing down savings, or
larger businesses in poultry and fish supply chains borrowing; and (2) longer-term or more proactive
were 13 percent less likely to close than small busi- adaptations, such as the adoption of digital tech-
nesses. On the other hand, smaller vegetable nologies, operational diversification, or increasing
farms in Ethiopia were found to be less vulnera- use of contracts (for example, retailers and pro-
ble to COVID-19 disruptions than medium-sized cessors signed contracts with farmers to reduce
farms, because the smaller farms were less reliant market risk for both parties).
on hired labor.14 This pattern was also identified in Deep and abrupt changes in business prac-
Kenya, where smaller firms in the midstream seg- tices, products, or technologies that substantially
ments of potato and fish value chains proved more alter supply chains have been termed “pivoting.”21
resilient (as measured by relative changes in vol- Pivoting may be pursued as a short-term coping
umes traded) to shocks over the 2019–2021 period mechanism or as a long-term adaptation action
than larger businesses, though the very largest and strategy. Pivots by food industry firms during
businesses surveyed experienced smaller relative the COVID-19 pandemic were focused primarily on
reductions in sales.15 marketing channels (such as shifting from in-store
During the early stages of the pandemic, shorter or in-restaurant sales to e-commerce) and technolo-
supply chains (in terms of distance from farms to gies (such as shifting from labor- to capital-intensive

Agrifood Value Chains  47


Figure 1 E-commerce yearly growth rates in 2019 (before COVID-19) and 2020

2019
China
2020

Nigeria

India

Mexico

Brazil

South Africa

Indonesia

0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100% 120%

Source: Data from V. Vardhan, “Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Retailing in Emerging Countries,” Powerpoint presentation by
Euromonitor International, October 2020, cited in T. Reardon, A. Heiman, L. Lu, C.S.R. Nuthalapati, R. Vos, and D. Zilberman, “’‘Pivoting’ by
Food Industry Firms to Cope with COVID-19 in Developing Regions: E-commerce and ‘Copivoting’ Delivery Intermediaries,” Agricultural
Economics 52, 3 (2021): 459–475.

technologies). Perhaps the most significant of these search for buyers or sellers increased in the wake
pivots was the boom in e-commerce for food retail of the pandemic.22 Similar changes, though start-
sales in many LMICs, as consumers sought to pre- ing from a lower base, have also been observed in
vent infection by avoiding public places. Although Nigeria.23 In India, accepting digital payment via
food e-commerce and associated online platforms QR codes became very common, even among the
and logistics infrastructure were growing prior to smallest retail businesses.24
the pandemic, most notably in China, the pandemic Signs of a partial business recovery were evi-
dramatically boosted their expansion across mul- dent in most countries in 2021 despite the severity
tiple regions, albeit unevenly, with rapid growth in of the Delta variant of COVID-19, which predomi-
parts of Latin America, Southeast Asia, and India, nated by mid-year. In LMICs, this business resilience
and slower growth in much of sub-Saharan Africa reflects in part the nature of the small farms and
(Figure 1). The differences in regional expansion firms that make up the bulk of the food system.
are explained by the basic enabling conditions for These enterprises typically have low overhead and
these businesses in the different regions — hard few hired workers, which allowed them to scale
infrastructure like roads that allowed fulfillment of back operations and persist through times of crisis.
digital orders, and soft infrastructure like business However, their coping strategies, including draw-
regulations that did not fetter the establishment of ing down savings and borrowing, likely exacted a
new enterprises in this sector. heavy cost in terms of human welfare and eroded
Uptake of digital information and communi- their capacity to adapt to future shocks. The largest
cation technologies (ICT) by smaller actors and businesses have been best placed to adapt proac-
individuals in food value chains also accelerated tively through pivots — such as the reconfiguration
significantly. For instance, in Kenya, the use of of supply chains and diffusion of e-commerce —
“mobile money” for making transactions and of often facilitated by co-pivots by other supply
phones, social media, and online marketplaces to chain actors such as logistics providers.25 These

48  Building Resilient Food System


disparities may have contributed to increasing con- While the countries most dependent on wheat
centration in ownership and market shares in some imports from Ukraine and Russia were directly
instances.26 However, many smaller farms and firms affected, the impact of the war on agrifood value
were also quick to adopt or increase their use of ICT chains has been global, affecting many LMICs
to overcome coordination problems and reduce that import wheat and leading to spillover effects
the need for physical contact during the crisis, and on other value chains.30 As with the food crises in
they look set to continue on this path. 2007/08 and 2010, some countries have tried to
shield themselves from rising food prices by imple-
menting export restrictions or lowering import
CIVIL STRIFE AND CONFLICTS
restrictions. These trade policy interventions only
Most of the world’s extreme poor live in fragile aggravate the global problem by escalating dis-
states.27 Yet despite the enormous importance of ruptions of global agrifood value chains and food
these areas for global food security, relatively little price volatility.31 Price-insulating policies adopted
research has examined how agrifood value chains by a number of countries in the wake of the Ukraine
respond and adapt in such contexts. Food prices crisis have contributed to high volatility in world
and the affordability of food are particularly crit- prices, as price risks were transferred from one
ical in these settings. Some research has shown group of countries to another.32 However, some
that rising food prices are often the cause of vio- unambiguously beneficial trade policies have also
lent conflict and unrest, and there are significant been adopted in the crisis, such as the creation
linkages and feedback loops between violence of safe corridors that can help reduce the impact
and food prices. Here we briefly discuss two con- of the conflict — including the Black Sea Grain
flicts — one international (the Russia-Ukraine war), Initiative, which has allowed grain exports from
which has global implications, and one with largely Ukraine’s seaports.
domestic impacts (Myanmar).
CONFLICT IN MYANMAR
RUSSIA-UKRAINE WAR In Myanmar, civil strife has disrupted domestic
The recent war in Ukraine has highlighted the agrifood value chains. Myanmar’s military seized
vulnerability of global agrifood value chains to control in a coup in February 2021, setting the
conflict. International commodity markets were country on a path toward widespread violence,
already volatile before the war began, as a result of insecurity, and major economic contraction. In pro-
the COVID-19 pandemic and weather shocks that test, Myanmar’s people organized a national Civil
reduced harvests. Food prices were at their highest Disobedience Movement and worker strikes that
level in a decade, and international fertilizer prices disrupted service delivery for both public institu-
had increased by 125 percent in the preceding year, tions and private businesses. Banks discontinued
due to high prices for natural gas and coal (used as in-person services and faced severe liquidity short-
feedstock and energy sources in ammonia produc- ages, limiting businesses’ ability to pay employees
tion).28 High energy prices and a global shortage and suppliers as well as individuals’ access to
of containers also led to a substantial increase in their money. Cumulatively, these disruptions had
international shipping costs in 2021. When Russia major economic consequences — GDP declined
invaded Ukraine in February 2022, food prices by 18 percent and the poverty rate increased by
increased rapidly, especially wheat prices, which between 8 and 18 percentage points.33
rose by more than 40 percent in just two months. The value chain for rice, Myanmar’s primary sta-
By July, they had returned to pre-conflict levels, but ple food, is the country’s biggest and is closely
to date remain well above the historical average. linked to the banking and transport sectors. In the
Fertilizer prices also increased, given that Russia aftermath of the coup, a number of challenges arose
and Belarus were major fertilizer suppliers,29 which in the rice value chain, as banks were short of cash
has sparked serious concerns about food security, and transport was complicated by lack of drivers,
especially in LMICs. lack of fuel or high costs of fuel, and road blocks.

Agrifood Value Chains  49


Nonetheless, rice processing and trade contin- The increasing frequency of natural calamities
ued, ensuring that rice was available in most retail that affect agrifood systems has generated signif-
markets, and processing margins remained largely icant interest and experimentation with innovative
stable — demonstrating the value chain’s resilience index-based agricultural insurance products to
to such major shocks.34 This resilience reflects the reduce the risk faced by farmers. While globally
ability of value chain actors to adapt to new con- about half of all farms are covered by agricultural
ditions. For example, to address the impact of the insurance, a substantial number of farms in LMICs
banking crisis, millers began using a modified hundi are left out.38 Index-based insurance products are
payment system to sell rice, whereby a sale is nego- generally perceived to be too expensive for smaller
tiated and payment is transferred from a trusted farms in these settings, and uptake has been
third party with available cash. However, as the mar- low. Given the importance of such risk-reducing
gin increased between the price that rice millers products in increasing the resilience of agrifood
received and the price that retailers charged con- value chains, one promising option for improving
sumers, average retail prices rose by 11 percent, uptake is to bundle these insurance products with
implying welfare losses of almost US$500 million stress-tolerant seed varieties, risk-oriented credit/
for the country (equivalent to 3 percent of agricul- savings products, or extension services.39 However,
tural GDP). Despite the knot of problems that must despite innovations and new opportunities cre-
be addressed in such settings, there are policy tools ated by advances in remotely-sensed data systems,
that can help. For example, easing transport restric- digital technologies, smartphones, and e-banking,
tions and facilitating cheap and safe trade of food insurance for catastrophic risks is expected to
products can reduce food price inflation, ensure remain unaffordable for most farmers and thus is
higher farm prices, and thus improve welfare.35 an inequitable form of safety net,40 leaving many
farmers dependent on disaster assistance in cata-
strophic years.
NATURAL CALAMITIES
Natural calamities, such as floods and droughts,
LESSONS LEARNED
cause major disruptions in agrifood value chains,
as the recent disastrous flooding in Pakistan has A number of lessons can be drawn from the
reminded the world. Such extreme weather events responses of agrifood value chains to these differ-
are occurring with greater frequency, and the ent crises.
shocks can affect a wide area. For example, floods
in Bangladesh in 1998 covered two-thirds of the Agrifood value chains have generally proven
country, causing severe damage to the country’s quite resilient to shocks, though in ways
rice crop. However, widespread food insecurity was that are heterogenous and context specific.
avoided, as Bangladesh’s rice markets adjusted to The type of crisis — driven by climate, civil strife,
the loss of domestic production through signifi- pandemic, or other shocks — affects value chains’
cant commercial rice imports from India. Because resilience. The resilience of agrifood value chains has
Bangladesh had liberalized trade in the early 1990s, sometimes come from direct policy interventions, as
private traders were assured that sufficient rice seen in exemptions of food service industries from
imports would be available.36 In Ethiopia, where lockdowns in the case of the COVID-19 pandemic.
drought is common, the worst impacts may be Structural differences in value chains can make one
avoided by adopting appropriate agricultural prac- value chain more resilient than others. In particular,
tices. A study found that training farmers in the small informal firms may be more vulnerable or face
production and conservation of livestock fodder as greater constraints in their response than large for-
well as in soil and water conservation practices — mal firms. Thus, interventions and policies should be
good practices even in normal times — was crucial tailored not only to the type of crisis but also to the
for strengthening farmers’ capacity to adapt to and specific context, value chain, and if possible, size of
cope with drought.37 the enterprise affected.

50  Building Resilient Food System


Improved and new technologies have and outputs, which are typically transported over
an important role to play in ensuring long distances in both transitional and modern
greater resilience of value chains. Proactive markets. For example, the creation of safe corri-
investments are needed to establish wide- dors for agrifood products — as seen in the case of
spread availability of usable knowledge and the Ukraine war — can sometimes reduce impacts
shock-resistant technologies, such as climate-smart of disturbances.
technologies and practices, and relevant ICT. In
the past, breeding efforts by international research Attention to gender is important, as women
organizations have led to lower yield volatility,41 often suffer greater setbacks from crises.
and today the development of new agricultural Ensuring that women retain access to productive
technologies again has an important role to play opportunities across various nodes in value chains
in improving risk management. In addition, appro- can limit the impact on food security and liveli-
priate insurance instruments and risk mitigation hoods. For example, women must be able to take
strategies should be facilitated, with public sector advantage of digital agriculture and finance inno-
interventions playing a crucial role. vations as well as training in food safety and other
food technology practices. Moreover, women often
A regulatory and business environment draw down their savings more quickly than men
needs to be created (or existing environ- during crises; to address this, further research is
ments reformed) to allow shock-responsive needed on women’s coping strategies and ways to
innovations to develop and spread in the improve them.
face of crisis. In some cases, this means reduc-
ing or eliminating constraints, such as unnecessary Careful and frequent monitoring, both
requirements or “red tape”; in other cases, it means before and during crises, can support bet-
making public investments in fundamentals such ter targeting of interventions to crucial
as roads, wholesale markets, and electrification. value chain nodes. Given the rapid evolution
During the COVID-19 pandemic, the accelerated of crisis situations, updated information on where
take-off of e-commerce and the quick spread of and when shocks occur and whom they affect is
alternative payment systems — such as mobile often lacking, including information on road clo-
money and informal transfer systems — showed the sures, price changes, and product scarcities (see
contribution of such innovations to value chains’ Chapter 2). Before a shock occurs, countries can
resilience. While contract farming and commod- undertake hazard assessments of their value
ity exchanges could also have more important chains to be better prepared and build resilience
roles to play in price risk management, their in advance. Detailed guidance on such risk assess-
growth in LMICs has been hampered by contract ments for value chains is available.43 During crises,
enforcement issues, liquidity problems, and high frequent surveys on important impacts are feasi-
transaction costs, among other issues.42 ble, given widespread mobile phone use. These
phone surveys have been shown to be useful44 and
Ensuring continued private trading oppor- should be encouraged. For example, the World
tunities is important for overcoming crises. Food Programme is increasingly using such sur-
These opportunities help value chain actors to veys in crisis situations, although monitoring of
diversify suppliers and customers and to work value chain agents remains limited.45 In addition,
around local constraints, including restrictive the increasing availability of big data and improved
trade policies implemented in response to crises. methodologies to effectively use such data has
Such trade barriers often lead to higher price vol- great potential for better monitoring in these
atility and higher margins in agricultural markets, fast-changing situations.
and should therefore be avoided. Keeping trans-
portation and appropriate logistics functioning is
crucial for maintaining trade in agricultural inputs

Agrifood Value Chains  51


CHAPTER 5

Social Protection
Adaptive Safety Nets for
Crisis Recovery
KALLE HIRVONEN
Kalle Hirvonen is a senior research fellow, Development Strategies and Governance Unit,
International Food Policy Research Institute.

KEY MESSAGES To boost the role of safety nets in recovery and resilience, steps should be
taken to:
■ Social protection programs, especially social safety nets that provide
cash and in-kind transfers, are an increasingly common policy tool to ■ Shift toward a more proactive approach to disasters by building highly
reduce poverty and improve food security and nutrition in low- and adaptive, flexible, inclusive social protection systems and by budgeting
middle-income countries. for potential crises.

■ Social protection can play a critical role in times of crisis. Programs have ■ Invest in incorporating shock-responsive designs into social protec-
been expanded in response to recent shocks, but coverage remains low tion programming to scale up support faster and more effectively
in the poorest countries and in urban areas. during emergencies. This includes investment in monitoring and in
predictive early warning systems, as well as unified and digitized tar-
■ Before crises occur, social safety nets can reduce vulnerability and build
geting systems.
resilience by helping households build assets, increase productive
investments, and diversify income sources. ■ Improve coordination between emergency humanitarian aid and pre-
existing social protection programs to facilitate delivery and targeting
■ During crises, social safety nets that provide timely and adequate cash
of transfers.
or in-kind transfers help maintain household consumption and savings
and limit use of welfare-reducing coping strategies. Benefits can be ■ Explore new ways to cover the costs of social protection, such as climate
expanded effectively and quickly when programs are already in place. or green financing schemes, and to reduce costs of implementation,
such as use of cash transfers and mobile payments when appropriate
■ There is growing international commitment to better coordinating
for the context.
emergency and long-term social assistance to improve crisis responses.

52  Adaptive Safety Nets for Crisis Recover


O
ver the past two decades, social protection safety net, have been found to improve women’s
programs have become a mainstream pol- empowerment10 and even reduce the risk of inti-
icy tool to address chronic poverty and food mate partner violence, particularly when coupled
insecurity in low- and middle-income countries with complementary activities.11
(LMICs). Social safety net programs are one of the In low- and middle-income countries (LMICs),
most common forms of social protection (Box 1). social safety net programs reach a considerably
In sub-Saharan Africa, for example, the number of larger share of people in rural areas than they
social safety net programs has more than tripled do in urban areas (Figures 1A and 1B). Most rural
since the early 2000s,1 and today each country in people derive their livelihoods from rainfed agri-
the region operates at least one such program.2 culture (either directly or indirectly), and therefore
Evidence is mounting that social safety net pro- many safety net programs have been primarily
grams and social protection more broadly can designed to protect rural livelihoods from extreme
improve food security, reduce chronic poverty, weather events, such as droughts and floods.
and build household wealth (assets).3 Moreover, This rural focus is justified, given that global pov-
social safety net programs can improve nutritional erty remains concentrated in rural areas12 and that
outcomes,4 protect aspirations (people’s ability to damaging weather is predicted to intensify and
visualize and engage in forward-looking activities) become more frequent due to climate change.13
during natural disasters,5 and increase resilience in However, the COVID-19 pandemic and the 2022
the face of climate change.6 Social safety net pro- food price spikes — two global shocks — have hit the
grams may even prevent local conflicts,7 increase urban poor particularly hard,14 exposing the lim-
trust in local governments,8 and stimulate eco- itations of social protection programming in urban
nomic growth by encouraging savings, addressing areas.15 Recurring crises — weather anomalies, nat-
credit market imperfections, and creating com- ural disasters, disease epidemics, conflicts, and
munal assets.9 Finally, cash transfers, one form of price shocks — are increasingly complex and often

Social Protection  53
Box 1 TYPES OF SOCIAL PROTECTION PROGRAMS

Social protection programs fall into three categories: (1) social safety net (or social assistance) programs that provide
noncontributory transfers to the poor and vulnerable; (2) contributory social insurance programs; and (3) labor market
programs (such as unemployment insurance, wage subsidies, and trainings).1 Contributory transfers refer to regular payments
that individual participants must make to cover the costs of future loss of employment or other shocks. Noncontributory
programs do not require payments from the participants.
This chapter focuses primarily on social safety net programs. In low- and middle-income countries, these programs reach
a considerably larger share of the population than do social insurance and labor market programs, particularly in the poorest
countries (Figure 1). Social assistance programs are also considered more important for poverty reduction than other forms
of social protection.2
While recent years have seen a shift toward cash-based social protection programming, in-kind transfers in the form of
food or nonfood items remain widespread.3 Transfers can be unconditional or conditioned on recipients meeting certain
obligations — for example, education- or health-related objectives, such as participation in classes. In public works programs,
transfers are conditioned on work requirements.
Transfers in social assistance programs are typically targeted to the poorest and most vulnerable households. Targeting
methods vary. Some programs select beneficiaries based on community assessment or information on household incomes
or asset levels while others target certain geographies or demographic groups.4 Transfers can also be targeted within
households, for example to mothers. Recent experimental evidence from cash transfer programs in Burkina Faso, Kenya,
and Morocco suggests that whether the targeted recipients are men or women does not significantly affect child health or
education outcomes.5
Universal basic income schemes provide unconditional transfers to all citizens without targeting. While there have been
small-scale pilots in countries such as Finland, India, Kenya, and the Republic of Korea, no country is currently operating a
full-scale national universal basic income program.6

interlinked, and so require highly adaptive and flex- this regard, the 2007/08 global food price crisis
ible social protection systems to protect the poor was likely an important catalyst, as it alerted policy-
and the vulnerable. makers to the inadequate coverage and limited
This chapter illustrates how social protection coordination of social protection in LMICs.17 Ex post
programs protect before, during, and after crises. assessments found that channeling and targeting of
It then discusses the role of shock-responsive (or support during the 2007/08 crisis was considerably
adaptive) social protection programs that comple- more effective in countries that had preexist-
ment humanitarian response by building resilience ing safety net programs.18 Possibly as a result, the
before shocks occur and, during crises, by offering past two decades have seen major investments in
a mechanism for channeling support that is both safety nets and other social protection measures
cost-effective and timely. in LMICs.19 Yet despite the strong evidence base
and growing interest in expanding social safety
net programs, their coverage among the poorest
EFFECTIVENESS OF SOCIAL SAFETY
segments of the population remains low in LMICs.
NET PROGRAMS DURING CRISES
According to the latest ASPIRE database,20 less than
Expansion of cash transfers and other social safety 15 percent of the poorest quintile in low-income
net measures has been a common policy response countries receive social assistance, rising to just
to recent major crises such as the COVID-19 pan- below 60 percent in upper-middle-income coun-
demic and the 2022 global food price crisis.16 In tries (Figure 1C). Coverage is similarly low for the

54  Adaptive Safety Nets for Crisis Recover


Figure 1 Share of people receiving different forms of social protection, by country income group
Social safety nets Social insurance Labor market

A. COVERAGE IN RURAL AREAS B. COVERAGE IN URBAN AREAS

60% 60%

50% 50%
Share of population covered

Share of population covered


40% 40%

30% 30%

20% 20%

10% 10%

0% 0%
Low Lower-middle Upper-middle Low Lower-middle Upper-middle

C. COVERAGE OF THE POOREST QUINTILE D. COVERAGE OF THE EXTREME POOR (<$1.90 PPP PER DAY)

60% 60%

50% 50%
Share of poorest quintile covered

Share of extreme poor covered

40% 40%

30% 30%

20% 20%

10% 10%

0% 0%
Low Lower-middle Upper-middle Low Lower-middle Upper-middle

Source: Data from the World Bank Atlas of Social Protection: Indicators of Resilience and Equity (ASPIRE) database (2020). .

Note: Social safety nets (social assistance) refers to programs that provide noncontributory transfers to the poor and vulnerable. Social insurance refers to
contributory programs requiring regular payments that participants must make to cover the costs of future employment losses or other shocks. Labor market
refers to programs such as unemployment insurance, wage subsidies, and trainings. N=112 countries (110 countries in Figure 1D). The latest available year for
each country used. High-income countries were omitted due to limited data availability. The poorest quintile (1C) and the extreme poor (1D) are based on per
capita pretransfer income or consumption. Missing coverage data were replaced with imputed values using extrapolation or data from the previous available
year. If no previous data were available, the coverage level was assumed to be zero.

Social Protection  55
extreme poor, that is those living with less than the cyclone’s damages to their dwellings than house-
$1.90 PPP per day (Figure 1D). holds with only slightly better scores that were
During crises, social safety net programs can ineligible to participate in the program.31
offer protection through several channels. Timely Disease epidemics constitute a very different
and adequate cash or in-kind transfers provide type of shock than do weather shocks and other
relief in the immediate aftermath of a shock. But natural disasters. For example, the COVID-19
safety net programs can also improve resilience by pandemic resulted in increased mortality and mor-
building households’ or communities’ capacity to bidity, but also negatively affected incomes and
deal with future shocks (see Chapter 3). A recent disrupted food systems, as well as complicating
meta-analysis of rigorous impact evaluations found the logistics of delivering assistance through social
that social assistance programs increase house- protection programs.32 However, evidence from
hold asset holdings,21 which can serve as a buffer the pandemic suggests that transfer programs also
against future shocks. Safety nets may also pro- protect beneficiaries during such widespread dis-
mote productive investments and allow households ease outbreaks. A cash transfer program rolled out
to diversify their income sources, making them less in Colombia targeting poor households during the
vulnerable to future shocks.22 pandemic improved their food access and reduced
There is growing evidence across LMICs that their reliance on welfare-reducing coping strate-
social safety net programs do protect during cri- gies, such as asset depletion and borrowing.33 In
ses. In Ethiopia, for example, droughts continue to Bolivia, a large-scale noncontributory pension pro-
reduce welfare, but households benefiting from gram had sizable positive impacts on food security
the national Productive Safety Net Program (PSNP) during the early months of the pandemic, partic-
recover to their pre-shock food security levels faster ularly protecting poor households and those who
than do nonbeneficiaries.23 A smaller-scale UNICEF lost their livelihoods.34 In rural Ethiopia, the PSNP
cash transfer program in north Ethiopia was found protected household food security during the
to protect children’s food consumption during local- pandemic.35 Another approach, a universal basic
ized droughts.24 Zambia’s Child Grant Programme, income scheme in rural Kenya, showed positive
which provides unconditional cash transfers to effects on food security as well as on physical and
households with preschool-age or disabled children, mental health.36 And in urban Kenya, a one-time
has protected household consumption expenditures cash transfer to women-led microenterprises sub-
during rainfall anomalies.25 In Niger, an uncondi- stantially increased inventory spending, revenues,
tional government cash transfer program mitigated and profits during the pandemic.37
the negative impacts of droughts on household con- These findings from a wide range of contexts
sumption and poverty.26 Mexico’s conditional cash provide strong evidence that cash transfers and
transfer program, Progresa, has been found to pro- other social protection measures protect household
tect the consumption of nutritious foods during consumption and savings during natural disasters
droughts,27 keep children in school following natu- and epidemics. In the absence of safety nets, poor
ral disasters,28 and even remedy negative impacts households usually have no option but to resort to
of shocks that occurred several years before house- welfare-reducing coping strategies, such as cutting
holds enrolled in the program.29 In India’s Bay of food consumption, selling productive assets, or pull-
Bengal region, access to a rural livelihood program ing children from school, with women and girls often
partly mitigated the devastating economic impacts the worst affected (see Chapter 6). Such coping
of an unusually strong cyclone in 2013.30 In response strategies can have serious negative consequences
to a major cyclone in Fiji in 2016, the government in the short term, and their negative impacts may
provided a one-time top-up transfer to the benefi- persist for several decades. For example, a sizable
ciaries of existing social protection schemes. Fijian literature shows that short-term nutritional defi-
households that were only just eligible for an exist- ciencies during early childhood can lower final
ing program based on a poverty score index and educational attainment and increase the risk of pov-
received the top-up transfer recovered faster from erty in adulthood.38

56  Adaptive Safety Nets for Crisis Recover


SHOCK-RESPONSIVE National Drought Management Authority mon-
SOCIAL PROTECTION itors weather conditions in the area using the
remote-sensing-based Vegetation Condition
Despite the growing number of social protection pro- Index (VCI). Very low VCI values trigger horizontal
grams, many LMICs continue to receive emergency expansion in the form of emergency payments to
aid to address humanitarian situations, many of which households not included in the HSNP. The program’s
are protracted or recurring39 (see Chapter 7). This budget has been drafted based on needs in normal
fact, and the increasing frequency and complexity years as well as careful assessment of drought prob-
of shocks, has generated a widespread commit- abilities and costs of disaster response.48
ment among international agencies to strengthen Ethiopia’s PSNP was set up to provide a more
coordination between social protection and emer- sustainable response mechanism to recurring
gency aid.40 Notably, the Grand Bargain agreement droughts and ad hoc emergency appeals in areas
between international donors and humanitar- that have been historically vulnerable to droughts
ian agencies, launched at the World Humanitarian and other weather disasters.49 Within these areas,
Summit in 2016, commits them to “increase social communities themselves select beneficiaries who
protection programmes and strengthen national receive payments for six months, in the form of cash
and local systems and coping mechanisms in order or food, in exchange for performing labor-intensive
to build resilience in fragile contexts.”41 The core public works, while poor and chronically
premise is that leveraging existing social protection food-insecure households with limited labor capac-
programs as a platform for channeling emergency ity receive unconditional payments. With 8 million
support can be quicker, more effective, and more beneficiaries, the PSNP is one of the largest safety
inclusive than setting up and operating parallel net programs in Africa.50 However, despite its suc-
humanitarian systems during crises.42 For exam- cess in improving food security, asset levels, and
ple, during the COVID-19 pandemic, preexisting resilience,51 the need for annual humanitarian aid
social protection programs were often considerably persists in areas where the PSNP is operational.52 At
more agile in delivering and targeting transfers than the national level, it is estimated that approximately
entirely new programs and initiatives.43 5 million people who are not regularly benefiting
During crises, emergency aid can be chan- from the PSNP require emergency assistance in
neled to existing social protection beneficiaries non-drought years,53 highlighting the chronic gap
(vertical expansion) or used to expand coverage to between actual needs and the funding made avail-
crisis-affected nonbeneficiary households (horizon- able for the program.54
tal expansion). Other adaptions include adjusting The PSNP, however, does have various mecha-
the rules and conditions of existing social protec- nisms for scaling up support during crises. During
tion programs or aligning the emergency support a widespread drought in 2011, the program
to match the modalities of an existing social pro- expanded both vertically (by extending the dura-
tection program.44 The past few years have seen tion of support to 6.5 million beneficiaries) and
an increased interest in establishing such adaptive horizontally (by providing three months of pay-
or shock-responsive social protection programs in ments to more than 3 million additional people).55
LMICs.45 While rigorous evaluations of these pro- Leveraging the PSNP during the crisis had multiple
grams are still in the works,46 many LMICs have benefits. The time between identifying the crisis
already incorporated shock-responsive designs and responding to it was reduced to two months,
into their social protection programming. compared with the typical response time of eight
Kenya’s Hunger Safety Net Program (HSNP), months for disbursement of emergency support
for example, provides unconditional cash trans- in Ethiopia. In addition, the use of existing delivery
fers on a bimonthly basis to the poorest households platforms was highly cost-effective: an estimated
residing in drought-vulnerable northern Kenya.47 cost of US$53 per beneficiary compared with $169
The program is designed to expand horizontally spent for United Nations or NGO-managed emer-
during droughts and other weather shocks. The gency assistance. An evaluation of the coordination

Social Protection  57
Figure 2 Limited association between climate risk and social assistance coverage in the poorest quintile

Low-income Lower-middle-income Upper-middle-income High-income

100%

90%

80%

70%
Social assistance coverage of poorest quintile

60%

50%

40%

30%

20%
Haiti

10% Pakistan

Mozambique
0%

175 150 125 100 75 50 25 0

Global Climate Risk Index (lower values indicate higher risk)

Source: Data from the World Bank Atlas of Social Protection: Indicators of Resilience and Equity (ASPIRE) database, updated June 28, 2022; and from GCIR, D.
Eckstein, V. Künzel, L. Schäfer, and M. Winges, Global Climate Risk Index 2020 (Bonn: Germanwatch, 2019).

Note: The Global Climate Risk Index (GCIR) measures the extent to which countries have already been affected by weather anomalies in terms of lives lost and
economic losses. Lower GCRI values indicate higher climate risk. N=120 countries (latest available data point for each country). Dashed vertical and horizontal
lines mark the median values of climate risk index and social assistance coverage, respectively. The shaded quadrant indicates the area of greatest concern.

58  Adaptive Safety Nets for Crisis Recover


Figure 3 Share of ODA allocated to humanitarian aid and social protection
20%

Humanitarian aid Social protection

15%
Share of total bilateral aid

10%

5%

0%
2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018 2020

Source: Data from OECD-DAC database, Official Bilateral Commitments (or Gross Disbursements) by Sector: Aid (ODA) by Sector and Donor
[DAC5] (Paris: OECD, 2022).

Note: Official development aid (ODA) (from all official donors) disbursements for social protection (ODA category 16010, Social Protection)
and humanitarian aid (ODA category 700, Humanitarian Aid, Total) are compared to total ODA disbursements (All Sectors, Total).

between the PSNP and emergency support in served to mitigate the negative impacts on food
2017/18 found that together these two programs security and partially protected household savings
provided a continuum of support: the PSNP tar- when the flooding occurred.59 Unified targeting
geted chronically food-insecure households, while systems based on social registries likely need to
the humanitarian aid focused more on acutely vul- be established to rapidly determine eligibility for
nerable households.56 Since then, an effort has support when crises occur. For example, the intro-
been underway to further consolidate the PSNP duction of a unified targeting system in Indonesia
and annual emergency assistance delivery systems improved both targeting accuracy and harmoni-
and procedures into a single framework. zation across different social protection programs
Setting up shock-responsive social protection in the country.60 Possibly as a result, Indonesia’s
programs requires major investment and effort.57 social protection response during the COVID-19
Effective shock response requires close coordina- pandemic was considered strong: more than
tion across different social protection programs 85 percent of households received some form of
as well as emergency response programs within a assistance during the early months of the pandemic
country. Moreover, the information requirements and the support was relatively well targeted to the
for these programs are high. Policymakers need poorest households, with little duplication across
to know what risks vulnerable populations are fac- different programs.61
ing, where these risks are likely to materialize, and
who is vulnerable.58 Early warning systems are
GOING FORWARD
needed to facilitate a rapid and effective response
(see Chapters 2 and 3). In Bangladesh, for example, Some countries explicitly target their national safety
anticipatory cash transfers to households pre- net programs to climatically vulnerable areas, char-
dicted to be severely affected by impending floods acterized by frequent droughts or other erratic

Social Protection  59
Box 2 GRADUATION PROGRAMS

Jessica Leight, Research Fellow, International Food Policy Research Institute

In recent years, a growing literature in development economics has examined the complex interrelated constraints faced
by households in extreme poverty. Given the salience of these multiple constraints, multifaceted “graduation model”
interventions — which simultaneously address several barriers — are widely viewed as promising. The first large-scale
evaluation of this approach was conducted as a multicountry trial in Ethiopia, Ghana, Honduras, India, Pakistan, and Peru,
analyzing an integrated package of social protection interventions that included two years of consumption-support cash
transfers, an asset transfer (valued at between US$500 and $1,000), training, weekly household coaching visits, household-
level health training, and savings groups.1 This package not only led to substantial increases in consumption, food security,
assets, and financial inclusion in the medium term, but also its effects persisted 10 years later in India, by which point the
consumption impacts had roughly tripled in magnitude.2 Another large-scale trial of a similar intervention implemented in
Bangladesh by BRAC, an international development organization, also showed very substantial positive effects in both the
medium and long term, up to 10 years post-intervention, with large increases in consumption, assets, food security, and
financial inclusion.3
Additional evaluations of graduation programs in conflict-affected areas have been conducted in Afghanistan and
Yemen — showing robust positive effects in Afghanistan, but more modest effects only on savings and assets four years
post-transfer in Yemen — and in Ghana, where the effects of a more limited set of interventions, including only productive
asset transfers or savings schemes, were minimal or zero.4 A very recent contribution also found that a graduation program
incorporating psychosocial support in Niger had positive effects on consumption and food security, income, and mental
health in the short term.5 While the evidence from Ghana suggests that scaled-down sets of interventions including only
some of the graduation model components do not have impacts comparable to the full set of interventions, the evidence is
nascent and thus this remains an important area for future research.
Overall, major gaps remain in the evidence on longer-term effects and in evaluations of projects implemented at scale or
within the context of broader government social protection programs. The original graduation model pilots were generally
small in scale. However, the Targeting the Ultra Poor programming run by BRAC in Bangladesh targeted 450,000 households,
and the graduation program in Niger was rolled out in the context of a government social safety net, albeit to a subsample
of recipient households. Particularly given the high cost and intensive implementation required for graduation model
interventions, better understanding of whether they can be effectively scaled up will be a crucial focus for future research.

weather patterns. For example, Niger’s adap- levels, respectively. The lines divide countries
tive safety net program targets areas exposed into four quadrants based on their relative level of
to recurrent drought, as determined by an index social assistance coverage and climate risk. The
that considers rainfall and vegetation density data bottom right quadrant captures countries of par-
derived from satellite sources.62 Globally, how- ticularly high concern — countries such as Haiti,
ever, there is only a limited correlation between Mozambique, and Pakistan are exposed to high
social assistance coverage in the poorest quin- climate risk but have very low social assistance cov-
tile and the Global Climate Risk Index (Figure 2),63 erage for the poorest quintile.
which measures the extent to which countries Overall, governments and aid agencies need
have already been affected by extreme weather to shift toward a more proactive approach to
events (droughts, floods, heatwaves) in terms of disasters, replacing ad hoc humanitarian appeals
lives lost as well as economic losses. The dashed during crises with social protection programs
vertical and horizontal lines in Figure 2 mark the that build long-term resilience and respond to
median climate risk and social assistance coverage extreme weather events and other disasters when

60  Adaptive Safety Nets for Crisis Recover


they occur.64 The shift should be accompanied by unlocking productive investments and permitting
appropriate risk-financing instruments that pre- households to diversify their income sources.72
pare for disasters before they happen.65 This entails
calculating the odds of disasters occurring in a
given region or country and estimating the costs
of responding. Budgets can then be drafted not
according to the needs in nondisaster years, but at
a level that accounts for disaster probabilities and
their response costs.66
Yet globally, ad hoc responses remain the norm.
The share of official development assistance (ODA)
allocated to humanitarian aid increased rapidly
over the past decade, while the share of ODA allo-
cated for social protection remained relatively
stagnant (Figure 3). Considering the solid evidence
from a wide variety of contexts showing that social
protection programs build resilience and offer pro-
tection during crises, thereby reducing the need for
humanitarian response, a strong argument can be
made for increasing spending for social protection.
Social safety net programs in LMICs depend
largely on external funding.67 To ensure the con-
tinuity of these programs, LMICs must diversify
funding sources by enhancing domestic revenue
collection mechanisms and exploring innovative
financing. For example, programs like Ethiopia’s
PSNP and Indonesia’s Keluarga Harapan condi-
tional cash transfer program have been found to
increase tree cover or prevent forest loss,68 thus
potentially qualifying them for climate or other
green financing schemes.69 Another way to alle-
viate the financial burden of social safety nets is
to reduce implementation costs. For example,
switching from in-kind transfers to cash or mobile
payments can produce considerable cost savings
for program implementers.70 However, to minimize
harmful effects for transfer recipients, it is import-
ant to consider the context before making such
adjustments, particularly when food prices are ris-
ing rapidly or are volatile.71
In the long run, the goal of social safety pro-
grams should be to strengthen livelihoods to
promote long-term resilience and eventual gradu-
ation from assistance. A growing body of evidence
shows that carefully designed graduation programs
(Box 2) can lift households out of poverty, improve
food security, and increase resilience to shocks by

Social Protection  61
CHAPTER 6

Gender
Promoting Equality in Fragile
and Conflict-Affected Settings
HAZEL MALAPIT AND LYNN BROWN
Hazel Malapit is a senior research coordinator, Poverty, Gender, and Inclusion Unit,
International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). Lynn Brown is director of Alliances,
Policy, and the Africa Region, HarvestPlus, IFPRI.

KEY MESSAGES To improve the outcomes of crisis responses, it is important to:

■ The treatment of women is a better predictor of a state’s peaceful- ■ Prioritize gender targets and track progress, and direct funding toward
ness than its level of wealth, status of democracy, or ethnoreligious programming that promotes gender equality and women’s empower-
identity. In fragile and conflict-affected settings, women and girls ment in fragile and conflict-affected settings.
face disproportionate risks that include forced displacement and
■ Adopt innovative methods to address the gender data gap. Providing
gender-based violence.
mobile phone access to women can have multiplier effects, enabling
■ Comprehensive and systematic data to provide evidence on the gen- women to receive cash transfers directly while providing a platform for
dered consequences of crises are still lacking, particularly for disasters high-frequency data collection and targeted information campaigns.
and conflicts. Yet, sex- and age-disaggregated data are critical to under-
■ Generate more evidence on violence prevention strategies. To date,
standing how crises differentially affect women and men, and girls and
few studies empirically evaluate the impact of violence prevention and
boys; monitoring whether programs are reaching and benefiting the
response interventions in fragile and conflict-affected settings, but
appropriate groups; and designing gender-responsive interventions.
important research is underway, including work by the interdisciplin-
■ Women’s voices are rarely heard in disaster management, despite ary Cash Transfer and Intimate Partner Violence Research Collaborative,
evidence that their participation can improve outcomes, including hosted by IFPRI.
in conflict situations. Although women are often consulted during
■ Ensure that women’s voices are included at all levels, especially in peace
the needs assessment phase of response management, they are not
processes and in senior management and high-level government posi-
involved in the design of projects.
tions where policymaking and programming decisions are made.

62  Promoting Equality in Fragile and Conflict-Affected Setting


G
ender inequality exists everywhere, Democratic states with a higher level of violence
but it is particularly stark in fragile and against women are as unstable as nondemot
conflict-affected settings (FCAS). Yemen, cratic states.6 States with male-dominant family
Afghanistan, Chad, Iraq, Pakistan, and the law systems have greater levels of fragility,7 and
Central African Republic — all of which are cont other quantitative studies show that states with
sidered extremely fragile and are affected by higher levels of gender inequality are more likely
conflict (except Pakistan)1 — score the lowest on to experience conflict.8 Compared to other develt
the Gender Development Index.2 The States of oping country contexts, women and girls in
Fragility 2022 report also finds that the Gender FCAS are exposed to greater health risks, such
Inequality Index is highly correlated with all six as maternal mortality and early pregnancy, along
dimensions used to assess fragility, with 15 of 21 with other negative outcomes such as forced/
conflict-affected contexts facing high levels of child marriage and gender-based violence (GBV).9
gender inequality.3 The same pattern is shown The increased exposure of women and girls to
by the Global Gender Gap Report 4 — 72 percent these risks has adverse effects on their human
of the countries ranked in the bottom quartile of capital, access to resources, and economic part
gender parity are considered fragile, and a numt ticipation, which in turn reduces their agency and
ber of countries affected by conflict, such as Haiti, resilience to manage and cope with other shocks
Somalia, and South Sudan, do not even have suffit and stressors. Households headed by widows in
cient data to be included in the ranking.5 conflict settings are more vulnerable to intergent
These patterns indicate a close relationship erational poverty, and children exposed to related
between fragility and gender inequality. The traumas, such as orphanhood, can experience
treatment of women is a better predictor of a lasting developmental impacts, with adverse cont
state’s peacefulness than its level of wealth, stat sequences for health and economic outcomes in
tus of democracy, or ethnoreligious identity. adulthood.10

Gender  63
In this chapter, we focus on catastrophic crit severe food insecurity by 38 percentage points.17
ses — disasters11 and conflicts — that lead to Additionally, the share of respondents who were
displacement, which has devastating conset unable to access needed health services increased
quences for women and girls. These types of crises by 35 percentage points, and the share of respont
are of particular concern because of the lack of dents who were unable to purchase staple foods
evidence-based policy responses. increased by 26 percentage points.18 These negt
ative impacts were more pronounced for poor
households, rural households, and those with
GENDERED CONSEQUENCES OF
undernourished children.
DISASTER AND CONFLICT
Although the data do not allow for individual-level
Existing evidence confirms that crises disprot analysis and the majority of phone survey respondents
portionately impact women’s assets, livelihoods, were men (around 62 percent across all rounds),19 it
and well-being.12 Such gendered impacts have is likely that women’s workloads increased disproport
also been observed from growing evidence on tionately for households that were unable to access
the direct and indirect impacts of current crit needed health services due to the conflict. According
ses, including the COVID-19 pandemic and the to the 2013 Ethiopia Time Use Survey, women spend
Russia-Ukraine war.13 more than twice as much time as men on unpaid care
When it comes to disasters and conflict, howt work, with 5.5 hours daily for women compared with
ever, the evidence remains quite limited. A decade 2.0 hours for men.20 The time use data also suggest
ago, a review observed that most research on that prior to the conflict, women already bore a dout
the gendered impacts of conflict focused exclut ble burden by spending more than an hour longer
sively on GBV and called for a wider set of issues than men on unpaid and paid work combined, leaving
to be considered.14 Since 2013, research on GBV them with less time for rest. The livelihood and income
in disaster settings and emergencies has grown uncertainties accompanying conflict are likely to exact
considerably, although the quality of quantitative erbate the workload pressure on women, who remain
studies remains poor.15 A recent scoping review16 primarily responsible for preparing food and caring
confirms that, to date, few studies have explored for children and other family members. This added
the gendered effects of conflict on agricultural prot pressure also raises the importance of recognizing
ductivity and food security. We also do not know care needs as part of impact assessments and recovt
much about the distribution of care work, and gent ery planning.
dered impacts in human and physical capital that
make long-term movement out of poverty possible. WOMEN AND GIRLS FACE INCREASED RISK OF GBV
These knowledge gaps limit understanding of the GBV is a serious public health concern, with nearly
full range of the gendered distribution of impacts, one in three women worldwide having been
as well as the underlying mechanisms that lead to subjected to physical and/or sexual violence.21
those impacts — critical information that can help Numerous studies also show that intimate partner
inform both short- and long-term policy responses. violence (IPV) and other forms of violence against
women and girls (VAWG) have risen at alarming
HEALTH AND SANITATION SERVICES rates due to the COVID-19 pandemic.22 Disasters
AND WOMEN’S WORKLOADS exacerbate stress and violence against women,
Disruptions in health and sanitation services in regardless of country income status. After the
FCAS may exacerbate women’s care burdens. 2011 earthquake in Christchurch, New Zealand, for
In Ethiopia, recent studies on the impacts of the example, IPV reportedly increased by 40 percent in
ongoing civil conflict use high-frequency phone rural areas.23
surveys to assess food insecurity and access to Recent evidence reviews suggest that the risk
health and water, sanitation, and hygiene sert of GBV is even more elevated in humanitarian and
vices. IFPRI research found that the outbreak of the emergency settings, particularly for adolescent
conflict increased the probability of moderate to girls.24 The consequences of GBV extend beyond

64  Promoting Equality in Fragile and Conflict-Affected Setting


the immediate physical injuries and mental trauma consequences for girls, including curtailment of
of the experience. Studies show that GBV survivors education, impacts on sexual and reproductive
are more likely to suffer from reproductive health health, exposure to IPV and GBV, early pregnancy
issues, sexually transmitted infections, unwanted and higher maternal mortality and morbidity, sext
pregnancies, depression, and anxiety and to ually transmitted diseases including HIV, and
develop unhealthy coping strategies, such as drug higher rates of under-five mortality for children of
use.25 Moreover, necessary health services to meet girls.33 These risks can be exacerbated in displacet
the increase in healthcare needs after exposure to ment situations where services are more lacking
GBV and across the life course may be limited or for adolescents.
unavailable in disaster and displacement situations. Child marriage is more common for girls
A recent systematic review examined VAWG in than boys in FCAS (Figure 1). Marriage rates for
disaster situations across quantitative, qualitative, girls under the age of 18 exceed 50 percent in
and mixed-method studies.26 The authors report Burkina Faso, the Central African Republic, Mali,
that nearly half of all quantitative studies found Mozambique, Niger, and South Sudan. In Niger,
positive associations between exposure to disast almost three out of four girls are married by the
ter and some type of violence, and none found that age of 18. Additionally, the lasting impact of intert
disaster exposure was associated with decreased mittent fragility and/or frequent disasters on
VAWG. The review uncovered three potential patht addressing child marriage is shown by child mart
ways through which disaster exposure can increase riage rates in Bangladesh (51 percent), Chad
VAWG: (1) increased stressors such as poor ment (61 percent), and Guinea (47 percent), which persist
tal health and loss of housing and livelihoods; (2) even though the World Bank does not classify these
poor law enforcement and risky post-disaster houst countries as fragile due to conflict.
ing environments; and (3) underlying drivers that In most of the countries ranked most fragile
are exacerbated by disaster exposure, such as (marked with [*] in Figure 1), more than 10 percent
forced marriage of girls and worsened social norms of girls are married before the age of 15. In the
rooted in men’s feelings of inadequacy in the face Central African Republic and Niger, more than
of disaster.27 25 percent of girls are married before the age of 15.
Results from a systematic review and meta-analysis Poverty contributes to the likelihood of child
suggest that one in five refugees or displaced women marriage because marriage can be used by houset
in complex humanitarian settings28 experience sexual holds to reduce the financial burden of caring for
violence.29 However, this is likely a significant underest or educating daughters.34 These pressures are
timation, given the well-documented underreporting likely exacerbated during periods of heightened
of VAWG across all settings.30 economic insecurity, but few studies have examt
The most prevalent forms of GBV against adot ined this in fragile settings. For example, a recent
lescent girls are child marriage, domestic violence, report suggests that in Ethiopia, child marriage
and sexual violence.31 Adolescent girls can be sept has more than doubled as families struggle with
arated from their families and support networks food insecurity in regions hit hardest by drought.35
during displacement, which contributes to increased One recent study that tracked whether adolescent
risk of GBV. For example, a 1999 government survey girls were more likely to be married as a result of
in Sierra Leone found that 37 percent of prostitutes the economic stress from the COVID-19 pandemic
were under the age of 15, and of those, 80 percent found that 18 percent of respondents in Uganda
were children displaced by war.32 reported knowing of a family in their community
who had their underage daughter married due to
GIRLS FACE INCREASED RISK OF CHILD MARRIAGE the pandemic, usually because of parental income
Marrying in childhood is a human rights violat loss and economic uncertainty.36 Nearly half of the
tion. It is worth emphasizing that children cannot respondents reported knowing or hearing about
give informed consent to sex, marriage, or other girls in their community becoming pregnant while
critical decisions. Early marriage has significant schools were closed. This highlights the risk of early

Gender  65
Figure 1 Child marriage rates (2014–2020) in fragile and conflict-affected countries
Married by age 15 Married by age 18

80%

70%

60%

50%

40%

30%

20%

10%

0%
Girls
Boys
Girls
Boys
Girls
Boys
Girls
Boys
Girls
Boys
Girls
Boys
Girls
Boys
Girls
Boys
Girls
Boys
Girls
Boys
Girls
Boys
Girls
Boys
Girls
Boys
Girls
Boys
Girls
Boys
Girls
Boys
Girls
Boys
Girls
Boys
Girls
Boys
Afghanistan

Bangladesh**

Burkina Faso*

Cameroon

Central African Republic*

Chad**

Democratic Rep. of the Congo

Ethiopia

Guinea**

Iraq

Mali*

Nigeria
Mozambique*

Myanmar

Niger*

Somalia*

South Sudan*

Ukraine

Yemen

Source: Country list based on the World Bank’s FY2023 List of Fragile and Conflict-Affected Situations (2022). Child marriage data are from UNICEF, The State
of the World’s Children 2021: On My Mind – Promoting, Protecting and Caring for Children’s Mental Health (2021).

Note: Countries marked with an asterisk (*) are classified as the 10 most fragile, based on the OECD’s 2018 State of Fragility Report; countries marked with **
are on the OECD list but not the World Bank list.

66  Promoting Equality in Fragile and Conflict-Affected Setting


pregnancy among adolescent girls, which has negt results across some dimensions of empowerment.
ative implications for the future health and human To maximize program effectiveness, the study’s
capital outcomes of young mothers and their authors recommend explicitly targeting specific
children.37 empowerment outcomes and tailoring the intervent
tion to the drivers of gender inequity in the given
context.43
RECOMMENDATIONS
How can programs and policies promote gender CLOSE THE GENDER DATA GAP
equality in fragile and conflict-affected settings? Routine collection of sex- and age-disaggregated
data is a critical step both to promote gender
PRIORITIZE GENDER TARGETS AND TRACK PROGRESS equality and to support gender-targeted programt
Programming for gender-specific humanitarian ming in FCAS. Without appropriate and timely
responses has been historically underfunded.38 data, there is a general lack of knowledge on the
Recent commitments to address this shortfall gender-differentiated impacts of crises, and policy
have led to a notable surge in gender-specific responses are unlikely to address the most presst
humanitarian funding — more than doubling from ing needs of women and men, and boys and girls. A
US$268 million in 2018 to $587 million in 2021 — but recent Inter-Agency Humanitarian Evaluation found
this represents only 1.9 percent of total internat limited evidence of sex- and age-disaggregated
tional humanitarian assistance.39 Moreover, current data being used to inform the analysis and
reporting systems do not allow for accurate trackt adaptation of project activities, with negative
ing of funding commitments, a lack of visibility that consequences for the quality of initial response
increases the risk of funds being diverted away activities for women and girls, as compared to
from gender.40 According to key informants intert other populations.44 These policy responses span
viewed for the 2022 Global Humanitarian Assistance a wide range of actions that address both the
Report, establishing an integrated gender compot underlying causes of crises (such as development
nent before the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic programs to stabilize livelihoods and social protect
minimized the risk of funds being diverted, despite tion programs) and the outcomes of crises (such
the rising needs from the health emergency.41 The as anticipatory action programming or emergency
pressure to deprioritize gender is exacerbated in response humanitarian programming). It is critical
settings where funding for humanitarian operations that women be counted in policy responses in all
is severely limited. these stages — before, during, and after disasters
Directing funding toward programming that and conflict.
promotes gender equality and women’s empowt
erment pays off in FCAS. Guidance on the most PRACTICAL CHALLENGES
promising interventions comes from a recent syst However, data collection during disaster and cont
tematic review of 14 intervention types across 29 flict periods is fraught with practical challenges.
FCAS.42 The review finds that most gender-specific Data collection systems in FCAS are rarely set up
and gender-transformative interventions have overt to systematically collect sex-disaggregated data.
all positive effects on the primary dimension of Conventional sources of individual-level data, such
women’s empowerment being targeted, and that as household surveys, may be difficult to implet
none of the interventions lead to negative effects ment in settings with extensive migration or forced
on any outcome. Effective gender-focused intert displacement or due to logistical, security, and etht
ventions include cash transfers, self-help groups, ical concerns. Even where available, data may not
village savings and loan associations, and technit be interoperable across different systems, limitt
cal and vocational education and training. These ing how they can be analyzed, and there may be
can improve multiple dimensions of empowerment, political sensitivities around sharing data across
while asset transfers, sensitization campaigns, and institutions. Other methodological difficulties
capacity-building programs lead to promising include the lack of reliable baseline information on

Gender  67
Box 1 WHEN DISASTER STRIKES, RIGID SECLUSION NORMS CAN MEAN
DEATH FOR WOMEN AND GIRLS

Women and girls bear an unequal burden from disasters. According to data from 141 countries affected by natural disasters
between 1981 and 2002, disasters lower the life expectancy of women more than of men.1 Restrictions on women’s
freedom of movement contribute to their vulnerability during disasters, particularly in contexts where women may not be
able to decide whether to evacuate.2 For example, during the 1993 earthquake in Afghanistan, seclusion norms reportedly
prevented women from evacuating.3 During the 1991 cyclone in Bangladesh, 9 out of 10 deaths were of women.4 Many
women reportedly waited for their husbands to return home before deciding to evacuate, in part due to a lack of warning
information, which had been transmitted primarily to men.5
Insights from Pakistan reveal how gender norms expose women and girls to death in disaster situations. The 2022
monsoon rain triggered flooding that covered around one-third of the country and left 6 million people in need of assistance.
Elders and men in more patriarchal remote villages forbade women from moving to camps where they would be safe from
the floods, and would have access to food and water. In Basti Ahmad Din, a small village in Punjab province, its 400 residents
faced starvation and disease as the village became an island. More than half of its homes were destroyed by flooding, but the
elders forbade women from leaving for relief camps, as it would entail them mixing with men outside their families. Instead,
men traveled to the camps to secure supplies for the villagers. In another area of Punjab, similar concerns reportedly led to the
death of dozens of women and children. In yet another village, men evacuated to higher ground with their livestock, leaving
the women behind.6

gender inequalities and other variables of interest in the face of disaster (Box 1)? Do men return earlier
during non-crisis periods.45 to reestablish homes, leaving spouses and children
For example, although the number of internally behind? Are women’s assets disposed of first as
displaced persons (IDPs) more than doubled from households rebuild the family home and livelihood
26.4 million to 53.2 million between 2012 and 2021 during these types of crises? Past research shows
due to conflict and violence (see Chapter 7), data that shocks to household livelihoods often result in
for people displaced by disaster often reflect only women’s assets being sold first (including product
immediate displacement and are rarely disaggret tive assets such as small livestock), before those
gated by sex or age.46 According to the Internal that are controlled and used by men to generate
Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC), of the income (such as farm machinery or cropland).48
countries and territories from which it collected These findings suggest that crises can disproport
data in 2018, only 14 percent documented the sex tionately erode women’s incomes, savings, and
and age of IDPs, and of those, only a quarter did so assets, which has serious implications for their
systematically.47 In the absence of reliable sex- and future livelihoods and bargaining power within
age-disaggregated data on IDPs, it is difficult to the household.
assess which subpopulations are more likely to be The reality is that neither internal nor external
displaced, how long people are displaced for — displacement is a short-term occurrence in most
particularly in disaster situations — or whether they instances. The average UN-coordinated humant
are displaced multiple times in a year. itarian response to address these situations lasts
Similarly, it is unclear how displacement due to nine years.49 The life-course needs of women of
disaster affects men and women differently. Do child-bearing age and girls can change dramatt
men stay to protect fixed assets in disaster zones ically within this span of time. Given the lack of
and settings affected by extreme weather? How sex-disaggregated data, it is unclear how agencies
often are women forbidden to move to IDP camps can ensure these needs are addressed, especially

68  Promoting Equality in Fragile and Conflict-Affected Setting


Box 2 OPERATIONAL RECOMMENDATIONS ON WASTING

The world’s most fragile and conflict-affected countries bear the brunt of any food crisis. Wasting is the indicator of choice in
these emergency settings, as it changes quickly in response to both food shortfalls and/or disease outbreaks caused by issues
with healthcare or access to safe water. In the first six months of 2022, one child became severely wasted every 60 seconds,
increasing the total of severely wasted children from 7.674 million to 7.934 million.1 Severe wasting is a key predictor of child
mortality, with mortality rates 11 times higher for severely wasted children than well-nourished ones, and accounts for 20
percent of all global child deaths.2 Severe wasting that affects more than 30 percent of children under the age of five years in
a region is one of three indicators used to declare famine — the others are when 20 percent of the population faces extreme
food shortages and when 2 out of 1,000 people die of starvation daily.3
Ninety percent of children treated for severe wasting are in emergency settings, including displacement and refugee
camps.4 This is a major challenge for slow-onset disasters, such as severe drought, where parents are unable to protect their
homes and assets, and mothers may be very young. Delayed displacement to a camp may result in children dying before
arrival or en route, or being too ill to save when they arrive.
Mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC) tapes are a simple, inexpensive tool to check for wasting in children. To do so, the
paper measuring tape is placed around the upper arm of a child ages 6–59 months. The tape is color coded, with red indicating
severe wasting, amber/orange indicating moderate wasting, and green indicating no wasting. MUAC tapes are commonly
used by rural clinics and community health workers. These tapes could be given to women in areas with slow-onset drought
or ongoing conflict, which often limits their mobility and access to clinics. By providing these tapes with instructions on their
use, women could be made aware that accessing more food or healthcare is critical when the child’s arm measurement begins
to enter the amber/orange segment of the tape. It would also help women in slow-onset drought disasters, such as in Somalia,
leave for displacement camps as a matter of urgency, given that it can take several days of walking to reach these camps.
Mobile phones also offer an opportunity for simple text messaging that encourages women to measure their children and
report red or orange measurements, potentially enabling humanitarian workers to identify the most severe problems earlier
and mobilize a rapid response.

for young girls who transition to adolescence and mobile money transfers, the phone could also be
face increased threats due to their gender and life used to collect high-frequency data on women
stage. This can lead to more child marriage, as and children and provide low-cost interventions,
parents lack resources and seek to protect their such as targeted nutrition messaging. For examt
adolescent daughters. ple, if women received both a mobile phone and
a mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC) tape as
TESTING DIGITAL SOLUTIONS part of their humanitarian assistance package, they
To this end, closing the digital gender gap can have could receive instructions and periodic prompts
multiplier effects. If every displaced woman entert via phone to use the tape to monitor their chilt
ing an IDP camp were provided a mobile phone dren’s wasting status, which is a critical predictor of
as part of the humanitarian assistance package, child mortality, particularly in emergency response
then the scope would widen considerably for both settings (Box 2). Independent access to a mobile
data collection and gender-responsive intervent phone can also help deter GBV by making it east
tions. This idea is being tested on the ground by ier for women to report sexual harassment and
the World Food Programme, which is scaling up other violations to trusted authorities. Husbands
the use of mobile money for humanitarian assist may still control if and when women are allowed
tance and prioritizing women as recipients of to use mobile phones in some contexts, howt
food assistance and cash transfers.50 Apart from ever, so it would be important to understand what

Gender  69
conditions make this type of intervention more settings. With a diverse portfolio of eight studies
likely to succeed. to be completed in seven countries by 2024, the
Experience from the Gender, Climate, and Collaborative is expected to contribute to a new
Nutrition Integration Initiative phone surveys sugt wave of research that aims to go beyond demont
gests that it is possible to collect survey data on strating whether cash transfers reduce IPV to
different aspects of well-being, as well as data explore how practitioners can maximize impacts
related to agency, decision-making, and even and whether these impacts can be sustained.54
more sensitive topics such as intrahousehold Insights from this research will undoubtedly offer
conflict and gendered practices including child lessons for FCAS, where economic distress is a
marriage. Because of the sensitivity of some quest commonly cited contributor to GBV.55
tions, it is recommended that only one respondent
be selected in each household (either a man or LET WOMEN LEAD
woman) to minimize the potential of intrahousehold Of the 130 peace agreements signed between
conflict, and that speakerphone use be checked to 1990 and 2014, only 13 included women signatot
ensure women’s privacy.51 ries.56 Compared to peace agreements without
women signatories, those signed by women have
GENERATE MORE EVIDENCE ON VIOLENCE not only been more durable, but have also included
PREVENTION STRATEGIES a larger number of agreement provisions and
Despite the increased attention to GBV, few studies led to a higher rate of provision implementation
empirically evaluate the impact of GBV prevention 10 years after signing. Enabling women’s voice in
and response interventions in disaster and conflict peace negotiations is associated with a 35 percent
settings. Many widely accepted strategies for pret increase in the probablity that an agreement lasts
venting and responding to GBV in humanitarian at least 15 years.57 Even when women are not sigt
settings do not easily lend themselves to experit natories to peace agreements, their engagement in
mental designs, including good practices around negotiations increases the likelihood of an agreet
case management and referral systems, justice and ment being signed. Women’s influence is often
legal aid, safety and risk mitigation, and coordinat stronger for more fundamental reforms, including
tion, assessment, monitoring, and evaluation.52 postconflict female political representation and
Nevertheless, important research is underway legal reforms related to land ownership, inherit
in this field. The latest Sexual Violence Research tance, GBV, and healthcare. In Liberia, women’s
Initiative Forum, held in 2022, featured new political activism against violence was critical to
research from humanitarian and displacement sett ending the country’s 14-year civil war.58 Liberian
tings in Iraq, northern Uganda, South Sudan, and women continued their advocacy in the aftermath
southern Lebanon.53 These studies examine the of the Accra Peace Agreement, which led to the hist
integration of violence prevention strategies with toric presidential election of Ellen Johnson Sirleaf,
livelihood and economic programming. However, the first female head of state in Africa.59
some methodological challenges remain, part In disaster management, however, women’s pert
ticularly around identifying causal impacts and spectives are rarely considered.60 Although the
distinguishing between the impacts of economic humanitarian system has shown improvements in
components and violence prevention components. women’s representation in senior leadership,61 this
Recognizing that economic insecurity is a does not necessarily translate to real influence in
well-known risk factor for multiple forms of violence response management and programming. Women
against women and children, the interdisciplint are often consulted during the needs assesst
ary Cash Transfer and Intimate Partner Violence ment phase, but they are not involved in the actual
Research Collaborative hosted by IFPRI aims to design of projects. Their inputs are often limited to
build evidence on how cash transfer programt hygiene or sexual and reproductive health, rather
ming can catalyze IPV prevention among poor than their other broader needs, strengths, resilt
and vulnerable women in low- and middle-income ience, and capacities.62

70  Promoting Equality in Fragile and Conflict-Affected Setting


The global community should learn from and
invest in grassroots women’s groups that are leadt
ing programs to respond to crises and rebuild
livelihoods in their own communities. Women’s
groups can provide a platform for collective action
by sharing labor and childcare responsibilities,
organizing transport, accessing credit and savt
ings, and disseminating information.63 For example,
during the pandemic, the Self-Employed Women’s
Association in India served as an intermediary
between female farmers and the government, helpt
ing women to sign up for government relief and
organizing members to sell their vegetables.64
Other examples abound, such as women’s organit
zations in Albania, Brazil, Ethiopia, Lebanon, Nepal,
and Paraguay that are supported by UN Women.65
Women’s groups know their communities best and
can reach those who are most in need. Beyond
more financial support, women deserve a seat at
the table to shape the policies and programs that
directly impact their own lives and communities.

Gender  71
CHAPTER 7

Forced Migration
Fragility, Resilience,
and Policy Responses
MANUEL A. HERNANDEZ, OLIVIER ECKER,
PETER LÄDERACH, AND JEAN-FRANÇOIS MAYSTADT
Manuel A. Hernandez is a senior research fellow, Markets, Institutions, and Trade Unit,
International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). Olivier Ecker is a senior research
fellow, Foresight and Policy Modeling Unit, IFPRI. Peter Läderach is CGIAR co-lead
of climate security, The Alliance of Bioversity and CIAT. Jean-François Maystadt is a
professor of economics, Université Catholique de Louvain and Lancaster University.

KEY MESSAGES To improve the outcomes of forced migration, it is critical to:

■ The decision to migrate is complex, driven by a wide range of ■ Invest in research to develop better-tailored policies that expand the
context-specific push and pull factors, including economic, social and positive effects of migration and limit negative ones on migrants and
cultural, environmental, and safety factors. their families, sending communities, and hosting communities.

■ Forced displacement — when people must leave their original place ■ Adopt nontraditional methods and analytical approaches to trace
of residence — results from various triggering factors, events, and migration. These can provide new research avenues to better under-
shocks. These include climate change, armed conflict, criminal violence, stand the key factors driving forced migration, including irregular
and economic shocks, which are often interrelated, multiplying their migration, which is inherently more difficult to measure and analyze.
impact. About four-fifths of displaced people have experienced acute
■ Align social protection and climate action objectives. As conflict and cli-
hunger and malnutrition.
mate change further worsen the global humanitarian crisis — and drive
■ Migration, including forced migration, constitutes an important adap- forced migration — humanitarian and climate investments must mutu-
tation strategy, with both challenges and opportunities. It can have ally support peace, security, and climate adaptation and mitigation.
benefits for migrants and for hosting and sending communities. It is a
■ Identify measures for accelerating the transition from humanitarian aid
fundamental component of economic development, allowing individu-
to development policy and for better integrating refugees into hosting
als to respond to economic incentives or seek out better opportunities.
communities. Different options should be considered for integration,
■ Policies that restrict the rights of migrants to work and choose a place with special attention given to the needs of displaced women.
of residence in hosting countries should be considered barriers to eco-
■ Prioritize addressing “forced immobility” (that is, the situation of
nomic and social integration and development.
those who are not able or choose not to relocate) — a problem that has
■ Migration requires resources and socioeconomic networks, and often received little policy attention.
those who stay behind are the most vulnerable.

72  Fragility, Resilience, and Policy Response


M
igration is a recurrent, complex, and multi- Recent examples of forced migration include ref-
dimensional phenomenon driven by a ugees5 displaced by the Syrian civil war and by
broad set of factors. These include both the Russia-Ukraine war, the Rohingya people flee-
“push” factors that encourage or force people to ing violence inflicted by Myanmar’s state forces,
move from their current location and “pull” factors Venezuelan migrants seeking asylum to escape
that attract people to a new location.1 Migration is food insecurity and oppression, and people from
also an important adaptation strategy and devel- Central America taking treacherous routes to the
opment pathway that can support livelihoods, build United States to escape gang violence and per-
resilience, and protect against fragility and armed sistent poverty.
conflict. Natural barriers and policy restrictions to Of people forcibly displaced worldwide, as of
migration may similarly result in important welfare mid-2021, 80 percent had experienced acute food
losses.2 insecurity and high levels of malnutrition.6 The
Individuals or households migrate for multi- COVID-19 pandemic also increased the vulnerabil-
ple reasons, including being forced to leave their ity of displaced people and migrants. In East Africa,
homes due to climate change, armed conflict, crim- including the Horn of Africa, for example, the chal-
inal violence, or economic needs, among other lenges of displaced people were exacerbated by
triggering factors. This chapter discusses migra- reduced humanitarian funding, a decrease in remit-
tion as a result of “forced displacement,” which tance flows due to travel freezes, and hundreds of
occurs when people must leave their “original place thousands of job losses.7
of residence as a result of an idiosyncratic shock, Even migration forced by war and violence
whether manmade or environmental.”3 Interactions requires resources and relies heavily on networks.8
among these driving forces, such as conflict and/or People with more liquid resources are more able
extreme weather events combined with food inse- to flee,9 though perhaps less likely to do so,10
curity, may also lead to threat-multiplying effects.4 while better social networks can also facilitate

Forced Migration  73
Figure 1 Key migration facts migration.11 Thus, migrants are not necessarily
those most affected by triggering factors, and they
may be relatively better equipped with knowledge
ONE IN EVERY SEVEN PEOPLE IN THE and skills that are useful for adaptation in hosting
WORLD IS A MIGRANT communities than those who remain behind.

763 million are internal migrants and 281 million are


international migrants. RELEVANT MIGRATION FACTS
Worldwide, one in every seven people is a
migrant, whether a forced or voluntary migrant12
INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION SURGED BY (Figure 1). Of these approximately 1 billion
107 MILLION OVER THE PAST 20 YEARS migrants, 763 million are estimated to be inter-
nal migrants (migrating within their country
52% of international migrants are men, about one-third of origin), while 281 million are international
are 15–34 years old, and a large share originate from migrants. International migration has received
rural areas. more attention recently, as it surged by 107 million
between 2000 and 2020. During this period,
Western Europe and the United States were the
THERE ARE ABOUT 84 MILLION INTERNALLY main destinations for migrants. Among interna-
DISPLACED PERSONS, REFUGEES, tional migrants, 52 percent are men and roughly
AND ASYLUM SEEKERS one-third are between 15 and 34 years of age.
About 40 percent of international remittances are
Most people displaced by armed conflict or other sent to rural areas, reflecting the rural origins of
forces are from developing countries, and 80% many migrants.13
experience acute food insecurity. While the increase in international migrants
has mostly occurred in high-income countries
over the past three decades, the rising refu-
CLIMATE DISPLACEMENT HAS RECEIVED gee population has been concentrated more in
SPECIAL ATTENTION IN RECENT YEARS low- and middle-income countries (Figure 2). The
number of refugees has roughly doubled since
75% of recent displacements are due to natural disasters, the early 2000s, reaching 27 million in 2021, and
and many people displaced by climate change are more than 86 percent of them have been hosted
women, who are also at greater risk of violence. by these countries.
Forced displacement may also result in irregu-
lar migration, which is the movement of people that
occurs outside of the laws and regulations of the
FORCED MIGRATION MAY ALSO RESULT IN
sending, transit, and receiving countries.14 Irregular
IRREGULAR MIGRATION
migration is generally more difficult to track, and
there is more information on irregular migration
Apprehensions at the US–Mexico border set a new
flows to Europe and the United States than within
record in fiscal year 2022 and almost tripled compared
Africa, Asia, and Latin America, where they are
to 2019.
likely to be significant.15 Although stringent border
controls and migration policies at the onset of the
COVID-19 pandemic led to a temporary decrease
Source: Data from FAO, Migration, Agriculture and Rural Development (Rome: 2016);
IOM, World Migration Report 2020 (Geneva: 2020); J. Barchfield,”Pandemic Deepens in irregular migration, these crossings seem to
Hunger for Displaced People the World Over,” UNHCR, March 31, 2021; USAID, U.S. have resumed — and even increased — since 2021.16
Government Global Food Security Strategy (Washington, DC: 2021); IOM, “Migration Apprehensions at the US–Mexico border, for exam-
in the World,” and “Key Migration Terms,” accessed January 2023; OHCHR, “Climate
Change Exacerbates Violence against Women and Girls,” (2022); USCBP, “U.S. ple, numbered 800,000 in fiscal year (FY) 2019,
Border Patrol Apprehensions,” Washington, DC, Dec. 19, 2022.

74  Fragility, Resilience, and Policy Response


Figure 2 International migrants and refugees in low-, middle-, and high-income countries
International migrant population in LMICs Refugee population in LMICs
International migrant population in HICs Refugee population in HICs

250 25
International migrant population (million people)

Refugee population (million people)


200 20

150 15

100 10

50 5

0 0
1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 2020

Source: UNHCR Refugee Data Finder. https://www.unhcr.org/refugee-statistics/

Note: LMICs = low- and middle-income countries; HICs = high-income countries.

400,000 in FY 2020, more than 1.5 million in FY associated with climatic conditions and extreme
2021, and 2.2 million in FY 2022.17 events; conflict, violence, and crime; food inse-
curity and malnutrition; job opportunities (or lack
thereof); social and political instability in the local
CAUSES OF MIGRATION
area; and/or illegitimate institutions and govern-
Formally identifying migration-triggering factors ment repression, among others. In the case of
requires a careful and comprehensive analysis, as forced internal migration in Africa and the Middle
many of the factors that influence migration deci- East, for example, the main driving forces include
sions are interrelated, vary over time, reinforce one conflict and insecurity, repressive governance,
another, and cannot always be observed.18 Factors lack of economic opportunities, and climate
that drive migration are generally grouped into shocks.19 The major drivers of irregular migra-
four categories: environmental (such as extreme tion from Central America to the United States
weather events), safety (such as political instabil- include unemployment (especially among youth),
ity, conflict violence, and crime), economic (such as transnational ties (family networks), victimization
income shocks or job opportunities), and social/cul- (crime), and agricultural stress due to natural disas-
tural (such as family and social networks) (Figure 3). ters20 (although most of the available studies are
These triggering factors are also context-specific based on anecdotal evidence and cross-sectional
and may vary by region or country. They can occur assessments that only allow us to approximate cor-
at the individual or household level, as well as the relations rather than causality).
local, regional, and national levels. While Europe is currently experiencing its larg-
Most often, a combination of factors trig- est refugee crisis since World War II — with close to
gers migration. The decision to migrate may be 8 million people fleeing Russia’s war on Ukraine,

Forced Migration  75
Figure 3 Factors driving migration

l and Cultura
Socia l

Environmental
Economic

MIGRATION

Safet y

Source: Authors’ own elaboration.

Note: The arrows indicate the direction of causality, which is bidirectional in most of the cases between each factor and migration, as well as
between the factors themselves.

the vast majority of people displaced from their were triggered by conflict violence and 75 percent
homes by armed conflict or other forces glob- by natural disasters. Similarly, of the estimated
ally are from developing countries.21 As of 2019, 26 million refugees worldwide in 2019, two-thirds
the International Organization for Migration (IOM) were from 5 countries (in order of refugee popula-
reported more than 84 million internally displaced tion: Syria, Venezuela, Afghanistan, South Sudan,
persons (IDPs), refugees, and asylum seekers.22 and Myanmar).
Three-quarters of all IDPs (34.5 million) were living In recent years, special attention has been
in 10 countries, with half of them in Syria, Colombia, paid to climate displacement, which occurs
and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Of all when migration is driven, at least in part, by the
new internal displacements in 2019, 25 percent impacts of climate change. In 2016, the United

76  Fragility, Resilience, and Policy Response


Nations General Assembly adopted the New York ■ Social protection programs have different
Declaration for Refugees and Migrants, which effects on migration for men and women. For
explicitly recognizes that people move “in response women, these programs may decrease migra-
to the adverse effects of climate change, natural tion, while effects for men may also depend on
disasters (some of which may be linked to climate other factors, such as weather or socioeconomic
change), or other environmental factors.”23 Climate status.37 In addition, migrant networks can play
change has been linked to an increase in migra- an important role, particularly for permanent
tory movements that result from attempts to adapt migration where job search costs tend to be
to the changing environment.24 Research has also higher.38
shown that, on average, people move from coun-
tries of higher vulnerability to lower vulnerability.25
SOCIOECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES
This is consistent with the idea that migration is
OF FORCED MIGRATION
an adaptation to climate change26 or a response
to natural disasters, where families and social net- The consequences of migration are diverse and
works among migrants in the destination country should be analyzed across three dimensions:
can play an important (host) role in response to impacts on migrants and their families; on sending
shocks in their country of origin.27 Areas severely communities; and on hosting communities.
affected by climate change are also more prone For migrants themselves, migration may even-
to conflict.28 According to UN Environment, tually lead to higher incomes and improved
an important share of people displaced by cli- livelihoods in the hosting country, including bet-
mate change are women, who are also at greater ter education and nutrition outcomes for their
risk of violence, including sexual violence (see children.39 However, these positive effects are not
Chapter 6).29 without costs and can take time to materialize, leav-
Recent studies highlight the varying profiles of ing migrants in vulnerable positions that include
migrants who are forced to leave their communities lower job quality than local workers and deterio-
and the different reasons driving their decisions. A rated physical and mental health and well-being.40
synthesis brief from the CGIAR Research Program IDPs are more vulnerable as they are more diffi-
on Policies, Institutions, and Markets30 provides cult to locate and tend to receive less international
several key findings from recent CGIAR work on assistance. Moreover, migration generally occurs at
migration drivers: great risk, with many migrants undergoing extreme
hardship and even losing their lives in the jour-
■ The factors driving migration, whether forced
ney.41 According to the Missing Migrants Project of
or voluntary, generally differ between men
IOM, more than 50,000 people have lost their lives
and women, and by age. Men are more often
during migratory movements since 2014. More than
motivated by employment, while women face
half of these deaths occurred en route to and within
higher barriers to employment and migrate
Europe, and around 5,000 people have died or dis-
for marriage or educational opportunities.31
appeared en route to the United States.42
Although both men and women may migrate
For the families who stay behind, remittances
in response to an income shock, men are more
from migrants can constitute an important source
likely to do so.32 Youth migration is associated
of income, allowing them to invest more in edu-
with lack of access to land and pursuit of educa-
cation and housing and to attain a better quality
tion, although migration does not always lead to
of life.43 Remittances were especially important
more education.33
as a source of income during the COVID-19 pan-
■ Climate-driven migration varies by region and demic. In 2021 in Latin America, they accounted
country and may differ by age, sex, and socio- for 28 percent of GDP in Honduras, 27 percent in
economic group.34 Adaptation to climate change El Salvador, 18 percent in Guatemala, 16 percent in
may reduce migration,35 while conflict may lead Nicaragua, and 4 percent in Mexico.44 In the Pacific
to migration (though this is not always the case).36 Region, these shares were even higher: 44 percent

Forced Migration  77
in Tonga, 32 percent in Samoa, 12 percent in the refugees — and Latin America — the destination of
Marshall Islands, and 9 percent in the Philippines many Venezuelan refugees.56
and Fiji.45 Despite these benefits, migration may More recently, researchers have started to
also result in an increased work burden for family investigate whether migrants, and especially
members who stay behind. those fleeing armed conflict, are more inclined to
In sending communities, migration may put engage in criminal activities and organized crime
more pressure on wages for unskilled agricultural in hosting countries.57 The limited evidence from
workers, which can have serious consequences for a few middle-income countries provides mixed
the farmers who hire them.46 Migration may also and inconclusive results,58 which emphasizes
affect women’s workloads and empowerment,47 the need to better understand group dynamics
and women do not necessarily benefit from the among migrants and intergroup attitudes in ref-
“feminization” of agriculture — that is, the increase ugee camps and hosting communities. The claim
in women’s labor in agriculture, in their labor rela- that cross-border refugee flows are responsible
tive to that of men, or in their roles in agricultural for propagating localized armed conflict has been
decision-making (see Chapter 6).48 Lastly, migra- stubbornly persistent, especially in the context of
tion may result in either a “brain drain” or “brain civil conflict in Africa — though it lacks strong sup-
gain” for sending communities.49 High returns on porting evidence. A recent study reexamining the
human capital (education and skills) in the desti- effects of refugees on civil conflict found no evi-
nation country can lead to high-skilled emigration dence that hosting refugees raises the likelihood of
but may also encourage nonmigrants to invest in new conflict, prolongs existing conflict, or increases
human capital.50 the number of violent events or casualties.59
For hosting communities, the economic liter-
ature assessing the effects of forced migration
RECOMMENDED POLICY RESPONSES
is growing, although still limited.51 Research
TO FORCED MIGRATION
focused on the African context showed that forced
migration is not an economic burden for hosting Recognize migration as a multidimensional,
communities, at least not in a lasting way.52 On the Complex, and context-specific phenomenon.
contrary, these migrants tend to contribute pos- Policy responses should start from a clear under-
itively to local economic growth. In Rwanda, for standing of the causes of forced migration, which
instance, each additional refugee has been esti- may be context-specific, and of the people who
mated to increase annual real income in the local migrate, as well as the possible consequences for
economy by US$205 to $253 through market inter- migrants and their families, sending communities,
actions between refugees and their hosts.53 and hosting communities. A comprehensive anal-
Nevertheless, findings also point to rather ysis is required to determine key driving forces
strong distributional effects for hosting commu- that push (or pull) people to relocate, which often
nities, especially in the short term. In the context interrelate or intersect in complex ways depend-
of underdeveloped labor and credit markets, ing on each setting. New analytical approaches,
the poor — who are most vulnerable to livelihood such as machine learning, and unconventional data
shocks — face the greatest challenges in seiz- sources, such as geo-localized cell phone records
ing new economic opportunities that accompany or geotags posted to social media, provide new
inflows of forced migrants, due to their low levels of opportunities to fill gaps in data and knowledge
physical and human capital.54 Intrahousehold dis- about private migration decisions,60 including
tributional effects have also been identified, where irregular migration, which is inherently difficult
women with low levels of education are less likely to trace. Results using these data should still be
to engage in employment outside of the house- interpreted cautiously because of likely biases in
hold.55 The evidence from African countries is reporting and selection (the most vulnerable may
consistent with the findings of more recent studies not have access to tracked communication technol-
in the Middle East — the destination of most Syrian ogy). Although humanitarian assistance is essential

78  Fragility, Resilience, and Policy Response


in the short term to prevent hunger, malnutrition, adaptation and mitigation, while humanitarian
and disease among migrants, lasting solutions investments need to support climate action in addi-
require wide-ranging policy strategies. These may tion to social protection schemes.63 In Colombia,
be tailored to different situations to address the for example, a project led by the International
structural causes of forced migration, including Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT) is implement-
lack of economic opportunities, food insecurity, ing sustainable land use systems to contribute to
and inadequate access to basic services, and to forest conservation, climate protection, and the
mitigate the impacts among migrants as well as peacebuilding process (Box 1).64
sending and hosting communities.
Provide options to mitigate mass migration
Broaden the scope of research on migration risks. Research has been limitied on the potential
decisions and potential impacts. More research consequences of different policy options to mit-
is needed to better understand migration deci- igate detrimental impacts associated with large
sions and their potential effects (beyond short-term migration flows in hosting communities. Exceptions
impacts) on migrants, sending communities, and include studies focusing on the benefits of local
hosting communities to derive more tailored pol- initiatives to better integrate forced migrants into
icies that expand positive effects and attenuate hosting communities, on Uganda’s social protec-
negative ones. For instance, despite a rapidly grow- tion programs for refugees, and on Colombia’s
ing literature examining the socioeconomic impacts right-to-work policy for refugees.65 Yet beyond
of forced migration among host populations in these insightful case studies, systematic evidence is
developing countries, surprisingly little is known still lacking on how specific policies toward forced
about the impacts among the migrants them- migrants may lead to improved development and
selves or about the costs of “forced immobility” better integration of these populations into their
for those who are not able or choose not to relo- hosting communities.
cate. Although evidence is still limited, cash-based
transfers or vouchers to refugees have shown effi- Better tailor refugee-targeted interventions
ciency in improving food security among refugees to increase their effectiveness. Most studies
in Kenya, Rwanda, and Ecuador (see Chapter 5).61 focus on refugees living in camps, while globally
Addressing forced immobility should also be a pol- most refugees in developing countries live out-
icy priority. In contrast, cash transfers (for example, side of camps.66 Particular attention should be
cash-for-work programs) in sending communi- given to displaced women, given their likely vul-
ties may increase (rather than deter) migration by nerability to domestic and other forms of violence,
alleviating liquidity and risk constraints and not the disruption in their access to critical services
necessarily increasing the opportunity cost of and informal safety nets, and their lower employ-
migration (that is, potential gains of staying) among ment opportunities (see Chapter 6). Geographic
likely migrants.62 mobility has been found to be key for integrat-
ing forced migrants in high-income countries, but
Align social protection and climate action little is known on the pros and cons of allowing
objectives. The climate crisis is exacerbating such mobility in developing countries. Migrants
many underlying drivers of conflict and threat- respond to economic incentives, and migration
ens to worsen the humanitarian crises, with ever itself can lead to a more efficient allocation of
more people living in fragile and conflict-affected resources.67 From a policy perspective, it is import-
settings. Climate adaptation, peace, and social ant to consider different options for the reception
protection objectives need to be well aligned, of forced migrants. Refugees should be allowed
especially considering that funds are typically to move to local labor markets that offer favorable
insufficient to cope with multiple crises. Climate employment opportunities. Providing them with
investments should be used to support peace, the option of choosing where to relocate could
security, and social protection in addition to climate result in the most effective allocation process.

Forced Migration  79
Box 1 THE IMPORTANCE OF AMNESTY FOR REFUGEES IN COLOMBIA

Since 2017, more than 5.1 million Venezuelans have fled their country due to its collapsing economy, political turmoil, and
humanitarian crisis. Two million of these refugees have relocated to Colombia, although the lack of resources in the hosting
country has resulted in a need for long-term solutions and initiatives to promote the socioeconomic recovery of refugees.
While previous studies have primarily focused on cash transfers and their effects on refugee welfare, little is still known
about the impact of large-scale amnesty initiatives to regularize migratory status and work permits, particularly in developing
countries, which often face structural problems such as discrimination in the labor market.
A recent study assesses the impact of the Permiso Especial de Permanencia (PEP) program in Colombia, which has allowed
more than 442,000 refugees to find formal employment and access safety nets by regularizing their status. The study shows
improvements in several outcomes, such as formal employment rates, poverty levels, access to financial services, per capita
income and consumption, food security, and physical and mental health, among those who received the PEP (compared to
nonrecipients). These findings demonstrate the importance of a well-conducted amnesty program to smoothly integrate
migrants into their hosting communities and improve their well-being.

Source: A. Ibáñez, A. Moya, M.A. Ortega, S.V. Rozo, and M.J. Urbina, “Life Out of the Shadows: Impacts of Amnesties in the
Lives of Refugees,” Policy Research Working Paper 9928, World Bank, Washington, DC, 2022.

Similarly, offering them opportunities to enroll in Overall, forced migration is a recurrent phe-
training programs that prepare them to actively nomenon that should be incorporated into the
participate in local labor markets and increase global development agenda, given its magni-
their language skills can enhance their employ- tude and importance for economic development,
ment prospects in the hosting community.68 as it reflects multiple challenges and opportuni-
ties for vulnerable populations. It is imperative
Provide inclusive interventions for commu- to invest in more research to better understand
nities hosting refugees. More work is needed to migration causes and consequences, includ-
understand the impact of refugee-targeted inter- ing context-specific factors, and to derive
ventions on host communities. In some contexts, better-tailored policies that comprehensively
for example, cash transfers for refugees can have a address the phenomenon in both sending and
large positive impact on food consumption without hosting communities.
affecting prices, while in others they may contrib-
ute to inflation and resentment toward the refugee
population.69 Refugees may also influence local
politics by altering the support for certain parties or
affecting voting behavior,70 which can have import-
ant implications for local development. Providing
aid and developing infrastructure in the hosting
community, including improved public service
delivery, can prevent tensions between refugees
and locals. More generally, assessing the potential
economic burdens of a massive influx of migrants
on local infrastructure and social services can help
to promote better policies for inclusion.71

80  Fragility, Resilience, and Policy Response


Increasing crises in
human systems and
the natural world will
not abate in coming
years — the time to
step up our efforts
to develop a more
permanent, sustainable
response is now.
REGIONAL
DEVELOPMENTS
RECENT GLOBAL CRISES HAVE LED TO DIVERSE IMPACTS ACROSS THE WORLD’S
low- and middle-income regions, reflecting local conditions and differing policy
responses. These effects are often compounded by more local shocks and crises,
including prolonged conflict and violence, natural disasters, and fragile economic
and governance systems. This section examines the impacts of recent food crises
to identify both future risks and promising policy options that could improve early
warning, immediate response, and resilience building in each region.

■ Pursuing a humanitarian-development-peace approach to Africa’s


protracted crises

■ Reducing reliance on food imports in the Middle East and North Africa

■ Diversifying trade and improving governance for great resilience in


Central Asia

■ Increasing smallholder productivity and sustainability in South Asia

■ Building regional integration in East and Southeast Asia to better manage


future crises

■ Managing commodity cycles and building human capital in Latin America


and the Caribbean

82
Africa 84
Middle East and North Africa 90
Central Asia 97
South Asia 102
East and Southeast Asia 108
Latin America and the Caribbean 112

83
AFRICA
SAMUEL BENIN, WIM MARIVOET, HARRIET MAWIA,
AND JOHN ULIMWENGU

Samuel Benin is deputy division director, Wim Marivoet is a research fellow, Harriet Mawia is a research
officer, and John Ulimwengu is a senior research fellow, all with the Africa Regional Office, International
Food Policy Research Institute.

I
n Africa, about 282 million people (20 percent DRIVERS OF FOOD CRISES IN AFRICA
of the population) are facing food insecurity
and are undernourished, more than double the Food crises in Africa are driven largely by conflict,
share in any other region of the world.1 Food inse- weather shocks (especially droughts and floods),
curity levels vary significantly across and within and poverty, all of which affect the demand, sup-
Africa’s subregions. As of 2021, countries in cen- ply, and availability of food.4 Food shortages and
tral and southern Africa had the largest populations income losses have been worsened by pests asso-
deemed at crisis levels or worse of food insecurity ciated with extreme weather, especially the fall
(45.6 million people, 18.4 percent of the pop- armyworm plague that started in 2016 in western
ulation), with 9.9 million at an emergency level Africa5 and the locust infestation across eastern
(Table 1; see Chapter 2, Box 2, for a definition of Africa in 2020.6
the IPC food insecurity phases).2 In eastern Africa, Agricultural policies have also contributed to
about 43.6 million people (9.8 percent of the pop- persistent food crises. Policy support tends to
ulation) are in crisis or worse, with 10.1 million in favor agricultural exports, for which prices have
emergency. In western Africa and the Sahel region, been declining, over food commodities consumed
30.4 million people (8.6 percent of the population) in Africa, for which prices have been increasing.
are in crisis or worse, about 42 percent of them Lower export prices have led to declining foreign
in Nigeria. exchange receipts and income losses, while rising
In terms of absolute numbers of people, food prices have resulted in higher food import
the situation is most critical in the Democratic bills and declining investment in agriculture and
Republic of the Congo (DRC), where 27.3 million other key public goods and services.7
people are in crisis or worse, followed by Nigeria Other recent shocks compounding food inse-
and Sudan. In terms of the share of population, curity include the Ebola outbreaks in western
South Sudan is most affected, with 60 percent of Africa (2014–2016) and the DRC (2018–2020), the
the population (7.2 million), including 2.4 million COVID-19 pandemic, and the Russia-Ukraine war.
people in emergency and 100,000 in catastro- During the Ebola and COVID-19 outbreaks, lock-
phe situations.3 Other countries with more than downs implemented to limit the spread of disease
30 percent of the population in crisis or worse in many countries led to a slowdown or shutdown
include Angola, the Central African Republic, of economic activities that disrupted food systems.8
Eswatini, Ethiopia, Lesotho, Madagascar, Namibia, The continuing crisis reflects remaining supply
and Zimbabwe. chain issues caused by the pandemic, as well as
additional disruptions from the Russia-Ukraine war,

84  Regional Developments
Table 1 Acute food insecurity in sub-Saharan Africa regions and selected countries (millions of people affected), 2021

Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC)


Number of
countries Phase 2: Phase 3: Phase 4: Phase 5:
Region/country included Stressed Crisis Emergency Catastrophe

Central and Southern Africa 12 67.7 35.7 9.9 0.01


Democratic Republic of the Congo 40.8 20.5 6.7 0.0
Mozambique 8.4 2.6 0.3 0.01
Malawi 6.3 2.5 0.1 0.0
East Africa 9 51.2 30.3 10.6 0.5
Ethiopia 17.2 12.1 4.3 0.4
Sudan 16.5 7.1 2.7 0.0
South Sudan 3.3 4.7 2.4 0.1
West Africa and the Sahel 16 74.3 28.4 1.5 0.0
Nigeria 35.0 12.7 0.2 0.0
Cameroon 5.8 2.4 0.3 0.0
Niger 5.8 2.4 0.1 0.0

Source: Data from FSIN and GNAFC, 2022 Global Report on Food Crises (Rome: 2022).

Note: See Chapter 2, Box 2, for information on the IPC classifications.

as a large share of Africa’s food imports (especially given recent shocks that have raised food, fertil-
wheat and maize) come from Russia and Ukraine.9 izer, and fuel prices.11 The continent’s population
The incidence and severity of these shocks, growth, at about 2.5 percent per year compared to
as well as the drivers, vary across the continent the global average of a little under 1 percent per
(Table 2). While occasional conflict occurs in year, puts additional pressure on the food system
many places, several African countries — includ- and economy to keep pace.
ing Nigeria, Ethiopia, the DRC, Somalia, Mali, and
Burkina Faso (in order of fatalities) — suffered sub-
GENDERED EFFECTS OF FOOD CRISES
stantial violence against civilians in 2022.10 Conflict,
political instability, and violence against civil- Food crises affect women and men and boys and
ians are the primary drivers of food crises in other girls differently due to norms and cultural prac-
countries as well. The impact of weather shocks is tices that lead to different roles, responsibilities,
likewise varied and widespread. In 2022, for exam- and access to resources and coping strategies
ple, floods affected millions of people and their (see Chapter 6). Data from several African coun-
livelihoods, destroyed thousands of homes and tries indicate that more women (32.8 percent) than
properties, and killed nearly 2,000 people, while men (29.7 percent) were significantly affected by
desertification and drought are the main chal- food price shocks during the COVID-19 pandemic,
lenges in other places. because women spend a much higher share of
Poverty has also put healthy diets out of reach their income on food. Moreover, women face hun-
for many Africans. Although the cost of a healthy ger more often than men during food crises; for
diet in Africa (US$3.46 per person per day) is example, in 2014–2016, 25.2 percent of African
slightly below the global average (US$3.54 per per- women were severely food insecure compared to
son per day), per capita income is also lower and 23.7 percent of men.12 This disparity is due to differ-
poverty rates are higher in Africa than the global ences in income, access to employment or means
average. As a result, a larger proportion of Africa’s of production, and cultural practices that put
population cannot afford a healthy diet, especially women last, or allot them smaller portions, when

Africa  85
Table 2 Main drivers of food crises in selected African countries

Country Main drivers of food crises

Coup d’état in September 2022 and the presence of armed groups, mainly in
Burkina Faso
the country’s north.

Desertification, including drying up of rivers and lakes in recent years,


Chad
accelerated by drought in northern Chad.

Combination of increased food prices and transportation costs, epidemics,


Democratic Republic of the Congo
and one of the world’s longest-running armed conflicts.

Civil war (November 2020 to November 2022) exacerbates the effects of


Ethiopia
drought.

Multiple shocks including dry spells, below-average crop and livestock


Kenya
production, localized resource-based conflict, and the COVID-19 pandemic.

Poor infrastructure keeps vital aid from reaching the poorest parts of the
Malawi
country.

In Cabo Delgado province, extremist groups have forced more than 700,000
Mozambique
civilians from their homes since 2017.

In 2021, a surge in armed groups and internal conflicts forced tens of


Niger
thousands of vulnerable people into the driest parts of Niger.

Loss of more than 860,000 acres of land every year to desertification, affecting
Nigeria
11 of 36 states.

Decades of armed conflicts, including eruption of civil war in 2013, frequent


South Sudan
climate-related shocks (severe flooding and dry spells), and macroeconomic crisis.

Drought in 2022 led to price increases of up to 25 percent for basic household


Uganda
items.

The 2018/19 drought plus long-standing macroeconomic challenges are


Zimbabwe
pushing millions to the edge of starvation.

Source: Authors’ compilation based on Convoy of Hope, “Food Crisis in Africa Reaches Terrifying Levels," Aug. 25, 2022; IPC, “Acute Food
Insecurity and Malnutrition Snapshot Acute Food Insecurity: October 2022 – July 2023, Acute Malnutrition July 2022–June 2023" (2022);
République Démocratique du Congo, “Aperçu de la sécurité alimentaire et de la nutrition, juillet 2022–juin 2023" (2022).

food is in short supply.13 In Sierra Leone and Liberia, women and girls will engage in negative coping
for example, the closure of food and other retail strategies, such as transactional sex, to generate
markets to control the 2014–2016 Ebola outbreak income needed to purchase food for their fam-
destroyed the livelihoods of traders, 85 percent ilies.18 Conflict seems to widen the gender gap
of whom were women.14 Similarly, in South Africa, as well (see Chapter 7). Some studies have found
women accounted for about two-thirds of the job higher rates of chronic malnutrition among preg-
losses during the COVID-19 lockdowns.15 nant women and children or increased risk of acute
Such disruptions can exacerbate other nega- malnutrition in areas of several African countries
tive impacts for women and girls, such as violence affected by armed conflict, including Burundi,19
and sexually transmitted infections. For exam- Côte d’Ivoire,20 Ethiopia and Eritrea,21 Nigeria,22
ple, sexual and domestic violence reportedly Rwanda,23 and Somalia.24
rose in Ebola-affected regions of the DRC after
an outbreak began in 2018.16 Likewise during the
CRISIS RESPONSES AND CHALLENGES
Ebola outbreak in Guinea, a 4.5 percent increase
in violence against women was reported.17 Food National and international actors (such as govern-
insecurity can also increase the likelihood that ments, UN agencies, and NGOs) as well as affected

86  Regional Developments
local communities and households have responded 2020, with internally displaced people (IDPs) flee-
to food crises with varied approaches and cop- ing conflict and violence accounting for most of
ing strategies. the increase. Displacement may also be triggered
by climate change and extreme weather events,
Humanitarian assistance is the most common, such as the flooding in 2020 that affected more
straightforward response to aid affected pop- than 2 million people across 18 western and central
ulations. In 2022, the total budget for the UN’s African countries.
Humanitarian Response Plan for sub-Saharan Africa
was estimated at US$16.7 billion. This funding is Resilience building has gained traction over the
largely earmarked to ensuring food security, while past decade as a potentially cost-effective strat-
a smaller amount is allocated to nutrition, refugees, egy to tackle underlying vulnerabilities and spur
and social protection. However, as of the end of local solutions for highly contextual challenges.29
October 2022, less than 45 percent of total humani- This strategy focuses on creating and rehabilitat-
tarian needs had been funded (see Chapter 3). ing household and community assets, including
strengthening institutions to manage their own-
Early warning systems have emerged as a criti- ership, access, and use. In 2021, for example, the
cal instrument to increase the effectiveness and World Food Programme reached 2.1 million peo-
efficiency of humanitarian responses over the ple across 12 western African countries through
years (see Chapters 2 and 3). Studies show that its Food Assistance for Assets program. This pro-
projections for Africa from famine early warn- gram, which was gradually introduced beginning
ing systems, such as the Famine Early Warning in 2013, has assisted local communities in restor-
Systems Network (FEWS NET), are generally good, ing or cultivating 75,000 ha of agricultural land
but sometimes miss the mark. These forecasting and constructing or rehabilitating 1,400 km of
issues are usually associated with complex climate water infrastructure and 244 km of feeder roads.30
and weather events, as well as the difficulty of pre- The protection and restoration of ecosystems that
dicting the impact of conflict on food insecurity, provide essential services can be an important
as conflict-affected areas are hard to access and component of resilience building (Box 1). However,
politically sensitive to analyze (see Chapter 3).25 To assessing the impact of any resilience-building
facilitate early action, some early warning systems intervention is difficult given the multiple defini-
and emergency preparedness initiatives, such as tions of and metrics on resilience, the complex
the work of the Africa Centres for Disease Control nature of the intervention packages, the difficulty of
and Prevention, have integrated surveillance and tracking intervention costs, and the uncertain time-
response strategies to mitigate the impact of dis- frame for recovery.31
ease outbreaks.26 However, like other early warning
systems, these too face challenges with data and The humanitarian-development-peace (HDP) nexus
information management systems, laboratory approach aims to strengthen collaboration, coher-
capacity and functionality, and human capacity, ence, and complementarity among these three
especially in the most remote areas.27 pillars of crisis recovery (see Chapter 7). Given
that any external intervention may have significant
Migration is another common response to food consequences — both intended and unintended —
crises, and can take many forms depending on on local power balances, institutions, and social
where migrants go, the duration of migration, and cohesion, the HDP approach works to ensure that
recurrence. Each choice is driven by a particular interventions maximize the reduction of vulnerabil-
set of pull and push factors, and leads to diverse ity and poverty while addressing the root causes of
outcomes for migrants and the sending and host conflict.32 One good example is the Partnership for
communities (see Chapter 7).28 The total number Recovery and Resilience, which was set up in South
of intra-African migrants increased from about Sudan in 2018 and has brought together more than
13 million people in 2000 to more than 20 million in 90 different actors, including local governments,

Africa  87
Box 1 GREAT GREEN WALL: BUILDING RESILIENCE
Ecosystem protection and rehabilitation is fundamental to building the resilience of food systems, particularly as climate
change worsens. The Great Green Wall initiative is a major effort in the Sahel region intended to restore degraded landscapes
across an 8,000 km strip of land between Senegal and Djibouti.1 Initially, this ambitious pan-African program proposed
constructing a 15-km-wide “wall of trees,” but this goal was abandoned in favor of a more realistic mosaic of diverse landscape
interventions, including natural regeneration, agroforestry, horticulture, livestock, apiculture, and water catchment
infrastructure, in addition to reforestation.2 Attention to the technical, social, and economic dimensions of this effort is
essential to ensure success in improving environmental and socioeconomic outcomes.3 However, a recent study showed that
most of the restoration strategies designed in 12 participating countries to shape the Great Green Wall Initiative largely fell
short in identifying potential benefits for different vulnerable or demographic groups, especially female-headed households
and pastoralists, while potential risk for capture of the benefits by elite groups was not assessed.4 On the financial side, it will
require an estimated US$44 billion (under the base scenario) to fund all proposed land restoration activities, which would
increase the economic value of Sahelian ecosystems over time — in terms of food, fodder, timber, and carbon sequestration —
with an expected break-even point at most 10 years after implementation.5

UN agencies, NGOs, and donors, to align activities challenges in mobilizing new funding from both
and promote collective outcomes.33 The potential domestic and international sources to support their
of the HDP approach to ensure greater coherence already underfunded development agendas.37 The
and impact in crisis responses has been highlighted cost-effectiveness of investments will have to be
by the recent establishment of the HDP Nexus improved, including by reallocating budgets and
Coalition hosted by the Global Network Against repurposing support policies. A recent scenario
Food Crises.34 However, implementation of HDP analysis38 on repurposing existing public fund-
faces a number of constraints including limited ing for food systems support showed potential for
understanding among actors in the three pillars significant benefits in reducing the cost of nutri-
of each others’ roles, lack of joint analysis and sce- tious diets, improving food security and nutrition,
nario planning with in-country program teams, and and reducing greenhouse gas emissions. However,
the need for programmatic and financial flexibility trade-offs are also likely, including reductions in
in highly volatile contexts. It also requires negoti- agricultural production and farm incomes. Thus,
ating trade-offs among the pillars — for example, having complementary policies within and out-
engaging in conflict resolution may jeopardize side agrifood systems — such as social safety nets
basic humanitarian principles of nonpartisanship and affordable access to health services and edu-
and thus impede access to vulnerable populations cation — as well as an environment for inclusive
(see Chapter 3).35 political participation will be needed to ensure that
repurposing efforts lead to real improvements.
Repurposing support policies to reduce the cost
and increase the availability of nutritious foods
CONCLUSION
will also be important for improving resilience and
recovery from crises. The pressing question is how About 20 percent of Africa’s population is food
to finance a transition to better diets. Currently, insecure and undernourished, more than dou-
official development assistance (ODA) for human- ble the population share in any other region of
itarian purposes and crisis response is rising much the world. Multiple crises in recent years — con-
faster than ODA for development purposes. As flicts, natural disasters, disease, and economic
countries face more frequent or protracted cri- shocks — have increased food insecurity across
ses,36 African governments can expect increasing the continent. National and international actors,

88  Regional Developments
including governments, UN agencies, and NGOs,
as well as affected local communities and house-
holds themselves are responding to the growing
impact of crises in various ways, including through
humanitarian assistance, early warning systems,
migration, and resilience building. Crisis interven-
tions that are responsive to gender are also critical
to reducing disproportional impacts on women
and girls. However, the costs associated with these
responses are enormous and underfunded.
The HDP nexus approach offers a promising
means to address the multifaceted nature of food
crises more cost effectively in the short to medium
term. For the longer term, however, repurpos-
ing current public support to food and agriculture
will be critical to reduce the cost and increase
the availability of nutritious foods. This multifac-
eted strategy to building crisis resilience over time
would make healthy diets affordable and available
for all of Africa’s population, including the poor,
women, children, and other vulnerable people,
which aligns with African leaders’ vision of accel-
erated transformation of food systems for shared
prosperity and improved livelihoods. Systemwide
enabling conditions for lasting resilience must
include good governance mechanisms, adequate
policies and regulations, high quality infrastruc-
ture, functioning community networks, and reliable
safety nets.

Africa  89
MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA
KIBROM ABAY, XINSHEN DIAO, DAVID LABORDE, AND MARIAM RAOUF
Kibrom Abay is country program leader for Egypt and a research fellow, Development Strategies and
Governance Unit, International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). Xinshen Diao is deputy division
director, Foresight and Policy Modeling Unit, IFPRI. David Laborde is director, Agrifood Economics
Division, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, and former senior research fellow, IFPRI.
Mariam Raouf is a senior research associate, Development Strategies and Governance Unit, IFPRI.

W
hile the global economy, and the econ- in some other MENA countries, including Lebanon
omies of many countries in the Middle and Yemen.
East and North Africa (MENA) region, At the onset of the current crisis, IFPRI research-
has not yet recovered from the repercussions of ers conducted an analysis of countries’ vulnerability
the COVID-19 pandemic, 2022 brought new chal- to the global increase in prices and the disrup-
lenges triggered by the Russia-Ukraine war and tion of exports from Russia and Ukraine.3 The
associated trade shocks. The MENA region is par- country-level typology categorizes Lebanon,
ticularly vulnerable to shocks to world food prices Sudan, and Yemen as extremely vulnerable to the
and trade because of its heavy dependence on crisis, and indicates Egypt is in the very high vulner-
food imports. It is also subject to political insta- ability category (Figure 1). For many countries in
bility, fragility, and persistent conflict, all of which the MENA region, their direct exposure to the trade
contribute to large refugee populations, many shock — as importers of Russian and Ukrainian cere-
hosted by countries within the region, and to food als — and low existing stocks put their food security
insecurity more broadly. MENA is also among the at risk. Existing stocks were already running low
world’s regions most at risk from climate change immediately before the crisis due to drought and
and water scarcity.1 The compound crises arising crop failure.
from conflict, trade shocks, and climate change cur- Global food prices surged in early 2022 when
rently threaten food and nutrition security in many Russia invaded Ukraine, disrupting Black Sea trade.
MENA countries. Some exporting countries responded to these dis-
ruptions by introducing trade restrictions,4 which
put further pressure on global markets. Despite
FOOD IMPORT DEPENDENCE
these challenges, many MENA countries have con-
AND RISING IMPORT COSTS
tinued importing the usual volumes of food but at
The MENA region relies heavily on food imports, significantly higher prices (Figure 2), triggering a
especially cereal imports. For example, wheat rep- significant increase in import costs. For example,
resents 39 percent of caloric intake per person up to July 2022, MENA countries experienced a
in Egypt, 20 percent in Sudan, and 46 percent in 50 percent increase in the cost of wheat imports.
Yemen. Historically, much of this demand was met For some of these countries, the external crisis has
by imports from Russia and Ukraine.2 In Egypt, the been compounded by domestic production short-
world’s largest importer of wheat, imports account ages, mainly due to weather conditions (Morocco
for about 62 percent of total wheat consumption, and Iraq) and conflict (Syria), problems that have
of which about 85 percent comes from Russia and increased demand for imports just to meet basic
Ukraine. Cereal import dependence is even higher consumption needs. Fortunately, most trade and

90  Regional Developments
Figure 1 Overview of country-level relative vulnerability
Extremely high Very high High Moderate Minor risk Ukraine

Source: Adapted from K.A. Abay, C. Breisinger, J. Glauber, S. Kurdi, D. Laborde, and K. Siddig, "The Russian-Ukraine War: Implications for Global and Regional
Food Security and Potential Policy Reponses," Global Food Security 36 (2023): 100675.

Note: The indicators used for this assessment included: (1) existing dependency on the Black Sea region; (2) exposure to other suppliers that have imple-
mented export restrictions; (3) current level of wheat stocks (to determine countries’ buffer capacity); (4) consequences for countries’ current accounts of price
increases for various commodities (positive or negative effects depending on trade structure of countries); and (5) existing level of undernourishment, food
price inflation, and expected impacts of the changes in world prices on domestic food bills and household food security.

financial sanctions continue to exempt food prod- imbalances and major currency devaluations in
ucts and critical agricultural inputs like fertilizers. Egypt, Lebanon, and Morocco. The devaluations in
These exemptions may have forestalled a larger turn are causing significant inflationary pressure in
price increase for wheat. domestic economies, which has fueled further price
increases for a wide range of commodities and ser-
vices in domestic markets. The surges in cereal
WINDFALLS AND INCREASED
prices have also significantly increased the cost of
ECONOMIC DIVERGENCE
humanitarian assistance in fragile countries, such as
In the face of global commodity shocks, the econo- Yemen and Sudan. For instance, rising wheat prices
mies of MENA’s oil-exporting countries have fared forced humanitarian organizations, including the
better than the region’s oil-importing countries. World Food Programme, to reduce food-basket
The surge in oil and natural gas prices gener- rations in both countries.
ated windfalls for MENA’s oil exporters, although Within countries, the combination of rising fuel
some of these countries, including Bahrain, Kuwait, and food prices meant some sectors fared sig-
Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab nificantly better than others. As a result of the
Emirates, rely heavily on cereal and related food counteractive impact of the price increases for
imports. MENA’s oil-importing countries, such as imports and exports, some countries’ overall GDP
Egypt, faced the double burden of high food and and employment were affected less than initially
fuel prices. These price surges have raised import expected. For example, while Egypt is a major
costs and reduced available government funds wheat importer, it also exports natural gas and fer-
for oil importers,5 triggering macroeconomic tilizers. The windfall revenues from higher natural

Middle East and North Africa  91


Figure 2 Wheat imports to MENA countries in 2022, compared to prior years
2019 2020 2021 2022

A. IMPORTS BY VOLUME B. IMPORTS BY VALUE

60 16,000

14,000
50

12,000

40
Metric tons, millions

10,000

US$ millions
30 8,000

6,000
20

4,000

10
2,000

0 0
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

Source: Based on data from Trade Data Monitor (https://www.tradedatamonitor.com/).

gas prices have supported overall GDP, and firms consume a disproportionate share of cereals and
and households with income associated with this other cheap, energy-dense foods.8 In Egypt, Sudan,
sector are expected to benefit. However, Egypt’s and Yemen, for example, poorer households con-
agrifood system has been harmed, particularly sume a significantly larger share of wheat-based
its off-farm agrifood system activities, which are calories per day than richer households.9 Conflicts
energy-intensive (Figure 3).6 Other fertilizer export- in Yemen and some other MENA countries further
ers faced more complex challenges. For example, increase households’ reliance on cereals and hence
Morocco is a large producer of phosphate, but their vulnerability to food price shocks.10
relies on imports of intermediate inputs (either nat- The fuel price shock, in combination with the
ural gas or ammonia) for fertilizer production. While food price shock, is expected to further worsen
high fertilizer prices could benefit Morocco, the war inequalities. Windfall revenues from oil and natu-
in Ukraine and the country’s difficult relationships ral gas exports are likely to accrue to governments,
with neighboring countries, such as Algeria, com- while most households — particularly poor or rural
plicated access to essential inputs in 2022.7 ones — are likely to be hit twice, by both rising
prices and falling incomes. In Egypt, for example,
overall national real household consumption is
IMPACTS ON POVERTY AND INEQUALITY
estimated to have fallen by a modest 0.9 percent
Within countries, the crisis has had differential (Figure 4), but rural and poor households have suf-
impacts across households, leading to an increase fered a much larger decline in consumption than
in inequality. Poorer households bear the greatest urban ones. Because Egypt produces most of the
burden of current food price shocks because they fertilizer it uses domestically and even exports
spend a larger portion of their income on food and a small amount, some urban households derive

92  Regional Developments
Figure 3 Anticipated change in GDP and employment due to food, fuel, and fertilizer shocks in Egypt
GDP Employment

0.0%
Whole economy
0.1%

-0.7%
Whole AFS
-0.9%
Agrifood system

-0.5%
Agriculture
-0.2%

-0.9%
Off-farm
-2.2%

0.2%
Outside AFS
0.6%

-2.5% -2.0% -1.5% -1.0% -0.5% 0.0% 0.5% 1.0%

Source: Simulation results from IFPRI’s Egypt RIAPA model, reported in K.A. Abay, F. Abdelradi, C. Breisinger, et al., “Egypt: Impacts of the
Ukraine and Global Crises on Poverty and Food Security,” Global Crisis Country Series Brief 18 (Washington, DC: IFPRI, 2022).

Note: Agrifood system (AFS) includes primary sector, food processing, and food-related services.

Figure 4 Anticipated change in real household consumption due to food, fuel, and fertilizer shocks in Egypt
Food prices Fuel prices Fertilizer prices and response

National -0.9% -0.6% -0.6% 0.3%

Rural -1.5% -0.9% -0.7%

Urban -0.3% -0.1% -0.5% 0.5%

Poor -1.5% -0.9% -0.7%

Nonpoor -0.7% -0.5% -0.6% 0.4%

-2.0% -1.5% -1.0% -0.5% 0.0% 0.5% 1.0%

Source: Simulation results from IFPRI’s Egypt RIAPA model, reported in K.A. Abay, F. Abdelradi, C. Breisinger, et al., “Egypt: Impacts of the
Ukraine and Global Crises on Poverty and Food Security,” Global Crisis Country Series Brief 18 (Washington, DC: IFPRI, 2022).

Middle East and North Africa  93


Table 1 Share of households affected by different types of shocks and food insecurity (2021–2022)

Reported types of shocks affecting households Prevalence


of moderate
or severe
Sickness Other food
High food High fuel and economic insecurity
Country Household type prices (%) prices (%) accident (%) Job loss (%) Drought (%) shock (%) (%)

Iraq Male-headed 32 9 20 20 13 8 35
Female-headed 35 8 34 21 8 7 49
Yemen Male-headed 67 46 29 11 12 4 58
Female-headed 62 40 46 6 6 5 74

Source: Based on FAO, Data In EMergencies (DIEM), accessed January 2023. https://data-in-emergencies.fao.org/pages/monitoring

income from fertilizer production and trade. As (Table 2).12 Fiscal policies have included increased
a result, the increase in fertilizer prices has had a food and fuel subsidies, new price controls,
positive impact for urban households as a group. incentives to boost domestic agricultural produc-
Rural and poor households, however, have faced tion, trade regulations, indirect tax exemptions,
large impacts from all rising prices — for food, fuel, product-specific exchange rates, and the intro-
and fertilizer. duction or expansion of cash transfers and utility
In several MENA countries, local conflict has bill and financial support to vulnerable house-
compounded the impact of these global shocks. holds. Some of these are adaptations of policies
Countries affected by fragility, conflict, and vio- introduced in response to the COVID-19 pan-
lence saw the greatest increases in poverty caused demic. Others, including commodity subsidies, are
by the COVID-19 pandemic.11 Iraq and Yemen con- new.13 These measures have helped to limit price
tinue to grapple with the multiple shocks caused increases, but their medium-term impacts in terms
by conflict and high food and fuel prices, which of protecting households as well as the long-term
all contribute to food insecurity. These underlying fiscal implications for government debt remain to
vulnerabilities are likely to affect households differ- be evaluated.
ently. For example, households headed by women
in Iraq and Yemen are more likely to face idiosyn-
PREPARING FOR COMPOUND CRISES
cratic shocks such as sickness and accidents that
reduce the income-generating potential of their National policy responses to global food crises
households (Table 1). About one-third of house- need to consider other regional vulnerabilities,
holds in Iraq and two-thirds in Yemen reported including climate change, water scarcity, conflict,
being affected by high food prices in the last two and rising debt vulnerability stemming from gov-
years, with those headed by women experiencing ernments’ increased fiscal spending. Recurring
higher rates of food insecurity. trade shocks and food crises are strong remind-
ers that MENA countries need to reinforce their
investments and efforts to increase the resilience
NATIONAL POLICY RESPONSES
of their food systems. In the very short term, MENA
The Russia-Ukraine war triggered important pub- countries should consider diversifying their food
lic policy responses, some of which have helped imports and exports while continuing to invest
to contain inflationary pressures, though they have in social protection systems to protect poor and
also contributed to fiscal pressures and costs. vulnerable households from food price spikes.
Several MENA countries introduced monetary and These social protection programs need to effec-
fiscal policies designed to cushion the adverse tively target the most vulnerable groups, including
impact of the crisis on economies and households women, who make up a large share of the poor.

94  Regional Developments
Table 2 Public policy responses to mitigate the impact of trade shocks (introduced since February 2022)

Product market interventions Targeted social protection

Increased
Increased Indirect Product- regulated Utility
food Instituted tax specific prices/ bill and
and fuel new price Trade reg- exemp- exchange reduced Cash financial Improved
subsidies controls ulations tions rates subsidies transfers support targeting

Algeria ● ●
Bahrain ● ●
Djibouti ● ● ● ● ●
Egypt ● ● ● ● ●
Iran ● ● ●
Iraq ● ● ● ● ●
Jordan ● ● ● ● ● ●
Kuwait ●
Lebanon ● ● ● ●
Libya ● ● ●
Morocco ●
Oman ● ●
Qatar
Saudi Arabia ● ●
Syria ● ● ● ●
Tunisia ● ● ●
United Arab Emirates ● ● ●
West Bank and Gaza ● ● ●
Yemen ●
Total: Out of 19 8 10 6 5 4 5 7 7 3

Source: Reproduced from F. Belhaj, R. Gatti, D. Lederman, et al. New State of Mind: Greater Transparency and Accountability in the Middle East and North
Africa—Middle East and North Africa Economic Update (October) (Washington, DC: World Bank, 2022).

Note: These public policy responses, which are likely an incomplete list, were compiled by World Bank country economists. This list does not include mone-
tary policy responses, such as increasing interest rates and devaluation, which have been deployed by some countries.

Targeting during the COVID-19 pandemic had to trade shocks that take account of domestic
mixed success in the MENA region, with target- production capacities and constraints related to
ing shown to be progressive (pro-poor) in some environmental sustainability and risk of weather
countries, including Egypt, but not in others, such shocks. Policies supporting the transition toward
as Morocco.14 Rethinking consumer policies and a greener future can offer a double win: less vul-
adopting healthier and more sustainable diets nerability to oil price shocks and a contribution
(particularly reducing reliance on wheat) is also to climate change mitigation. Given the region’s
important. Indeed, while governments must pri- strong potential for expanding wind and solar
oritize protection for poor consumers in times of energy, it could generate additional revenues by
crisis, once prices have stabilized, they should focus diversifying exports.
on reforming food subsidies to improve diets and Long-term agricultural policies in particular
reduce vulnerability. must take account of climate change and water
In the longer term, MENA countries will need to scarcity. While some countries may have poten-
explore policy options for mitigating vulnerability tial to expand arable land and production (such as

Middle East and North Africa  95


Sudan), such expansion is likely to be unsustainable
in water- and land-scarce countries. For example,
Egypt’s principal focus should be on adapting its
farming systems to address imminent water short-
ages and climate change threats and to increase
resilience, rather than unsustainably expanding
production.15
Windfall increases in state revenues in
oil-exporting countries and the associated increase
in government funds could serve all these objec-
tives if fiscal surpluses are directed toward
productive investments that diversify food imports
and exports, thus strengthening the resilience of
these economies. However, oil-importing coun-
tries, which continue to face significantly higher
import bills and increasing debt vulnerability, need
to devise sustainable means of addressing trade
shocks and food crises. Those countries affected
by prolonged conflict and violence should focus on
restoration of livelihoods and protection of vulner-
able households in the short term, while laying the
groundwork for longer-term investment to support
diversification and resilience of livelihoods.

96  Regional Developments
CENTRAL ASIA
KAMILJON AKRAMOV
Kamiljon Akramov is a senior research fellow, Development Strategies and Governance Unit, International
Food Policy Research Institute.

I
n Central Asia, the combined impact of the countries. The impact of the war on labor migration
COVID-19 pandemic and the Russia-Ukraine and remittances has so far been mixed. Evidence
war has ignited inflation and increased pov- suggests that migration interruptions following
erty. Although the region made good progress the war's onset were limited, and seasonal labor
in reducing poverty and inequality over the past migration from the region between March and
two decades, the pandemic stalled this progress July 2022 increased slightly. However, the share of
and even reversed the welfare gains in some coun- households with a member considering migration
tries. Nearly half a million individuals in the region declined.4 Data suggest the total flow of remit-
are estimated to have fallen into extreme poverty, tances to the region has been resilient and even
due to decreased incomes, job losses, and work increased significantly for Uzbekistan.5 However,
interruptions.1 In Kyrgyzstan, for example, the pov- that growth cannot be explained by regular flows
erty rate rose from about 20 percent in 2019 to of remittances. Data from the National Bank of
more than 33 percent in 2021.2 Subsequent exter- Kyrgyzstan suggest that while the total flow of labor
nal shocks to Central Asia’s food systems, driven remittances from Russia did not decline, the net
by the Russia-Ukraine war, have likely further wors- inflow of labor remittances fell by nearly 14 percent
ened poverty and increased the vulnerability of in 2022 compared to 2021, with the declining trend
households and individuals to food insecurity. more evident in the second half of 2022 (Figure 1).
Both these major shocks have constrained eco- Unfortunately, we do not have data on the outflow
nomic growth in the region. The Central Asian of transfers from Uzbekistan.
countries’ strong trade and financial links with Supply shortages and higher food and energy
Russia and Ukraine, along with heavy reliance on prices associated with the Russia-Ukraine war
remittances from their migrant workers in Russia, fueled double-digit inflation across the region. In
made them particularly vulnerable to the disrup- Kazakhstan, annual inflation stood at 20.3 percent.6
tions caused by the conflict, and the economic In Kyrgyzstan, overall inflation reached 14.7 percent
damage has been considerable.3 in 2022, with food inflation at 15.8 percent and the
consumer price index for wheat flour and prod-
ucts up 24.2 percent.7 Since wheat and wheat
REMITTANCES, PRICES,
products account for a significant share of caloric
AND FOOD SECURITY
intake in the region, rising consumer prices could
Labor remittances play an important role in reduc- reduce household consumption, increase poverty
ing poverty and inequality in Central Asia. In further, and are likely to strike poorer households
Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, remittances currently hardest. In Tajikistan, for example, wheat prod-
account for about 30 percent of national GDP, and ucts account for about 45 percent of the average
more than 90 percent of these remittances come total caloric intake, and net wheat imports make up
from Russia. Remittances also account for an essen- nearly 60 percent of the domestic supply (Figure 2).
tial share of income for many households in these The retail price of wheat flour in Tajikistan rose

Central Asia  97
Figure 1 Monthly net inflow of remittances from Russia to Kyrgyzstan, 2021 and 2022
250

2021 2022

200

150
US$ millions

100

50

0
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

Source: Data from the National Bank of Kyrgyzstan (2023).

sharply in the first months of the war (February to Figure 2 Share of wheat products in total caloric intake
May 2022), and despite a slight decline in the sec- and net imports in domestic wheat supply, 2019/20
ond half of the year, wheat flour prices remained
Share of wheat products in total caloric intake
more than 30 percent above the levels recorded at
Share of net imports in total domestic wheat supply
the end of 2021.8
60%

LONG-TERM SOURCES OF FRAGILITY


50%
In addition to the setbacks caused by the recent
global shocks, food systems in Central Asia are
at risk because of long-term sources of fragility, 40%
including gender inequality, climate change, and
poor governance. Considerable gender gaps in
30%
labor force participation and earnings make women
more vulnerable to external shocks and food inse-
curity during crises. When women enter their prime 20%
childbearing years, the gap increases as a result of
their increased domestic and care burdens and the
10%
limited availability of public childcare services.9 In
addition, existing household, institutional, and soci-
etal gender inequalities add to the fragility of food 0%
Kyrgyzstan Tajikistan Turkmenistan Uzbekistan
systems in the region.10
Climate change poses a serious risk, given the
Source: Data from FAOSTAT (2022).
large share of agriculture in GDP and employment
in Central Asia. The region’s agrifood sector and
related livelihoods are exposed to increasingly

98  Regional Developments
frequent extreme weather events, including generally, is essential to making the region’s food
temperature extremes, droughts, and floods, systems more robust and resilient to external
as well as greater variability in precipitation as shocks (see Chapter 4).
global temperatures continue to rise.11 For exam- Trade export restrictions, though not pro-
ple, heatwaves in July 2021 and July 2022 and longed, caused considerable increases in food
cold waves in January 2023 had major impacts prices at the outset of the pandemic. Temporary
on agricultural livelihoods and food systems bans and reductions in wheat exports imposed
in Uzbekistan. by the Russian Federation and Kazakhstan led to
The region’s vulnerability to climate change is higher food prices in the wheat-importing coun-
exacerbated by weak infrastructure, high levels tries — Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan.
of poverty, and poor governance. Despite some In response, some Central Asian governments
recent positive developments in governance, some shifted focus toward achieving a high degree
evidence shows that weak political institutions, lack of self-sufficiency in food, especially wheat. For
of accountability, poor regulatory quality and gov- example, in Tajikistan, policymakers have advo-
ernment effectiveness, and widespread corruption cated for 80 percent self-sufficiency in grain, up
pose significant challenges to the stability of food from the current 45–50 percent they now produce.
systems in the region.12 An IFPRI phone survey conducted in 2020 showed
that many smallholders switched to growing
wheat instead of high-value crops such as vegeta-
LESSONS LEARNED
bles.15 Central Asian countries are net exporters
The recent COVID-19 pandemic exposed two of vegetables, which allows them leeway to pro-
significant weakness in Central Asia’s food sys- mote cereal production at the expense of these
tems — a lack of diversity in markets and products crops in order to reduce reliance on imported
and alarmingly weak governance. Central Asian wheat. However, this shift could also cause food
countries score low on multiple dimensions of insecurity by reducing the dietary diversity that
the World Bank’s government effectiveness indi- is accessible at affordable prices. Moreover, food
cator, including the perceived quality of public self-sufficiency policies may require increased
services and the credibility of governments' com- government intervention in agriculture, includ-
mitment to their policies.13 Poor governance and ing price controls, subsidies, and regulation,
widespread corruption weaken Central Asian gov- which tend to create production and market inef-
ernments’ capacity to collect revenue and spend ficiencies and, as a result, may not achieve their
public resources efficiently,14 with detrimental desired outcome.
impacts on their ability to respond adequately Social protection policies aim to protect vul-
to external shocks and crises. Thus, public gov- nerable households and individuals from hardship
ernance and anticorruption reforms should be a caused by crises (see Chapter 5). In Central Asia,
high priority in the region. the social protection measures put in place during
The lack of economic diversity is evident in the COVID-19 pandemic were devoted to income
the high concentration of imports from a few protection, with a significant amount allocated to
countries — for example, the Russian Federation, cash-for-work programs and unconditional cash
Kazakhstan, and China account for more than transfers. However, they did not focus on job pro-
50 percent of Uzbekistan’s total imports — and tection measures. Overall, these social protection
dependence on remittances from a single country. policies were limited in scope. Moreover, weak
In combination with rising inequality, this depen- governance and widespread corruption led to inef-
dence on a few economic partners exacerbated ficient allocation and spending of limited public
the pandemic’s negative impacts in the region, resources.16 As a result, households resorted to
especially for poorer households. Increasing the negative food-based coping strategies, such as
number of trading partners and the diversity of consuming less desirable, less expensive foods, as
supply chains, and economic diversification more well as asset-depleting coping strategies.17

Central Asia  99
MONITORING AND RAPID RESPONSE or prevent transmission of the virus and to ensure
that health systems had the necessary capacity
During the COVID-19 pandemic, regional gov- for response, this framework aimed to address the
ernments and development partners worked medium-term social and economic consequences
together to monitor and respond to crises. These of the pandemic. As elsewhere, the pandem-
efforts were not sustained in the aftermath of ic’s impact was most severe for the poorest and
the pandemic, leaving communities and house- most vulnerable. The government relied on the
holds vulnerable to new shocks and failing to community-based targeting approach to reach
address the long-term impacts of the crisis on the neediest sectors of the population as a part of
poverty, food security, and livelihoods. The World the crisis response framework. But with a highly
Food Programme has since established food fragmented social protection system and limited
security monitoring systems in Kyrgyzstan and government capacity, it was not able to deliver sup-
Tajikistan, which conduct bimonthly household port to all vulnerable communities and households,
surveys to track trends in vulnerable communi- and many needy households have received no
ties. In Uzbekistan, the UN’s Food and Agriculture assistance. In particular, the social protection cov-
Organization in partnership with Westminster erage did not reach most unemployed and informal
International University in Tashkent recently workers, leaving them more vulnerable to shocks.
launched a web-based monitoring tool designed These poor households are forced to reduce con-
to collect national food price data and facilitate sumption of nutritious foods, directly affecting their
its dissemination and analysis. However, these long-term nutrition, health, and productivity, with
tools are limited in scope and focus on only a few impacts that are difficult to reverse and perpetuate
aspects of food security. They are not designed the cycle of poverty and vulnerability.
to predict, monitor, or manage the long-term
impacts of crises or vulnerability (see Chapters 2
PREPARING FOR FUTURE SHOCKS
and 3).
Policy responses to the COVID-19 pandemic Several factors — including climate change, limited
differed widely across the region, largely reflect- diversity of foreign trade, volatility of commodity
ing governments’ fiscal capacity. Kyrgyzstan and prices, and dependence on remittances — make
Tajikistan developed limited policy response mea- Central Asian countries especially vulnerable to
sures, given their narrow fiscal space and limited external shocks and crises. The ad hoc approach
public monitoring capacities.18 Kazakhstan and that has been taken to managing such crises has
Uzbekistan, with a larger fiscal base, responded failed to prevent serious increases in poverty, with
swiftly to the crisis, implementing strict monitor- long-term implications for development. Clearly, as
ing and confinement measures and designing large crises become more frequent and even coincide,
support packages. The multiple crisis response a more permanent, comprehensive framework for
measures adopted by the Kazakh government crisis readiness and response is needed. Such a
included supporting the domestic private sector framework will include a set of strategies, tools,
and employment; offering workers and families and procedures put in place by the region’s gov-
affected by the crisis short-term relief measures, ernments to prepare for emergencies and respond
such as cash payments to individuals who had to them effectively by mitigating impacts and
lost their jobs or were on unpaid leave due to the speeding recovery. Components may include risk
quarantine; provision of food baskets and non- assessment, early warning systems, a crisis man-
food essentials to vulnerable populations; and an agement plan, communication, training and testing,
increase in pension and social benefits.19 and recovery and learning.
Uzbekistan’s government developed and imple-
mented a framework for local community-based Social protection. Gender-sensitive social pro-
monitoring and rapid crisis response. In addition tection systems should be an integral part of
to specific short-term measures intended to slow any crisis response framework (see Chapter 6).

100  Regional Developments
These programs can provide a safety net during to them. The scarcity of gender-disaggregated
short-term shocks as well as long-term changes in data in particular makes it difficult to under-
the labor market that affect incomes and jobs. An stand the differences and inequalities between
optimal safety net policy would protect the wel- men and women, address gender inequalities in
fare of the poorest and most at-risk households and crisis response, and ensure that policies and inter-
support sustainable growth without hindering the ventions are more effective in reducing gender
reallocation of labor to more productive sectors disparities. Moreover, little in-country capacity
of the economy, which is essential for the devel- exists for modern data analytics and assess-
opment and transformation of food systems (see ment. Investment in gender-disaggregated,
Chapter 5).20 high-frequency data collection and in building ana-
Social protection systems should also cover lytical and applied research capacity is essential to
Central Asia’s labor migrants. Because these better anticipate and prepare for future crises in
migrants work primarily in Russia, they are at risk Central Asia.
when Russia’s economy and labor market condi-
tions deteriorate. With Russia subject to severe
sanctions, labor migrants may lose employment
because of declining demand, or fluctuations in
the Russian ruble may make it difficult to exchange
rubles for other currencies, such as the US dol-
lar, thus decreasing the value of labor remittances.
If these problems materialize, large numbers of
migrants may return to their home countries, and
they should be able to count on national social pro-
tection systems.

Regional cooperation. Regional cooperation and


foreign trade play a significant role both in making
the relatively small and undiversified economies
of Central Asia resilient to crises and in develop-
ing reliable national crisis response frameworks.
However, the landlocked position of Central Asian
countries is compounded by infrastructure bottle-
necks, institutional and policy barriers, and poor
trade facilitation, which need to be addressed.
Trade and policy reforms, investments in physical
and virtual connectivity, and cooperation in using
shared natural resources, such as water resources,
are essential to improve the region’s readiness to
respond to and prevent crises.

Monitoring and analysis. Addressing increas-


ingly frequent and disruptive crises will also
require timely and well-tailored high-frequency
data and analysis (see Chapter 2). At present,
Central Asian countries collect little household and
community-level data, and information and anal-
ysis is needed to identify the most vulnerable and
affected populations and target social safety nets

Central Asia  101
SOUTH ASIA
ANJANI KUMAR AND SHAHIDUR RASHID
Anjani Kumar is a senior research fellow and Shahidur Rashid is director, South Asia Regional Office,
International Food Policy Research Institute, New Delhi.

T
he COVID-19 pandemic dealt a serious blow CURRENT ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
to the strong economic and social per-
formance maintained by South Asia for Economic prospects for the region are mixed,
two decades. Regional GDP shrank by almost including for agriculture and food systems. In the
5 percent in 2020 (Table 1A). The agriculture sec- second half of 2022, most of the region’s domes-
tor, however, enjoyed modest growth across most tic currencies depreciated by more than 10 percent
of the region (Table 1B). As the regional econ- against the US dollar (Bangladeshi taka, 18 percent;
omy struggled to recover from the pandemic, the Pakistani rupee, 14 percent; Sri Lankan rupee,
Russia-Ukraine war and natural disasters, including 45 percent), and consumer price inflation remains
devastating floods in Pakistan in 2022, led to fur- above national central bank targets.
ther disruptions. Spikes in global food and energy India, which accounts for three-quarters of the
prices and the tightening of global financial con- region’s output, showed robust growth of about
ditions, as countries tried to contain high inflation, 7 percent in 2022/23 despite recent shocks, and
led to contractions in South Asian trade and in the similar growth is expected in 2023/24.4 Its agri-
hospitality and manufacturing sectors. The dete- culture sector also showed strong annual growth,
rioration in economic conditions that began with at more than 3 percent. With this recovery, India
the pandemic led to a substantial increase in pov- is poised to become the fastest-growing econ-
erty, with 48–59 million people estimated to be omy among the world’s largest emerging market
newly poor in 2021, particularly in Afghanistan, and developing economies. Reasons for con-
Pakistan, and Sri Lanka.1 cern persist, however. Consumer inflation spiked
These shocks all contributed to higher food to 7.8 percent in April 2022 and remained at
prices and disrupted food production and distri- 6.5 percent in January 2023, which led the Reserve
bution. Food insecurity worsened in Afghanistan, Bank to tighten its monetary policy.5
Pakistan, and Sri Lanka during 2022 (Figure 1).2 As Bangladesh was also hit by COVID-19 and
pressures on food markets intensified, a number the more recent shocks, although to a more lim-
of food-exporting countries resorted to protec- ited extent than other South Asian countries. GDP
tionist measures that subsequently contributed to growth is expected to slow from 7.2 percent to
higher international prices and market volatility. 5.2 percent in 2022/23 due to falling exports, a
Afghanistan, Bangladesh, India, and Pakistan imple- growing trade deficit, continued high inflation,
mented export restrictions in 2022 on rice, wheat, reduced remittances, energy scarcity and higher
and sugar, among other products. While interna- prices, and tighter monetary policy.6
tional food prices have recently eased, they remain Pakistan — an already vulnerable economy with
significantly above pre-pandemic averages, and a debt equal to 97 percent of its GDP,7 soaring
continuing high prices for fertilizers and energy inflation, and acute shortage of foreign exchange
have made agricultural production less remunera- reserves — faces continued policy and politi-
tive despite the increase in output prices.3 cal uncertainty as well as damage from natural

102  Regional Developments
Table 1 Annual GDP and agricultural GDP growth in South Asia

2019 2020 2021 2022

Ag GDP Ag GDP Ag GDP


Country GDP growth growth GDP growth growth GDP growth growth GDP growth

Afghanistan 3.9 17.5 -2.4 5.9 -20.731 -2.8 NA


Bangladesh 7.9 3.3 3.4 3.4 6.9 3.2 7.2
Bhutan 4.4 1.3 -2.3 4.6 -3.3 2.1 4.0
India 3.7 5.5 -6.6 3.3 8.7 3.0 6.8
Maldives 6.9 -7.5 -33.5 7.1 37 -0.6 8.7
Nepal 6.7 5.2 -2.4 2.4 4.2 2.8 4.2
Pakistan 3.1 0.9 -0.9 3.9 5.7 3.5 6.0
Sri Lanka -0.2 0.5 -3.5 -1.4 3.3 2.5 -8.7
South Asia 3.8 4.8 -4.8 3.4 8.1 3.0 6.4

Source: GDP growth data are from the International Monetary Fund’s World Economic Outlook (2023); agricultural GDP growth data are from
the World Bank’s World Development Indicators (2023).

Note: NA indicates data not available.

disasters that pushed an estimated 5.8 to 9.0 million FOOD SECURITY AND POVERTY
people into poverty in 2022.8
Sri Lanka and Afghanistan are also still fac- South Asia is far off track to achieve Sustainable
ing crisis. Sri Lanka’s output fell by an estimated Development Goal 2 (SDG2), Zero Hunger, by 2030,
9.2 percent in 2022 and is expected to decline and progress in tackling the problem has stalled.
another 4.2 percent in 2023 as a result of ongo- Numbers of undernourished people and those fac-
ing foreign exchange shortages, high inflation, ing severe food insecurity are up substantially over
increased interest rates, and policy measures the past five years (Figure 1). Child stunting and
implemented to restore macroeconomic stabil- wasting remain more prevalent in South Asia than
ity. This economic crisis increased poverty and in other world regions. The deterioration in food
reversed income gains made over the past decade. security is largely due to the pandemic-induced
In Afghanistan, the sudden suspension of inter- economic disruptions, poor macroeconomic man-
national aid in August 2021, along with reduced agement, armed conflicts, and climate change.
foreign investment, shrank the country’s output by Progress toward SDG1, No Poverty, has also been
about one-third, leading to a large increase in pov- set back, as hard-won gains have been lost and the
erty. The situation there remains precarious, and pandemic pushed an additional 62–71 million peo-
severe food shortages are likely. ple into poverty in South Asia.
On the other hand, Nepal has enjoyed a strong The recovery and development of food systems
recovery in domestic demand, which may raise in South Asia face multiple challenges. Although
GDP growth to 5.8 percent in 2022/23, and the spillover effects from the Russia-Ukraine war have
country is expected to maintain robust growth for not been large, South Asia has been affected
the foreseeable future. In addition, the Maldives by the global rise in food, fuel, and fertilizer
and Bhutan are benefiting from the post-pandemic prices. Food prices have risen sharply, contrib-
recovery of tourism. The Maldives is likely to remain uting to food insecurity. In September 2022, the
the fastest-growing small economy in the region year-on-year consumer inflation rate for food was
due to infrastructure investments and the rebound 66 percent in Sri Lanka, 36 percent in Pakistan,
in tourism. Bhutan’s economy is projected to grow and about 8 percent in India, Bangladesh, and
by 4.1 percent in 2022/23, as a result of opening its Nepal. The inflation in Pakistan and Sri Lanka is
border with India in September 2022. attributed mainly to macroeconomic instability

South Asia  103
and mismanagement, especially the sharp deval- suffered a devastating flashflood that affected
uation of their currencies, and the fertilizer ban in about 7.2 million people. Timely and appropri-
Sri Lanka. ate crisis response is increasingly important amid
continuing climate change, as yields for rice, vege-
tables, and wheat are expected to decline by 5 to
NATURAL DISASTERS
6 percent by 2050.13
Climate change is another significant threat. Other countries in the region are likewise at
Diverse geophysical settings and climatic con- risk. Nepal is at high risk of earthquakes. Sri Lanka
ditions make the region vulnerable to various experiences a high incidence of disasters relative
environmental shocks.9 Natural calamities, many to its small size and concentrated economic activi-
related to climate, have become increasingly fre- ties, with average annual disaster-related losses of
quent over the past two decades (Figure 2), with $50 million, affecting some 500,000 people.
a corresponding increase in the numbers of peo- South Asian countries are learning from past
ple affected in many countries. Several extreme disasters to improve responses. For instance, in the
weather events occurred in 2022, compounding the aftermath of the 2004 tsunami in India, the 2005
other shocks to the region. Record-breaking heat- Enactment of Disaster Management Act sought
waves in Afghanistan, Bangladesh, India, southern to minimize future losses by integrating disaster
Nepal, and Pakistan posed serious threats to life, management measures at all levels of gover-
livelihoods, and economies.10 In Pakistan, severe nance, including national, state, and district-level
droughts followed by devastating floods inflicted authorities. In addition, an Early Warning System
major damage on agricultural production. These for Tsunamis in the Indian Ocean was estab-
back-to-back catastrophes affected approximately lished by the Indian government in 2007 to issue
33 million people. Economic losses are estimated advance warnings in coastal areas, which could
at US$15 billion, and the country’s GDP declined reduce impacts of future disasters.14 Similarly,
by about 5 percent.11 Pakistan’s federal and provin- timely policy initiatives taken by the Government of
cial authorities are now working with local, national, Bangladesh after the devastating floods in 1998 —
and international partners to manage massive relief including enabling private sector participation in
efforts across the country. grain markets and enhanced public investments
Afghanistan suffered two major earthquakes in in agriculture — have helped respond to subse-
2022 that affected about 9,000 people. In response, quent shocks.15 The relatively low death toll and
the government allocated $11.3 million for dis- low incidence of waterborne diseases after flash-
bursement to the affected population, including floods in Bangladesh in 2004 reflect the efficacy of
the injured and households that lost family mem- the country’s disaster preparedness and response
bers. Adding to this misery, Afghanistan suffered capabilities, and people’s ability to manage and
a drought that affected 80 percent of the country, recover from disasters. These efforts have borne
and production of wheat declined as a result of the fruit and therefore, despite the frequency of natu-
2022 La Niña occurrence, which stressed the coun- ral disasters in South Asian countries, governments
try’s water resources, adding to food insecurity. in these countries have been able to respond to
India is prone to many major natural hazards, recent shocks more effectively than in the past.
and in 2022 recorded a broad range of extreme
weather events that caused more than 3,000 human
POLITICAL INSTABILITY AND CONFLICTS
deaths and 60,000 animal deaths, and damaged
2 million hectares of crops. Erratic monsoon rains Political instability and violence also threaten food
led to increased food price volatility, threatened security in the region. Since their independence,
households’ inflation expectations, and compli- many South Asian countries have experienced
cated monetary policy management.12 political instability caused by civil wars and ethnic
Bangladesh, too, is extremely vulnerable to and sectarian conflicts. As a result, a sizable num-
natural disasters. In 2022, its northeastern region ber of people have been displaced.

104  Regional Developments
Figure 1 Undernourishment and severe food insecurity in South Asia

A. PREVALENCE OF UNDERNOURISHMENT

30%

2017–2019 2018–2020 2019–2021

25%

20%

15%

10%

5%

0%
Afghanistan Bangladesh India Nepal Pakistan Sri Lanka

B. PREVALENCE OF SEVERE FOOD INSECURITY

25%

2017–2019 2018–2020 2019–2021

20%

15%

10%

5%

0%
Afghanistan Bangladesh Nepal Pakistan Sri Lanka

Source: Data from FAOSTAT, accessed Jan. 2023. https://www.fao.org/faostat

Note: The prevalence of severe food insecurity is an estimate of the proportion of the population that resides in severely food-insecure households. The
assessment is conducted by using data collected with the Food Insecurity Experience Scale (see Chapter 2) or a compatible experience-based food secu-
rity measurement questionnaire. A household is classified as severely food insecure if at least one adult has reported several of the most severe experiences
described in the FIES questions, such as being forced to reduce the quantity of food, skipping meals, and going hungry due to lack of resources. Measures for
severe food insecurity are not reported for India.

South Asia  105
Figure 2 Natural disasters in South Asia, 1980–2022

A. FREQUENCY OF NATURAL DISASTERS ACROSS COUNTRIES

400

1980–2000 2000–2022

300
Number of events

200

100

0
Afghanistan Bangladesh Bhutan India Maldives Nepal Pakistan Sri Lanka

B. TRENDS IN TYPES OF NATURAL DISASTERS

500

1980–2000 2001–2022

400
Number of events

300

200

100

0
Flood Storm Drought Earthquake Landslide Epidemic Extreme temperature

Source: Data from EM-DAT, accessed January 2023. https://www.emdat.be/

106  Regional Developments
Afghanistan has been affected by the Taliban inputs — especially for women and other dis-
insurgency and other forms of violence for advantaged groups — including facilitating
decades. The political crisis after August 2021 access to fertilizers, promoting crop diversifi-
led to a sharp economic contraction (Table 1), ris- cation, and boosting innovative technologies
ing food insecurity, and an increase in poverty.16 and approaches.
The Rohingya crisis continues to pose serious
challenges to Bangladesh's government, in col- ■ Stepped-up investment in customized
laboration with various international agencies, in climate-resilient agriculture for longer-run
coping with the enormous influx of refugees that sustainability, which can be supported by repur-
has made Cox’s Bazar the world’s largest refugee posing existing agricultural support.
camp. Additionally, violence resulting from the
government crackdown on the opposition party ■ Long-term systematic preparedness to mit-
in December 2022, ahead of a major rally, further igate disruptions in food systems, including
added to internal disruptions in Bangladesh. strategic and resilient food security programs.
Nepal has a long history of political unrest, but Other South Asian countries could gain valu-
a new constitution, drafted in 2015, established a able insights from India’s National Disaster
federal structure in the country, fostering renewed Management Authority and One Nation
hope for greater political stability, social cohesion, One Ration Card and from Bangladesh’s
good governance, and sustainable development. National Action Plan for Food Security and
Sri Lanka faces a volatile political situation, exac- the effective implementation of its Food
erbated by the country’s unsustainable debt and a Friendly Programme.
severe balance-of-payments crisis. With declining
economic growth and increasing poverty, political Beyond these measures, South Asian coun-
and economic instability are expected to continue. tries should align with international development
agencies for funding support to build resilience
in the agrifood system. They should also develop
RECOMMENDATIONS FOR
a long-term strategic framework to address the
FOOD CRISIS RESPONSES
macroeconomic mismanagement in Pakistan and
A combination of short- and long-term measures Sri Lanka, conflict in Afghanistan, and the refugee
are required to tackle food system crises in South crisis in Bangladesh, and establish a continual effort
Asia. These include: to improve governance.

■ Identification of vulnerable households and


groups (women, children, the elderly, and dis-
abled persons) to provide them adequate
support. The current food shock could be used
as an opportunity to strengthen social safety
nets, and targeted food consumption subsidies
could be explored to gradually replace broader
food consumption subsidies.

■ Promotion of intraregional trade, including


removal of recently adopted protectionist poli-
cies, given that trade within South Asia is quite
limited compared with other regional blocs.

■ Increasing production by improving small-


holders’ access to modern technologies and

South Asia  107
EAST AND SOUTHEAST ASIA
KEVIN CHEN, YUNYI ZHOU, AND RUI MAO
Kevin Chen is a senior research fellow, Development Strategies and Governance Unit,
International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), Beijing, and a Qiushi chair professor, Zhejiang University,
Hangzhou, China. Yunyi Zhou is a graduate research assistant, Zhejiang University–IFPRI Center for
International Development Studies, China Academy for Rural Development, Zhejiang University. Rui Mao is
a professor and deputy director, Zhejiang University–IFPRI Center for International Development Studies,
China Academy for Rural Development, Zhejiang University.

A
mid a global recession and the Russia-Ukraine absolute number and the percentage of people
war in 2022, East and Southeast Asian coun- facing severe food insecurity increased in 2020
tries have experienced setbacks on their path and 2021 (Figure 1). These trends are reflected in
toward meeting the Sustainable Development the Global Hunger Index for 2021, where East Asia
Goals (SDGs). Nonetheless, the region’s trade scored well but Southeast Asian economies over-
and financial positions have been relatively unaf- all fared worse. In 2022, Myanmar, Cambodia, and
fected as yet by the war, compared with much of the Philippines had the highest rates of insufficient
the world. For 2022, economic growth is expected food consumption among member states of the
to average 3.8 percent in East Asia and 5.0 percent Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).4
in Southeast Asia.1 Threats remain, however, as On a more positive note, the incidence of pov-
climate-related disasters, the pandemic, economic erty and the number of poor in East and Southeast
slowdown and protectionism, and their nested Asia (except China) in 2022 are projected to return
repercussions are unlikely to ease in the short term to the levels that were forecast pre-COVID-19,
and could further disrupt the region’s food systems although progress has been fragile. Low-income
in 2023.2 Yet intraregional integration has contin- households (and especially women, children, and
ued to deepen, which can be expected to bolster the elderly) are vulnerable to the food and energy
the region’s resilience to crises, and the UN’s 2030 price increases caused by global supply chain dis-
Agenda calls on countries in the region to collabo- ruptions and the recent war.5 The cost of a healthy
rate in creating a globally competitive, integrated, diet rose in both subregions between 2019 and
resilient, and inclusive food system that will be bet- 2020, and inflation may have put healthy diets even
ter positioned to weather future crises.3 further out of reach in 2021 and 2022.6 Moreover,
no country in either subregion is on track to meet
the targets for curbing adult obesity or anemia in
DISRUPTED PROGRESS TOWARD
women of reproductive age.7
ENDING POVERTY AND HUNGER
Despite some economic recovery in 2022, prog-
KEY VULNERABILITIES AND RESPONSES
ress toward achieving SDGs 1 and 2 — No Poverty
and Zero Hunger — has been disrupted. Across the COVID-19 PANDEMIC
region, there are huge disparities in food and nutri- For more than three years, the repeated COVID-19
tion status, which have increased in recent years. shocks have affected demand, supply, and trade in
In East Asia, a rise in severe food insecurity in 2020 the region’s food systems.8 Widespread vaccina-
was reversed in 2021; in Southeast Asia, both the tion in the region and major economies elsewhere

108  Regional Developments
Figure 1 Headcount and prevalence of severe food insecurity
Number of people, millions Percent of population

A. EAST ASIA B. SOUTHEAST ASIA

50 5% 50 5%

40 4% 40 4%

30 3% 30 3%

20 2% 20 2%

10 1% 10 1%

0 0% 0 0%
2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021

Source: Adapted from World Bank, East Asia and Pacific Economic Update, October 2022: Reforms for Recovery (Washington, DC: 2022).

has allowed East and Southeast Asian govern- rural populations) will be more susceptible to
ments to gradually shift their policy focus from long-term setbacks and inequalities during recov-
managing pandemic disruptions to supporting ery (for example, lower savings and scant access
post-pandemic recovery.9 As pandemic-related to credit and jobs). Addressing these dispari-
restrictions were gradually lifted in 2022, many ties will require a more inclusive financial system
Southeast Asian economies began to revive. in the wake of the pandemic.11 In addition, many
Recovering international tourist arrivals are East and Southeast Asian governments increased
expected to help countries such as Thailand and unsustainable measures, such as environmental
the Philippines recapture lost revenue along with deregulation, in response to the pandemic dis-
jobs in food services and many other sectors.10 ruptions.12 Coordinated action to reinforce food
China began loosening its pandemic policies in system resilience in the face of climate change
late 2022 and is increasing its pro-growth stance. and biodiversity loss is essential for sustainable
Despite recent challenges in the public health- post-pandemic recovery.
care system as COVID-19 cases rose, its economy To cushion the socioeconomic impact of
is expected to return to buoyant growth in 2023 as COVID-19, most nations provided “rescue pack-
a result of reopening and possible policy stimulus, ages” (such as in-kind food distribution, cash
with positive impacts on global value chains. transfer programs, and expanded social protection)
Among ASEAN member states, disparities in along with targeted measures to support domes-
income and access to public services between tic food production and consumption. For example,
rural and urban areas and between men and in Thailand, where two-thirds of laborers work in
women worsened during the pandemic, suggest- the informal sector, the government responded to
ing that low-income and marginalized households the outbreak in 2020 with fiscal packages designed
(such as informal employees, migrants, and to support small and medium enterprises (SMEs),

East and Southeast Asia  109


farmers, and informal employees outside the social technologies and practices, including capacity
security system.13 Across the region, measures building, climate-resilient crops, planting calen-
that aimed to sustain the food supply and protect dar adjustments, and more efficient machinery.
producers included increased agricultural input For example, the China Weather Index Insurance
subsidies and distribution, price support through Project offers digital insurance that has shown
procurement and regulation, new programs stimu- promise for stabilizing the income of small-scale
lating local food production and short value chains, farmers facing losses from natural disasters.21
and broad-based rural development policies.14 For A cross-country review of experiences with
example, Malaysia allocated about US$225 million scaling out location-specific climate-smart agri-
through the Bank Negara Malaysia Agrofood culture models in ASEAN recommends starting
Financing Scheme to improve agricultural produc- with knowledge sharing, then mainstreaming the
tivity and encourage local food production, with tested interventions into government policies, and
approximately $4.5 million earmarked to train more finally sustaining efficiency with proper market
small farmers in using digital technologies.15 strategies.22

CLIMATE CHANGE ECONOMIC UNCERTAINTIES


Myanmar, the Philippines, and Thailand remained The Russia-Ukraine war has had only modest direct
among the countries deemed most at risk by the impacts on food systems in East and Southeast
Global Climate Risk Index in 2021.16 China experi- Asia compared with other regions. Deepened intra-
enced a mix of record-breaking heatwaves, severe regional trade and value chain participation, stable
drought, and heavy rainfall in 2022, causing a rice production and inventories in the region,
decline in its annual grain yields (relative to pro- and relatively limited wheat consumption in the
jections based on prior-year trends), although the Southeast subregion are important factors account-
country has sufficient domestic reserves to buf- ing for this resilience. However, the widening
fer the impact on food supplies.17 But as global impact of the war and global inflation, along with
warming worsens, the adverse impacts of extreme climate change, have been driving food and liveli-
weather events on food security will rise, far out- hood crises in the region. No country has escaped
weighing the potential increase in output of some recent food inflation, with food insecurity of most
crops due to warmer temperatures.18 On the con- concern in countries highly dependent on food and
sumption side, the demand for food (especially agricultural input imports. The rapid rise in fertilizer
animal-source foods, maize, and soybeans) is prices (especially nitrogen and phosphates) —
increasing as a result of population growth, rapid induced by the war in Ukraine, reduced fertilizer
urbanization, and rising household incomes. The production in the European Union, and a con-
region’s reliance on conventional approaches to traction in fertilizer production and exports from
agricultural productivity growth (for example, its China — has raised concerns about the region’s
synthetic nitrogen fertilizer application rates are food security and potential systemic economic cri-
among the highest in the world) will make shift- ses.23 On the other hand, Viet Nam and Thailand
ing to low-carbon development of the sector are projected to increase rice exports in 2023 in
challenging.19 response to strong demand.24
Many countries in the region have not yet Many governments in the region increased sup-
set agriculture-specific targets for greenhouse port to agricultural production and even restricted
gas emissions, though Viet Nam has commit- exports in an effort to tame domestic pressures
ted to reducing its emissions by 20 percent on food and fuel prices during the pandemic.
every 10 years and is building its capacity for However, those short-term measures (mostly pub-
measuring, reporting, and verifying farm-level lic policy support through price controls and trade
emissions.20 To improve agricultural productivity barriers) distorted markets and disrupted the trend
within the bounds of sustainability, many coun- toward green production and dietary diversifi-
tries have supported climate-smart agriculture cation (Figure 2). Further price inflation affecting

110  Regional Developments
Figure 2 Public policy support to agriculture, 2010–2020 average
A. FOCUS OF BUDGETARY SUPPORT TO AGRICULTURE B. BUDGETARY AND MARKET PRICE SUPPORT

Other Agricultural knowledge Hydrological Market price support Transfers


and innovation system infrastructure
Production support subsidies

100% 100%

80%
80%
60%

40%
60%

20%

40%
0%

-20%
20%
-40%

0% -60%
China Indonesia Philippines Viet Nam China Indonesia Philippines Viet Nam

Source: Reproduced from World Bank, East Asia and Pacific Economic Update, October 2022: Reforms for Recovery (Washington, DC: 2022).

agrifood commodities is likely to increase the bud- Recovery Framework highlights the development
getary costs of agricultural input subsidies and of climate-smart agriculture and the need to boost
food price controls, limiting governments’ scope agro-rural productivity. The 2021 Global Call to
for further policy support in agriculture. Based Action for a Human-Centered Recovery, from
on evidence from Thailand, cash transfers to vul- the International Labour Organization, provides
nerable groups are recommended as a more a framework for proposed actions within ASEAN
cost-efficient alternative to price interventions for member states. The ASEAN-China Joint Statement
supporting food security.25 With differing govern- on Enhancing Green and Sustainable Development
mental capacity (fiscal positions) to sustain fiscal Cooperation, also announced in 2021, is expected
buffers, the agrifood sector in the Philippines, to expand actions to move food systems toward
Thailand, and Malaysia may be most at risk from the SDGs. In addition, the Regional Comprehensive
reduced agricultural input subsidies and food price Economic Partnership (RCEP), which came into
support.26 force at the beginning of 2022, could galvanize
regional integration and enable ASEAN member
states and their East Asian partners to better man-
INTEGRATION FOR THE FUTURE
age a complex array of food system crises and build
Considering growing fiscal deficits, food inflation, resilience for the future through a multilateral trad-
and debt, substantial work is needed to put the ing system.
region’s agrifood systems on track toward resil-
ience and sustainability, especially in a gloomy
global economic environment.27 Several major inte-
gration frameworks can help build resilience for the
region’s future. The 2020 ASEAN Comprehensive

East and Southeast Asia  111


LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN
EUGENIO DÍAZ-BONILLA AND VALERIA PIÑEIRO
Eugenio Díaz-Bonilla is special advisor, Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on
Agriculture, and a visiting senior research fellow, International Food Policy Research Institute
(IFPRI). Valeria Piñeiro is acting head of the Latin America and Caribbean program and a senior research
coordinator, Markets, Trade, and Institutions Unit, IFPRI.

T
he countries of Latin America and the “lost decade” of the 1980s, when average GDP
Caribbean (LAC), like most of the world, have growth was negative (−0.6 percent from 1981 to
been affected by multiple economic, health, 1990). The most recent commodity cycle began in
and geopolitical shocks in recent years, all add- the first half of the 2000s, with commodity prices
ing to the damage from more frequent extreme peaking around 2011 and then declining until
weather events. This section reviews major impacts 2021. Between 2000 and 2011, regional per cap-
from these crises, which have varied across the ita income grew at about 2.0 percent per year but
LAC region, reflecting the wide variation in national slowed to 0.4 percent from 2012 to 2019. The poor
economies, and offers recommendations for reduc- economic performance led to social protests in sev-
ing the impact of future shocks. eral countries, despite their different ideological
Historically, the region’s economies have been orientations. This weakened democratic gover-
substantially affected by global commodity cycles, nance, causing a full breakdown in some cases, and
which drive high economic volatility; in fact, the contributed to the emergence of authoritarian gov-
variability in the per capita growth rate in LAC is ernments and mass migrations in countries such as
about double that of East and South Asia (although Venezuela. The index of democracy, calculated by
lower than in sub-Saharan Africa and the Middle the Economist, dropped more than 5 percent for
East and North Africa). Economic volatility in turn the region between 2008 and 2021.2
has exacerbated the negative economic and social Thus, when the COVID-19 pandemic hit in
consequences associated with LAC’s large income 2020, many countries in LAC were struggling with
inequalities (LAC and sub-Saharan Africa are the both low economic growth and weakened gov-
two regions with the highest levels of inequal- ernments. Countries responded to the pandemic
ity). On the positive side, democratic governance with restrictions on mobility and a range of health
is more common in LAC than in other developing and income support measures, financed by fis-
regions. However, the combination of economic cal and monetary expansion. As a result, the LAC
volatility and inequality has affected the quality of region experienced the largest increase in the
democracy and the functioning of governments.1 debt-to-GDP ratio among developing regions (it
Figure 1 illustrates the critical role of commod- rose from 68.4 percent in 2019 to 77.8 percent
ity cycles for Latin American economies, beginning in 2021 for LAC’s group of emerging markets
with the high commodity prices and economic and middle-income developing countries).3
growth during the 1970s, when income per capita Notwithstanding the pandemic policy responses,
grew at about 3.7 percent per year. This was fol- the region, with only about 8 percent of the world’s
lowed by the drop in commodity prices and the population, suffered about 30 percent of global

112  Regional Developments
Figure 1 GDP growth per capita and real price of commodities

5% 120

Index of Real Price of Commodities (2010 = 100)


4%
100

3%
Growth per captia

80
2%

1%
60

0%

40
-1%

-2% 20
1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020

Source: Based on data from the World Bank’s World Development Indicators and Commodity Prices database.

deaths. Income per capita fell by about 7.5 percent, same time, prices of many products were increas-
more than any other developing region. LAC was ing due to a significant acceleration of world
particularly vulnerable to the pandemic for several growth (2021 saw the highest per capita growth
reasons, including its high level of urbanization, sig- of any year in the period since 1960), the linger-
nificant income inequality (which also limits access ing effects of COVID-19 in logistics chains, and the
to high-quality health services), the informality of effects of heatwaves and droughts in a number
labor markets, the prevalence of obesity, and the of agricultural countries. Then, in February 2022,
economic stagnation that preceded the pandemic.4 the Russian invasion of Ukraine caused a further
Agricultural production (including forestry surge in the prices of food, fertilizers, and energy.
and fishing) fared better in 2020 than other eco- Although those prices have declined since the ini-
nomic sectors, due in part to government support tial shock, they remain above pre-pandemic levels.
to the sector and to the fact that food production Poverty and nutrition indicators followed the
and distribution were considered essential activ- path of the most recent commodity cycle, and
ities during the pandemic by most countries, and then were affected by the pandemic and the war.
so faced fewer mobility restrictions. But the deep Economic growth in the upward phase of the com-
recession in 2020 that affected demand, plus sev- modity cycle, supported by the expansion of social
eral climatic events (from hurricanes in Central assistance policies in LAC, helped to reduce the
America to droughts in South America), kept sec- percentage of poor people (at US$3.65 PPP/capita/
toral growth low. Agriculture sector growth was day) from almost 27 percent of the population in
only 0.5 percent in 2020 and 1.2 percent in 2021, 2000 to about 11 percent in 2014–2015. However,
compared to more than 3.0 percent worldwide in the poverty rate stagnated until 2019, when growth
both years.5 declined in the downcycle.6 Although processed
In 2021, the region enjoyed a strong economic household survey data is not available for all coun-
rebound (up 5.8 percent over 2020), but GDP per tries in LAC after 2019, extrapolation from those
capita remained below pre-pandemic levels. At the countries with data suggests that the pandemic

Latin America and the Caribbean  113


Figure 2 Undernourishment across LAC, 2000–2021
12%
Prevalence of undernourishment (%)

10%

8%

6%

4%
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021

Source: Data from FAOSTAT (2022).

may have raised the regional poverty rate to poverty and malnutrition problems vary across
14 percent in 2020. Because of the closing of the LAC: Haiti and several countries in Central America
economy and the nature of many women’s jobs in are more affected by hunger, poverty, and lack of
the service sector, women were more affected than access to healthy diets, but suffer less from obesity,
men by some of the pandemic-related problems — while obesity is more prevalent in countries such as
for example, they were 44 percent more likely than Argentian, Chile, and Uruguay, and different con-
male workers to lose their jobs.7 figurations of those problems exist in between.
Similarly, undernourishment and hunger (lack All LAC countries have been affected by these
of calories) tracked the commodity and growth macroeconomic, political, health, and climatic
cycle, with rates declining from almost 11.0 percent shocks over the past decade, but the effects have
of the population in 2000 to 5.3 percent in 2014 as been more devasting for some than others. Haiti
the cycle peaked. The hunger rate trended some- in particular has borne the brunt of a calamitous
what higher until 2019, when it reached about combination of climate and natural disasters with
6.7 percent, and then rose to 8.0 percent in 2020 political, economic, social, and health crises in
and 8.6 percent in 2021 as a result of the pandemic recent decades. In the past two years alone, its
and the related economic slowdown, with the high- president was assassinated, and the island was hit
est rates in Haiti, Central America, and Venezuela. by an extremely damaging earthquake of 7.2 mag-
There are no estimates as yet for 2022. nitude followed by another of 5.3 magnitude a few
The most recent data also show that about months later.9
22.5 percent of LAC’s population cannot afford a
healthy diet (2020),8 and indicate a rising trend in
POLICY CONSIDERATIONS
obesity and related noncommunicable diseases. As
of 2016, 24 percent of the adult population of LAC As the current crises play out, their negative
was obese, close to the 27 percent found in the impacts on malnutrition and poverty are likely
United States, Canada, and Europe, and well above to be aggravated by the tightening of global fis-
the world average of 13 percent. Of course, these cal and monetary policies, which is leading to a

114  Regional Developments
slowdown in the world economy. Moreover, the in general, and particularly in developing coun-
extreme weather events already inflicting dam- tries, is an important part of the solution to climate
age in the region are projected to intensify in the change, given its triple potential role of reducing
near future.10 To prepare for and address these emissions through climate-smart practices; contrib-
threats, LAC governments must confront a num- uting to mitigation by capturing CO2 through more
ber of short- and medium-term challenges, bearing efficient agriculture and landscape management;
in mind that the application of policy responses and increasing sectoral resilience and adapting to
will have to be fine-tuned to each country in view worsening climate and weather conditions. Most
of the region’s complexity and the large varia- of the LAC countries should invest more in agri-
tion between lower- and higher-income countries’ cultural R&D, given that current R&D expenditures
human, financial, and innovation capacities. in many countries fall below the suggested min-
imum of 1 percent of agricultural GDP. The need
Manage fertilizer use. Global fertilizer prices for scaled-up investments in science and technol-
remain high, despite falling from their peak in ogy applies to the whole food value chain and the
April 2022. In the short term, special efforts are consumer environment as well. In this regard, it
needed from LAC governments and the pri- has been suggested that investments in science,
vate sector to ensure adequate supply and more technology, and innovation should reach at least
efficient use of fertilizers, along with a technolog- 1 percent of all GDP related to food systems, not
ical shift toward new fertilizers and management just agricultural GDP.13
practices with lower greenhouse gas emissions.
Countries should organize public-private work- Improve health systems. The pandemic has high-
ing groups to monitor fertilizer markets and help lighted the need for more effective health systems.
ensure their supply. LAC and the rest of the world are adjusting to a
situation in which the COVID-19 virus and its vari-
Manage commodity and economic cycles. While ants are endemic. With vaccines, testing, and
commodity cycles are inevitable, governments the development of better treatments, the dis-
need to manage them better by saving in the ease now seems manageable. However, the future
upcycle to be able to provide economic support will bring new epidemics, which will require not
in the downcycle. The international community only strengthening LAC’s health systems but also
can help by (1) supporting debt relief through improving global surveillance and rapid-response
improved mechanisms for debt restructurings and mechanisms.14 In particular, a “one health”
write-offs,11 (2) increasing the capital of multilateral approach to the interaction of human and animal
development banks and optimizing the use of their health in food systems, which has been the source
balance sheets, so they can expand lending, and of many recent pandemics, must be supported by
(3) using scarce international development funds strong science and technology investments.
more strategically to leverage and mobilize the vast
liquidity in global private capital markets, orient- (Re)Build human capital through social safety
ing those markets toward larger humanitarian and nets and nutrition programs. Finally, human
developmental objectives (for example, by making capital in LAC, as in other developing regions, has
better use of the Special Drawing Rights issued by been affected by the nutritional problems associ-
the International Monetary Fund12). ated with insufficient and less-healthy diets as well
as setbacks caused by the pandemic, including
Invest in science, technology, and innovation to the gap in education for the current generation
address climate change. The increasing frequency of students and the weakening of job skills due
of extreme weather events requires a greater to long unemployment periods for some working
investment in science, technology, and innova- people. All these problems must be addressed to
tion to develop and scale up critical measures for improve welfare and long-term growth. In particu-
adaptation, resilience, and mitigation. Agriculture lar, it will be necessary to scale up and reevaluate

Latin America and the Caribbean  115


the design of social safety nets and nutrition pro- as well as the threat of climate-related disasters.
grams in the region, with the goal of reducing To tackle the current challenges and prepare for
the high levels of inequality and increasing resil- likely future shocks, they will need substantial finan-
ience to future crises. A promising option for LAC cial support from international organizations to
countries is to expand the focus of cash-transfer implement the policies that will put them on a path
programs in rural areas to combine social, produc- toward greater stability, equality, and resilience.
tive, and environmental dimensions of sustainable
development — with a percentage of cash trans-
fers related to poverty levels; another share to
cover the additional cost of implementing sus-
tainable adaptation and mitigation technologies;
and another for forest, biodiversity, and other eco-
system protection and restoration services. More
generally, it would be beneficial to establish a
framework for social inclusion, in both rural and
urban settings, with multidimensional programs
including social safety nets, livelihoods and jobs,
and financial inclusion.15
Further, given that cash transfers or vouchers
are already being used for both temporary human-
itarian programs that respond to recurring crises
and expanded permanent social assistance pro-
grams, integrating those programs into what has
been called “shock-responsive social assistance”
could offer a way forward (see Chapters 3 and 5).
In addition, the series of negative shocks in recent
years has led to many humanitarian programs
operating on a near-permanent basis. This has cre-
ated strong networks of institutions — national and
international, public and nongovernmental — with
significant experience and operational capa-
bilities on the ground that could be integrated
within long-term national strategies developed by
elected authorities.

CONCLUSION
The LAC region has experienced significant eco-
nomic and political volatility, exacerbated by
extreme climate events and natural disasters.
Several policy measures — related to macro-
economic and financial issues, climate change,
health, and social interventions — have been
recommended here to address the short- and
medium-term challenges generated by those
shocks. LAC countries are now burdened by
pandemic-related increases in debt and face a
host of preexisting economic and social problems

116  Regional Developments
Notes
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1   FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations),
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3   Ibid. 22   M. Hidrobo, N. Kumar, T. Palermo, A. Peterman, and S. Roy, Gender-

4   World Economic Forum, Global Gender Gap Report 2022 (2022). Sensitive Social Protection: A Critical Component of the COVID-19
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“No End in Sight Yet for the Global Food Price Crisis,” IFPRI Blog, IFPRI,
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118  Notes
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12   E. Aurino, J.P. Tranchant, A. Sekou Diallo, and A. Gelli, “School Feeding
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Standards for Better Food Security and Nutrition Decisions (Rome: 2021). a Randomised Impact Evaluation of Cash and Food Transfers in Ecuador
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4   IPC Global Partners, Technical Manual Version 3: Evidence and
“In the Form of Bread? A Randomized Comparison of Cash and Food
Standards for Better Food Security and Nutrition Decisions (Rome: 2021).
Transfers in Yemen,” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 102, 1
(2020): 91–113.
BOX 2 15   S. Kurdi, “The Nutritional Benefits of Cash Transfers in Humanitarian
1   IPC (Integrated Food Security Phase Collection) Global Partners, Crises: Evidence from Yemen,” World Development 148 (2021): 105664;
Technical Manual Version 3: Evidence and Standards for Better Food O. Ecker, J-F. Maystadt, and Z. Guo, “Can Unconditional Cash Transfers
Security and Nutrition Decisions (Rome: 2021). Mitigate the Impact of Civil Conflict on Acute Child Malnutrition in
Yemen? Evidence from the National Social Protection Monitoring
Survey,” MENA Regional Program Working Paper 17, IFPRI, Washington,
DC, 2019.
CHAPTER 3
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1   Aon, Weather, Climate, and Catastrophe (London: 2021). Evaluation of the Yemen Crisis (New York: UN OCHA, 2022); IAHE, Inter-
2   J. Glauber and D. Laborde, eds. The Russia-Ukraine Conflict and Global Agency Humanitarian Evaluation of the Drought Response in Ethiopia
Food Security (Washington, DC: IFPRI, forthcoming). 2015–2018 (New York: UN OCHA, 2020).

3   E. Skoufias, “Economic Crises and Natural Disasters: Coping Strategies 17   D.K. Evans, B. Holtemeyer, and K. Kosec, “Cash Transfers Increase Trust
and Policy Implications,” World Development 31, 7 (2003): 1087–1102. in Local Government,” World Development 114 (2019): 138–155.

4   OCHA (United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian 18   R. Sabates-Wheeler, K. Hirvonen, J. Lind, and J. Hoddinott, “Expanding
Affairs), Global Humanitarian Review 2022 (New York: 2021). Social Protection Coverage with Humanitarian Aid: Lessons on

Notes  119
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Studies 58, 10 (2022): 1981–2000. “Anticipatory Action,” presented at the Food Security & Livelihoods
Cluster Coordination meeting, Rome, May 21, 2021.
19   G. Dafuleya, “Social and Emergency Assistance Ex-Ante and During
COVID-19 in the SADC Region,” International Journal of Community and 35   IFRC (International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent
Social Development 2, 2 (2020): 251–268. Societies), 2021 Annual Plan: Disaster Relief Emergency Fund and
Forecast-based Action (Geneva: 2020).
20   P. Howe, “The Triple Nexus: A Potential Approach to Supporting
the Achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals?” World 36   D. MacLeod, D.R. Kniveton, and M.C. Todd, “Playing the Long Game:
Development 124 (2019): 104629. Anticipatory Action Based on Seasonal Forecasts,” Climate Risk
Management 34 (2021): 100375.
21   L. Huybregts, F. Houngbé, C. Salpéteur, R. Brown, D. Roberfroid,
M. Ait-Aissa, and P. Kolsteren, “The Effect of Adding Ready-to- 37   L. Weingärtner and E. Wilkinson, “Anticipatory Crisis Financing and
Use Supplementary Food to a General Food Distribution on Child Action: Concepts, Initiatives and Evidence,” Working Paper, ODI,
Nutritional Status and Morbidity: A Cluster-Randomized Controlled London, 2019.

Trial,” PLoS Medicine 9, 9 (2012): e1001313; M.T. Ruel, H. Alderman, 38   P. Venton, C.C. Venton, N. Limones, et al., “Framework for the
and Maternal and Child Nutrition Study Group, “Nutrition-Sensitive Assessment of Benefits of Action/Cost of Inaction (BACI) for Drought
Interventions and Programmes: How Can They Help to Accelerate Preparedness,” Water Global Practice Working Paper, World Bank
Progress in Improving Maternal and Child Nutrition?” Lancet 382, 9891 Group, Washington, DC, 2019.
(2013): 536–551. 39   C. Gros, E. Easton-Calabria, M. Bailey, K. Dagys, E.C. de Perez, M.
22   D.K. Olney, Q. Marshall, G. Honton, et al., “Leveraging an Sharavnyambuu, and A. Kruczkiewicz, “The Effectiveness of Forecast-
Implementation–Research Partnership to Improve Effectiveness of Based Humanitarian Assistance in Anticipation of Extreme Winters: A
Nutrition-Sensitive Programs at the World Food Programme,” Food and Case Study of Vulnerable Herders in Mongolia,” Disasters 46, 1 (2022):
Nutrition Bulletin 41, 1 (2020): 18–37. 95–118.

23   C. Del Ninno, P.A. Dorosh, and K. Subbarao, “Food Aid, Domestic Policy 40   C. Gros, M. Bailey, S. Schwager, et al., “Household-Level Effects of
and Food Security: Contrasting Experiences from South Asia and Sub- Providing Forecast-Based Cash in Anticipation of Extreme Weather
Events: Quasi-Experimental Evidence from Humanitarian Interventions
Saharan Africa,” Food Policy 32, 4 (2007): 413–435.
in the 2017 Floods in Bangladesh,” International Journal of Disaster Risk
24   A.M. Kizito and E. Kato, “Does Linking Farmers to Markets Work? Reduction 41 (2019): 101275.
Evidence from the World Food Programme’s Purchase for Progress
41   See https://www.ifpri.org/topic/resilience for a repository of publica-
Satellite Collection Points Initiative in Uganda,” African Journal of
tions on this topic.
Agricultural and Resource Economics 13, 2 (2018): 169–181

25   L. Zanotti, “Cacophonies of Aid, Failed State Building and NGOs in Haiti:
Setting the Stage for Disaster, Envisioning the Future,” Third World
CHAPTER 4
Quarterly 31, 5 (2010): 755–771; S. Campbell, M. DiGiuseppe, and A.
Murdie, “International Development NGOs and Bureaucratic Capacity: 1   T. Reardon and B. Minten, “Food Value Chain Transformation in
Facilitator or Destroyer?” Political Research Quarterly 72, 1 (2019): 3–18. Developing Regions,” in Agricultural Development: New Perspectives in
26   U. Gentilini, S. Laughton, and C. O’Brien, “Human(itarian) Capital? a Changing World, eds. K. Otsuka and S. Fan, 397–437 (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2020).
Lessons on Better Connecting Humanitarian Assistance and Social
Protection,” Social Protection and Jobs Discussion Paper No. 1802, 2   J. von Braun and E. Kennedy, Commercialization of Subsistence
World Bank, Washington, DC, 2018. Agriculture: Income and Nutritional Effects in Developing Countries
(Washington, DC: IFPRI, 1986).
27   S. Levine, E. Wilkinson, and L. Weingärtner, “Anticipatory Action for
Livelihood Protection: A Collective Endeavour,” Working Paper No. 580, 3   T. Reardon and D. Zilberman, “Climate Smart Food Supply Chains in
Overseas Development Institute (ODI), London, 2020. Developing Countries in an Era of Rapid Dual Change in Agrifood
Systems and the Climate,” in Climate Smart Agriculture, eds. L. Lipper,
28   WFP (World Food Programme), Forecast-Based Financing (FbF):
N. McCarthy, D. Zilberman, S. Asfaw, and G. Branca, 335–351 (Cham,
Anticipatory Actions for Food Security (Rome: 2019).
Switzerland: Springer, 2018).
29   A. Seal and R. Bailey, “The 2011 Famine in Somalia: Lessons Learnt from
4   Ibid.
a Failed Response?” Conflict and Health 7 (2013): 22; D. Maxwell, K.
Gelsdorf, N. Haan, D. Dawe, eds., “Special Issue on the Somalia Famine 5   L.S.O. Liverpool-Tasie, T. Reardon, and B. Belton, “’Essential Non-
essentials’: COVID-19 Policy Missteps in Nigeria Rooted in Persistent
of 2011–2012,” Special issue, Global Food Security 1, 1 (December 2012).
Myths about African Food Supply Chains,” Applied Economic
30   WMO (World Meteorological Organization), WMO Guidelines on Multi- Perspectives and Policy 43, 1 (2020): 205–224; T. Reardon, A. Mishra,
hazard Impact-based Forecast and Warning Services: Part II: Putting C.S.R. Nuthalapati, M. Bellemare, and D. Zilberman, “COVID-19’s
Multi-hazard IBFWS into Practice (Geneva: 2021). Disruption of India’s Transformed Food Supply Chains,” Economic and
31   P. Raschky and M. Schwindt, “Aid, Natural Disasters and the Samaritan’s Political Weekly 55, 18 (2020): 7–8.
Dilemma,” World Bank Policy Research Working Paper No. 4951, World 6   L.S.O. Liverpool-Tasie, B. Belton, O. Tasie, et al., Pivoting in Nigeria’s Fish
Bank, Washington, DC, 2009. and Poultry Value Chains in Response to COVID-19 Policies and Impacts,
32   S. Levine, E. Wilkinson, and L. Weingärtner, “Anticipatory Action for NAPA Research Paper 1 (East Lansing: Michigan State University, 2021).
Livelihood Protection: A Collective Endeavour,” Working Paper No. 580, 7   Ibid.
ODI, London, 2020.
8   B. Belton, L. Rosen, L. Middleton, et al., “COVID-19 Impacts and
33   AATF (Anticipatory Action Task Force), “Enabling Anticipatory Action at Adaptations in Asia and Africa’s Aquatic Food Value Chains,” Marine
Scale,” Policy Brief for Donor Governments, 2021. Policy 129 (2021): 104523.

120  Notes
9   L.S.O. Liverpool-Tasie, B. Belton, O. Tasie, et al., Pivoting in Nigeria’s Fish in Developing Regions: E-commerce and ‘Copivoting’ Delivery
and Poultry Value Chains in Response to COVID-19 Policies and Impacts, Intermediaries,” Agricultural Economics 52, 3 (2021): 459–475.
NAPA Research Paper 1 (East Lansing: Michigan State University, 2021). 26   D. Naziri, B. Belton, S. Alobo-Loison, T. Reardon, et al., “Fish and Chips
10   D. Naziri, B. Belton, S. Alobo-Loison, T. Reardon, et al., “Fish and Chips in Crisis! COVID-19 Disruptions and Pivoting in the Hidden Middle of
in Crisis! COVID-19 Disruptions and Pivoting in the Hidden Middle of Kenya’s Potato and Fish Value Chains,” forthcoming.
Kenya’s Potato and Fish Value Chains,” forthcoming. 27   OECD, States of Fragility 2020 (Paris: 2020).
11   S. Nordhagen, U. Igbeka, H. Rowlands, R.S. Shine, E. Heneghan, and 28   C. Hebebrand and D. Laborde, “High Fertilizer Prices Contribute to
J. Tench, “COVID-19 and Small Enterprises in the Food Supply Chain: Rising Global Food Security Concerns,” IFPRI Blog, April 22, 2022.
Early Impacts and Implications for Longer-Term Food System Resilience
29   Ibid.
in Low- and Middle-Income Countries,” World Development 141
(2021): 105405. 30   M. Ruta, ed., The Impact of the War in Ukraine on Global Trade and
Investment (Washington, DC: World Bank, 2022).
12   C. Béné, D. Bakker, M.J. Chavarro, B. Even, J. Melo, and A. Sonneveld,
“Global Assessment of the Impacts of COVID-19 on Food Security,” 31   Ibid; D. Laborde, W. Martin, J. Swinnen, and R. Vos, “COVID-19 Risks to
Global Food Security 31 (2021): 100575. Global Food Security,” Science 369, 6503 (2020): 500–502.

13   K. Van Hoyweghen, A. Fabry, H. Feyaerts, I. Wade, and M. Maertens, 32   W. Martin and N. Minot, “The Impacts of Price Insulation on World
“Resilience of Global and Local Value Chains to the COVID-19 Wheat Markets during the 2022 Food Price Crisis,” Australian Journal of
Pandemic: Survey Evidence from Vegetable Value Chains in Senegal,” Agricultural and Resource Economics 66, 4 (2022): 753–774.
Agricultural Economics 52, 3 (2021): 423–440. 33   World Bank, Myanmar Economic Monitor, January 2022 (Washington,

14   B. Minten, B. Mohammed, and S. Tamru, “Emerging Medium-Scale DC: 2022); MAPSA (Myanmar Agriculture Policy Support Activity),
“Double Jeopardy: COVID-19, Coup d’État and Poverty in Myanmar,”
Tenant Farming, Gig Economies, and the COVID-19 Disruption: The
Myanmar Strategy Support Program Working Paper 22, IFPRI,
Case of Commercial Vegetable Clusters in Ethiopia,” European Journal
Washington, DC, 2022.
of Development Research 32, 5 (2020): 1402–1429.
34   B. Minten, J. Goeb, K.Z. Win, and P. Zone, “Agricultural Value Chains in a
15   D. Naziri, B. Belton, S. Alobo-Loison, T. Reardon, et al., “Fish and Chips
Fragile State: Evidence from Rice in Myanmar,” MAPSA Discussion Paper
in Crisis! COVID-19 Disruptions and Pivoting in the Hidden Middle of
15, IFPRI, Washington, DC, 2022.
Kenya’s Potato and Fish Value Chains,” forthcoming
35   Ibid.
16   HLPE (High Level Panel of Experts on Food Security and Nutrition),
Impacts of COVID-19 on Food Security and Nutrition: Developing 36   C. Del Ninno, P.A. Dorosh, and L.C. Smith, “Public Policy, Markets and
Effective Policy Responses to Address the Hunger and Malnutrition Household Coping Strategies in Bangladesh: Avoiding a Food Security
Pandemic (Rome: FAO, 2020). Crisis following the 1998 Floods,” World Development 31, 7 (2003):
1221–1238.
17   K. Hirvonen, B. Minten, B. Mohammed, and S. Tamru, “Food Prices
and Marketing Margins during the COVID19 Pandemic: Evidence from 37   C. Murendo, A. Keil, and M. Zeller, “Drought Impacts and Related
Vegetables in Ethiopia,” Agricultural Economics 52, 3 (2021): 407–421. Risk Management by Smallholder Farmers in Developing Countries:
Evidence from Awash River Basin, Ethiopia,” Risk Management 13, 4
18   I. Ali, A. Arslan, M. Chowdhury, Z. Khan, and S.Y. Tarba, “Reimagining
(2011): 247–263.
Global Food Value Chains through Effective Resilience to COVID-19
Shocks and Similar Future Events: A Dynamic Capability Perspective,” 38   B. Kramer, P. Hazell, H. Alderman, F. Ceballos, N. Kumar, and A.G. Timu,
Journal of Business Research, 141 (2022): 1–12. “Is Agricultural Insurance Fulfilling its Promise for the Developing
World?” IFPRI Discussion Paper 2057, IFPRI, Washington, DC, 2021.
19   D.C. Love, E.H. Allison, F. Asche, et al., “Emerging COVID-19 Impacts,
39   M. Carter, A. de Janvry, E. Sadoulet, and A. Sarris, “Index Insurance for
Responses, and Lessons for Building Resilience in the Seafood System,”
Developing Country Agriculture: A Reassessment,” Annual Review of
Global Food Security 28 (2021): 100494.
Resource Economics 9, 1(2017): 421–438.
20   D. Naziri, B. Belton, S. Alobo-Loison, T. Reardon, et al., “Fish and Chips
40   B. Kramer, P. Hazell, H. Alderman, F. Ceballos, N. Kumar, and A.G. Timu,
in Crisis! COVID-19 Disruptions and Pivoting in the Hidden Middle of
“Is Agricultural Insurance Fulfilling Its Promise for the Developing
Kenya’s Potato and Fish Value Chains,” forthcoming.
World?” IFPRI Discussion Paper 2057, IFPRI, Washington, DC, 2021; see
21   T. Reardon, A. Heiman, L. Lu, C.S.R. Nuthalapati, R. Vos, and D. also Chapter 5 in this report.
Zilberman, “‘Pivoting’ by Food Industry Firms to Cope with COVID-19
41   D. Gollin, Impact of International Research on Intertemporal Yield
in Developing Regions: E-commerce and ‘Copivoting’ Delivery
Stability in Wheat and Maize: An Economic Assessment (Mexico City:
Intermediaries,” Agricultural Economics 52, 3 (2021): 459–475.
CIMMYT, 2006).
22   D. Naziri, B. Belton, S. Alobo-Loison, T. Reardon, et al., “Fish and Chips
42   C.B. Barrett, T. Reardon, J. Swinnen, and D. Zilberman, “Agri-food Value
in Crisis! COVID-19 Disruptions and Pivoting in the Hidden Middle of
Chain Revolutions in Low- and Middle-Income Countries,” Journal of
Kenya’s Potato and Fish Value Chains,” forthcoming.
Economic Literature 60, 4 (2022): 1316–1377; N.J. Sitko and T.S. Jayne,
23   L.S.O. Liverpool-Tasie, B. Belton, O. Tasie, et al., Pivoting in Nigeria’s Fish “Why are African Commodity Exchanges Languishing? A Case Study
and Poultry Value Chains in Response to COVID-19 Policies and Impacts, of the Zambian Agricultural Commodity Exchange,” Food Policy 37, 3
NAPA Research Paper 1 (East Lansing: Michigan State University, 2021). (2012): 275–282.
24   B. Belton, COVID-19 and Lessons Learned on the Resilience 43   S. Jaffee, P. Siegel, and C. Andrews, “Rapid Agricultural Supply Chain
of Aquaculture Value Chains (Punchong, Malaysia: INFOFISH Risk Assessment: A Conceptual Framework,” Agriculture and Rural
International, 2022). Development Discussion Paper 47, World Bank, Washington, DC, 2010.
25   T. Reardon, A. Heiman, L. Lu, C.S.R. Nuthalapati, R. Vos, and D. 44   D. Boughton, J. Goeb, I. Lambrecht, et al., “Impacts of COVID-19
Zilberman, “‘Pivoting’ by Food Industry Firms to Cope with COVID-19 on Agricultural Production and Food Systems in Late Transforming

Notes  121
Southeast Asia: The Case of Myanmar,” Agricultural Systems 188 Transfers, Polygamy, and Intimate Partner Violence: Experimental
(2021): 103026. Evidence from Mali,” Journal of Development Economics 143 (2020):
45   World Food Programme, The WFP’s Real-Time Monitoring System: 102410; S. Roy, M. Hidrobo, J. Hoddinott, and A. Ahmed, “Transfers,
Approaches and Methodologies (Rome: 2021). Behavior Change Communication, and Intimate Partner Violence:
Postprogram Evidence from Rural Bangladesh,” Review of Economics
and Statistics 101, 5 (2019): 865–877.

CHAPTER 5 12   A. Castañeda, D. Doan, D. Newhouse, M.C. Nguyen, H. Uematsu, and


J.P. Azevedo, “A New Profile of the Global Poor,” World Development
1   S. Hickey, T. Lavers, M. Niño-Zarazúa, and J. Seekings, “The Negotiated 101 (2018): 250–267.
Politics of Social Protection in Sub-Saharan Africa,” UNU-WIDER
13   O. Hoegh-Guldberg, D. Jacob, M. Taylor, et al., “Impacts of 1.5°C Global
Working Paper 2018/34, UNU-WIDER, Helsinki, 2018.
Warming on Natural and Human Systems,” in Special Report: Global
2   K. Beegle, M. Honorati, and E. Monsalve, “Reaching the Poor and Warming of 1.5°C, Ch. 3 (Geneva: IPCC, 2018).
Vulnerable in Africa through Social Safety Nets,” in Realizing the Full
14   World Bank, Poverty and Shared Prosperity 2022: Correcting Course
Potential of Social Safety Nets in Africa, eds. K. Beegle, A. Coudouel, and
(Washington, DC, 2022); D. Headey and K. Hirvonen, “Food Inflation,
E. Monsalve, 49–87 (Washington, DC: World Bank, 2018).
Poverty and Urbanization,” IFPRI Discussion Paper 2134, IFPRI,
3   M. Hidrobo, J. Hoddinott, N. Kumar, and M. Olivier, “Social Protection,
Washington, DC, 2022.
Food Security, and Asset Formation,” World Development 101
(2018): 88–103; C. Andrews, A. Hsiao, and L. Ralston, “Social Safety 15   U. Gentilini, S. Khosla, and M. Almenfi, “Cash in the City: Emerging
Nets Promote Poverty Reduction, Increase Resilience, and Expand Lessons from Implementing Cash Transfers in Urban Africa,” Social
Opportunities,” in Realizing the Full Potential of Social Safety Nets Protection & Jobs Discussion Paper No. 2101, World Bank, Washington,
in Africa, eds. K. Beegle, A. Coudouel, and E. Monsalve, 87–138 DC, 2021; U. Gentilini, Cash Transfers in Pandemic Times: Evidence,
(Washington, DC: World Bank, 2018). Practices, and Implications from the Largest Scale Up in History
(Washington, DC: World Bank, 2022); J. Duchoslav and K. Hirvonen,
4   D.K. Olney, A. Gelli, N. Kumar, H. Alderman, A. Go, and A. Raza,
“Delivery of Social Protection Programs to Combat COVID-19 in Africa,”
“Social Assistance Programme Impacts on Women’s and Children’s
in ReSAKKS Annual Trends and Outlook Report: Building Resilient
Diets and Nutritional Status,” Maternal & Child Nutrition 18, 4 (2022):
African Food Systems after COVID-19, eds. J. Ulimwengy, M.A. Constas,
e13378; J. Manley, Y. Balarajan, S. Malm, et al., “Cash Transfers and
and E. Ubalijoro, 100–111 (Kigali and Washington, DC: AKADEMIYA2063
Child Nutritional Outcomes: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis,”
and IFPRI, 2021).
BMJ Global Health 5 (2020): e003621; J. Manley, H. Alderman, and
U. Gentilini, “More Evidence on Cash Transfers and Child Nutritional 16   U. Gentilini, Cash Transfers in Pandemic Times (Washington, DC:
Outcomes: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis,” BMJ Global Health World Bank, 2022); U. Gentilini, M.B.A. Almenfi, T. Iyengar, et al., Social
7 (2022): e008233. Protection and Jobs Responses to COVID-19 (Washington, DC: World
5   K. Kosec and C.H. Mo, “Aspirations and the Role of Social Protection: Bank, 2022).
Evidence from a Natural Disaster in Rural Pakistan,” World Development 17   A. McCord, “The Impact of the Global Financial Crisis on Social
97 (2017): 49–66. Protection in Developing Countries,” International Social Security
6   D.O. Gilligan, S. Devereux, and J. Tenzing, “Social Protection: Designing Review 63 (2010): 31–45.
Adaptive Systems to Build Resilience to Climate Change,” in 2022 18   M. Grosh, C. Andrews, R. Quintana, and C. Rodriguez-Alas, “Assessing
Global Food Policy Report: Climate Change & Food Systems, 58–63 Safety Net Readiness in Response to Food Price Volatility,” Social
(Washington, DC: IFPRI, 2022). Protection & Jobs Discussion Paper No. 1118, World Bank, Washington,
7   T. Fetzer, “Can Workfare Programs Moderate Conflict? Evidence DC, 2011; World Bank, The World Bank Group and the Global Food
from India,” Journal of the European Economic Association 18 (2020): Crisis: An Evaluation of the World Bank Group Response (Washington,
3337–3375. DC: 2014).

8   D.K. Evans, B. Holtemeyer, and K. Kosec, “Cash Transfers Increase Trust 19   World Bank, The State of Social Safety Nets 2018 (Washington, DC:
in Local Government,” World Development 114 (2019): 138–155; K. Kosec 2018); S. Hickey, T. Lavers, M. Niño-Zarazúa, and J. Seekings, “The
and C.H. Mo, “Does Relative Deprivation Condition the Effects of Social Negotiated Politics of Social Protection in Sub-Saharan Africa,” UNU-
Protection Programs on Political Attitudes? Experimental Evidence from WIDER Working Paper 2018/34, UNU-WIDER, Helsinki, 2018.
Pakistan,” American Journal of Political Science, forthcoming.
20   World Bank, ASPIRE (Atlas of Social Protection: Indicators of Resilience
9   H. Alderman and R. Yemtsov, “How Can Safety Nets Contribute to and Equity) database, June 28, 2022, update.
Economic Growth?” World Bank Economic Review 28 (2014):1–20;
21   M. Hidrobo, J. Hoddinott, N. Kumar, and M. Olivier, “Social Protection,
M. Filipski, J.E. Taylor, G.A. Abegaz, T. Ferede, A.S. Taffesse, and X.
Food Security, and Asset Formation,” World Development 101 (2018):
Diao, “Synopsis: Economy-wide impacts of the Productive Safety Net
88–103.
Programme (PSNP),” ESSP II Resarch Note 57 (Washington, DC: IFPRI
and Ethiopian Development Research Institute, 2016). 22   K. Beegle, M. Honorati, and E. Monsalve, “Reaching the Poor and
Vulnerable in Africa through Social Safety Nets,” in Realizing the Full
10   K. Ambler and A. De Brauw, “The Impacts of Cash Transfers on
Potential of Social Safety Nets in Africa, eds. K. Beegle, A. Coudouel, and
Women’s Empowerment: Learning from Pakistan’s BISP Program,”
E. Monsalve, 49–87 (Washington, DC: World Bank, 2018).
Social Protection and Labor Discussion Paper No. 1702, World Bank,
Washington, DC, 2017. 23   E. Knippenberg and J. Hoddinott, “Shocks, Social Protection, and
Resilience: Evidence from Ethiopia,” ESSP Working Paper 109, IFPRI,
11   A.M. Buller, A. Peterman, M. Ranganathan, A. Bleile, M. Hidrobo, and L.
Addis Ababa, 2017.
Heise, “A Mixed-Method Review of Cash Transfers and Intimate Partner
Violence in Low- and Middle-Income Countries,” World Bank Research 24   K. Haile, “Cash Transfers, Negative Rainfall Shocks and Child Welfare in
Observer 33 (2018): 218–258; R. Heath, M. Hidrobo, and S. Roy, “Cash Ethiopia,” Journal of African Economies 31, 5 (2021): 441–466.

122  Notes
25   S. Asfaw, A. Carraro, B. Davis, S. Handa, and D. Seidenfeld, “Cash Programmes in the Sahel,” Discussion Paper, CALP Network, Oxford,
Transfer Programmes, Weather Shocks and Household Welfare: UK, 2014.
Evidence from a Randomised Experiment in Zambia,” Journal of
41   UN OCHA (United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Development Effectiveness 9 (2017): 419–442.
Affairs), The Grand Bargain: A Shared Commitment to Better Serve
26   P. Premand and Q. Stoeffler, “Cash Transfers, Climatic Shocks and People in Need (Istanbul: 2016)
Resilience in the Sahel,” Journal of Environmental Economics and
42   C. Cherrier, “Cash Transfers and Resilience,” Discussion Paper, CALP
Management 116 (2022): 102744.
Network, Oxford, UK, 2014.
27   X. Hou, “Can Drought Increase Total Calorie Availability? The Impact
43   U. Gentilini, Cash Transfers in Pandemic Times (Washington, DC: World
of Drought on Food Consumption and the Mitigating Effects of a
Bank, 2022); K.A. Abay, N. Yonzan, S. Kurdi, and K. Tafere, Revisiting
Conditional Cash Transfer Program,” Economic Development and
Poverty Trends and the Role of Social Protection Systems in Africa during
Cultural Change 58 (2010): 713–737.
the COVID-19 Pandemic (Washington, DC: World Bank, 2022).
28   A. De Janvry, F. Finan, E. Sadoulet, and R. Vakis, “Can Conditional Cash
44   C. Cherrier, “Cash Transfers and Resilience,” Discussion Paper, CALP
Transfer Programs Serve as Safety Nets in Keeping Children at School
Network, Oxford, UK, 2014; M. Ulrichs and R. Sabates-Wheeler, “Social
and from Working when Exposed to Shocks?” Journal of Development
Protection and Humanitarian Response?” IDS Working Paper 516,
Economics 79 (2006): 349–373.
Institute of Development Studies, Brighton, UK, 2018.
29   A. Adhvaryu, A. Nyshadham, T. Molina, and J. Tamayo, “Helping
45   T. Bowen, C. del Ninno, C. Andrews et al., Overview: A Framework for
Children Catch Up: Early Life Shocks and the Progresa Experiment,”
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40   C. Cherrier, “Cash Transfers and Resilience: Strengthening Linkages 56   R. Sabates-Wheeler, K. Hirvonen, J. Lind, and J. Hoddinott, “Expanding
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58   T. Bowen, C. del Ninno, C. Andrews, et al., Overview: A Framework for 72   A. Banerjee, E. Duflo, N. Goldberg, et al., ”A Multifaceted Program
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68   K. Hirvonen, E. Machado, A. Simons, and V. Taraz, “More than a Safety


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124  Notes
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a society at any scale due to hazardous events interacting with condi- 22   The World Bank maintains a global tracker of studies on COVID-19 and
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12   N. Kumar and A.R. Quisumbing, “Gendered Impacts of the 2007–2008 23   J. True, “Gendered Violence in Natural Disasters: Learning from New
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Notes  125
26   A.M. Thurston, H. Stöckl, and M. Ranganathan, “Natural Hazards, 38   ALNAP (Active Learning Network for Accountability and Performance),
Disasters and Violence against Women and Girls: A Global Mixed- The State of the Humanitarian System (London: 2022).
Methods Systematic Review,” BMJ Global Health 6, 4 (2021): e004377. 39   Development Initiatives, Global Humanitarian Assistance Report
27   Ibid. (Wilmington, DE: 2022).

28   Brennan and Nandy define complex humanitarian emergencies as 40   ALNAP, The State of the Humanitarian System (London: 2022);
“humanitarian crises characterized by political instability, armed con- Development Initiatives, Global Humanitarian Assistance Report
flict, large population displacements, food shortages, social disruption (Wilmington, DE: 2022).
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42   E. Lwamba, S. Shisler, W. Ridlehoover, et al., Strengthening Women’s
29   Sexual violence outcomes included rape, molestation, sexual abuse, Empowerment and Gender Equality in Fragile Contexts towards Peaceful
genital mutilation, gang rape, marital rape, sexual violence related to and Inclusive Societies, 3ie Systematic Review 47 (New Delhi: 3ie, 2021).
exploitation, and sexual harassment.
43   Ibid.
30   A.M. Thurston, H. Stöckl, and M. Ranganathan, “Natural Hazards,
44   M. Bizzarri, M.C. Vinas, H. Khogali, and T. Jantzi, Inter-Agency
Disasters and Violence Against Women and Girls: A Global Mixed-
Humanitarian Evaluation on Gender Equality and the Empowerment of
Methods Systematic Review,” BMJ Global Health 6, 4 (2021): e004377; L.
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Stark, I. Seff, and C. Reis, “Gender-Based Violence against Adolescent
Girls in Humanitarian Settings: A Review of the Evidence,” Lancet Child 45   M. Buvinic, M. das Gupta, U. Casabonne, and P. Verwimp, “Violent
& Adolescent Health 5, 3 (2021): 210–222; A. Vu, A. Adam, A. Wirtz, Conflict and Gender Inequality: An Overview,” World Bank Research
et al., “The Prevalence of Sexual Violence among Female Refugees in Observer 28, 1 (2013): 110–138.

Complex Humanitarian Emergencies: A Systematic Review and Meta- 46   IDMC (Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre), Global Report
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32   J. Austin, S. Guy, L. Lee-Jones, T. McGinn, and J. Schlecht, 48   A.R. Quisumbing, N. Kumar, and J.A. Behrman, “Do Shocks Affect
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53   A. Peterman and M. Ranganathan, “How is Economic Security Linked to
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36   M. Alvi, S. Gupta, P. Barooah, C. Ringler, E. Bryan, and R.S. Meinzen-
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Council Resolution 1325, Ch. 3 (2015).

58   F. Kuwonu, “Women: Liberia’s Guardians of Peace,” Africa Renewal


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BOX 1 5   According to the 1951 Refugee Convention, a refugee is defined as


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47   N. Kawarazuka, T.M. Duong, and E. Simelton, “Gender, Labor Migration 57   Others have also studied the impact of refugees on other outcomes,
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60   M. Beine, L. Bertinelli, R. Cömertpay, A. Litina, and J-F. Maystadt, “A
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61   C. MacPherson and O. Sterck, “Empowering Refugees through Cash


REGIONAL DEVELOPMENTS
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Papers 320, Households in Conflict Network, Berlin, 2021; M. Alloush,
AFRICA
J.E. Taylor, A. Gupta, R.I. Rojas, and E. Gonzalez-Estrada, “Economic 1   K. Reid, “Africa Hunger, Famine: Facts, FAQs, and How to Help,” World
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2   FSIN (Food Security Information Network) and GNAFC (Global Network
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63   P. Läderach, J. Ramirez-Villegas, G. Caroli, C. Sadoff, and G. Pacillo,
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Climate Initiative is known as “Implementing Sustainable Land Use
5   J. Wan, et al., “Biology, Invasion and Management of the Agricultural
Systems to Contribute to Forest Conservation, Climate Protection
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Noctuidae),” Journal of Integrative Agriculture 20, 3 (2021): 646–663.
65   A. Betts, M.F. Stierna, N. Omata, and O. Sterck, “Social Cohesion and
6   Y. Dong, L. Zhao, and W. Huang, Monitoring of Desert Locust in Africa
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Working Paper 9917, World Bank, Washington, DC, 2022; C. Blair, G.
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Ortega, S.V. Rozo, and M.J. Urbina, “Life Out of the Shadows: Impacts 8   For further discussion of the COVID-19 pandemic and effects in Africa,
of Amnesties in the Lives of Refugees,” Policy Research Working Paper see IFPRI, 2021 Global Food Policy Report: Transforming Food Systems
9928, World Bank, Washington, DC, 2022. after COVID-19 (Washington, DC: 2021).
66   C. Schneiderheinze and M. Lücke, “Socio-economic Impacts of 9   J. Sacko and I. Mayaki, “How the Russia-Ukraine Conflict Impacts
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130  Notes
Could Disruptions to Eastern European Wheat Spur Displacement in 27   I.S. Fall, S. Rajatonirina, A.A. Yahaya, et al., “Integrated Disease
Africa?, ICMPD blogpost, International Centre for Migration Policy Surveillance and Response (IDSR) Strategy: Current Status, Challenges
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10   ACLED, ACLED data dashboard, accessed December 6, 2022. (2019): e001427; C.M. Wolfe, E.L. Hamblion, E.K. Dzotsi, et al.,
https://acleddata.com/dashboard “Systematic Review of Integrated Disease Surveillance and Response
(IDSR) Implementation in the African Region,” PLoS ONE 16, 2
11   FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations), IFAD
(2021): e0245457.
(International Fund for Agricultural Development), UNICEF, WFP (World
Food Programme), and WHO (World Health Organization), The State 28   CGIAR Research Program on Policies, Institutions, and Markets (PIM),
of Food Security and Nutrition in the World 2022: Repurposing Food Understanding Characteristics, Causes, and Consequences of Migration:
and Agricultural Policies to Make Healthy Diets More Affordable (Rome: Contributions from the CGIAR Research Program on Policies, Institutions,
FAO, 2022). and Markets, PIM Synthesis Brief (Washington, DC: IFPRI, 2021).

12   FAO, “New FAO Data Highlights Gender Gap in Food Insecurity across 29   D. Hilhorst, “Classical Humanitarianism and Resilience Humanitarianism:
Regions,” Sept. 25, 2017. Making Sense of Two Brands of Humanitarian Action,” Journal of
International Humanitarian Action 3, 15 (2018).
13   Oxfam, The Cost of Hunger (Johannesburg: 2014).
30   WFP, Annual Achievements 2021 (Dakar: WFP, Regional Bureau for
14   A.B. Kabia, “Women in Sierra Leone’s Labour Market,” China Daily, Feb.
9, 2016. Western Africa, 2022); WFP, Food Assistance for Assets (FFA) for Zero
Hunger and Resilient Livelihoods: A Programme Guidance Manual
15   D. Casale and D. Shepherd, “The Gendered Effects of the
(Rome: WFP Policy and Programme Division, 2016).
Covid-19 Crisis in South Africa: Evidence from NIDS-CRAM Waves
1–5,” Development Southern Africa (2022): 1–20. 31   S.S. Patel, M.B. Rogers, R. Amlôt, and G.J. Rubin, “What Do We Mean
by ‘Community Resilience’? A Systematic Literature Review of How It Is
16   IRC (International Rescue Committee), “Women and Girls in DRC Facing
Defined in the Literature,” PLOS Currents 9 (Feb. 1, 2017); M.A. Constas,
an Increased Risk of Violence and Higher Exposure to Ebola since the
L. Mattioli, and L. Russo, “What Does Resilience Imply for Development
Start of the Outbreak,” press release, March 2019.
Practice? Tools for More Coherent Programming and Evaluation of
17   C. Wenham, J. Smith, S.E. Davies, et al., “Women Are Most Affected Resilience,” Development Policy Review 39 (2021): 588–603; FAO,
by Pandemics: Lessons from Past Outbreaks,” comment, Nature RIMA-II: Resilience Index Measurement and Analysis II (Rome: 2016).
(July 8, 2020).
32   M. Fitzpatrick, K. Spears, J. Ryan, S. Polzin, G. Gottlieb, and D. Maxwell,
18   M. Altman, T. Hart, and P. Jacobs, Food Security in South Africa (Pretoria: Making the Nexus Real: Moving from Theory to Practice (Boston:
Human Sciences Research Council, 2009). Feinstein International Center, Tufts University, 2021); P. Howe, “The
19   T. Bundervoet, P. Verwimp, and R. Akresh, “Health and Civil War in Rural Triple Nexus: A Potential Approach to Supporting the Achievement
Burundi,” Journal of Human Resources 44, 2 (2009): 536–563. of the Sustainable Development Goals?” World Development 124

20   C. Minoiu and O.N. Shemyakina, “Armed Conflict, Household (2019): 104629; OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation
Victimization, and Child Health in Côte d’Ivoire,” Journal of and Development), DAC Recommendation on the Humanitarian-
Development Economics 108 (2014): 237–255. Development-Peace Nexus, OECD Legal Instruments 5019 (Paris: 2020).

21   R. Akresh, L. Lucchetti, and H. Thirumurthy, “Wars and Child Health: 33   M. Fitzpatrick, K. Spears, J. Ryan, S. Polzin, G. Gottlieb, and D. Maxwell,
Evidence from the Eritrean-Ethiopian Conflict,” Journal of Development Making the Nexus Real: Moving from Theory to Practice (Boston:
Economics 99, 2 (2012): 330–340. Feinstein International Center, Tufts University, 2021). See also South
Sudan Partnership for Resilience, www.southsudanpfrr.org.
22   G. Dunn, “The Impact of the Boko Haram Insurgency in Northeast
Nigeria on Childhood Wasting: A Double-Difference Study,” Conflict 34   See Fighting Food Crises along the Humanitarian-Development-Peace
and Health 12, 1 (2012): 1–12; E. Howell, T. Waidmann, N. Holla, N. Nexus Coalition, https://www.fightfoodcrises.net/hdp-coalition.
Birdsall, and K. Jiang, “The Impact of Civil Conflict on Child Malnutrition 35   M. Fitzpatrick, K. Spears, J. Ryan, S. Polzin, G. Gottlieb, and D. Maxwell,
and Mortality, Nigeria, 2002–2013,” CGD Working Paper No. 494, Center Making the Nexus Real: Moving from Theory to Practice (Boston:
for Global Development, Washington, DC, 2018. Feinstein International Center, Tufts University, 2021); P. Howe, “The
23   R. Akresh, P. Verwimp, and T. Bundervoet, “Civil War, Crop Failure, and Triple Nexus: A Potential Approach to Supporting the Achievement of
Child Stunting in Rwanda,” Economic Development and Cultural Change the Sustainable Development Goals?” World Development 124 (2019):
59, 4 (2011): 777–810. 104629; UNOCHA (UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
24   D.K. Kinyoki, G.M. Moloney, O.A. Uthman, N.B. Kandala, E.O. Odundo, Affairs), Sahel Crisis: Humanitarian Needs and Requirements Overview
A.M. Noor, and J.A. Berkley, “Conflict in Somalia: Impact on Child (2022).
Undernutrition,” BMJ Global Health 2, 2 (2017): e000262. 36   Globally, the share of official development assistance (ODA) allocated
25   D. Backer and T. Billing, “Validating Famine Early Warning Systems for humanitarian assistance increased from less than 5 percent in the
Network Projections of Food Security in Africa, 2009–2020,” Global 1990s to about 23 percent in 2019. By 2019, 43 countries had experi-
Food Security 29 (2021): 100510; P.K. Krishnamurthy, R.J. Choularton, enced periods of high humanitarian assistance lasting longer than 10
and P. Kareiva, “Dealing with Uncertainty in Famine Predictions: How years, with an increasing incidence in the past two decades. Of these
Complex Events Affect Food Security Early Warning Skill in the Greater 43 countries, 15 are in Africa (G. Milante and J. Lylja, Chronic Crisis
Horn of Africa,” Global Food Security 26 (2020): 100374; D. Maxwell, Financing? Fifty Years of Humanitarian Aid and Future Prospects, SIPRI
Famine Early Warning and Information Systems in Conflict Settings: Insights on Peace and Security No. 22/5, April 2022).
Challenges for Humanitarian Metrics and Response (Boston: Feinstein 37   The financing gap (investment-to-GDP ratio) between 2015 and 2030
International Center, Tufts University, 2019). to end extreme poverty by 2030, for example, is estimated to be about
26   See Africa CDC (Centres for Disease Control and Prevention), 66 percent per year (A. Kedir, A. Elhiraika, Z. Chinzara, and D. Sandjong,
https://africacdc.org “Growth and Development Finance Required for Achieving Sustainable

Notes  131
Development Goals (SDGs) in Africa,” African Development Review 29, 9   K.A. Abay, C. Breisinger, J. Glauber, S. Kurdi, D. Laborde, and K. Siddig,
S1 (2017): 15–26). “The Russia-Ukraine Crisis: Implications for Global and Regional Food
Security and Potential Policy Responses,” Global Food Security 36
38   FAO, IFAD, UNICEF, WFP and WHO, The State of Food Security and
(2023): 10675.
Nutrition in the World 2022: Repurposing Food and Agricultural Policies
to Make Healthy Diets More Affordable (Rome: FAO, 2022). 10   S. Kurdi, “The Nutritional Benefits of Cash Transfers in Humanitarian
Crises: Evidence from Yemen,” World Development 148 (2021): 105664.

11   K.A. Abay, N. Yonzan, S. Kurdi, and K. Tafere, “Revisiting Poverty Trends
BOX 1
and the Role of Social Protection Systems in Africa during the COVID-19
1   See Great Green Wall, www.greatgreenwall.org Pandemic (English),” Policy Research Working Paper No. WPS10172,
World Bank, Washington, DC, 2022.
2   D. Goffner, H. Sinare, and L.J. Gordon, “The Great Green Wall for the
Sahara and the Sahel Initiative as an Opportunity to Enhance Resilience 12   F. Belhaj, R. Gatti, D. Lederman, E.J. Sergenti, H. Assem, R. Lotfi,
in Sahelian Landscapes and Livelihoods,” Regional Environmental and M.E. Mousa, A New State of Mind: Greater Transparency and
Change 19 (2019): 1417–1428; WFP (World Food Programme), Greening Accountability in the Middle East and North Africa (Washington, DC:
World Bank, 2022).
the Sahel: How WFP’s Integrated Resilience Programme Generates
Climate Solutions at Scale (Rome: 2022). 13   U. Gentilini, M.B.A. Almenfi, G. Valleriani, Y. Okamura, E.R. Urteaga,
and S. Aziz, “Tracking Global Social Protection Responses to Inflation,”
3   M.D. Turner, T. Carney, L. Lawler, J. Reynolds, L. Kelly, M.S. Teague, and
Living Paper No. 178842, version 4, World Bank, Washington, DC, 2022.
L. Brottem, “Environmental Rehabilitation and the Vulnerability of the
Poor: The Case of the Great Green Wall,” Land Use Policy 111 (2021): 14   C. Krafft, R. Assaad, and M.A. Marouani, “The Impact of COVID-19 on
105750; A. Mirzabaev, M. Sacande, F. Motlagh, A. Shyrokaya, and A. Middle Eastern and North African Labor Markets,” ERF Policy Brief 57,
Martucci, “Economic Efficiency and Targeting of the African Great Economic Research Forum, Giza, Egypt, 2021.
Green Wall,” Nature Sustainability 5 (2022): 17–25. 15   N.D. Perez, Y. Kassim, C. Ringler, T.S. Thomas, H. ElDidi, and C.
4   M.D. Turner, T. Carney, L. Lawler, J. Reynolds, L. Kelly, M.S. Teague, Breisinger, Climate-Resilience Policies and Investments for Egypt’s
and L. Brottem, “Environmental Rehabilitation and the Vulnerability Agriculture Sector: Sustaining Productivity and Food Security, Food
Policy Report (Washington, DC: IFPRI, 2021).
of the Poor: The Case of the Great Green Wall,” Land Use Policy 111
(2021): 105750.

5   A. Mirzabaev, M. Sacande, F. Motlagh, A. Shyrokaya, and A. Martucci, CENTRAL ASIA


“Economic Efficiency and Targeting of the African Great Green Wall,”
1   IMF (International Monetary Fund), Regional Economic Outlook:
Nature Sustainability 5 (2022): 17–25.
Middle East and Central Asia: Mounting Challenges, Decisive Times
(Washington, DC: 2022).
MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA 2   National Statistical Committee of the Kyrgyz Republic, Poverty Rate in
the Kyrgyz Republic (Bishkek: 2022).
1   World Bank, Beyond Scarcity: Water Security in the Middle East and
North Africa, MENA Development Report (Washington, DC: 2018). 3   World Bank, Europe and Central Asia Economic Update, Spring 2022:
War in the Region (Washington, DC: 2022).
2   K.A. Abay, C. Breisinger, J. Glauber, S. Kurdi, D. Laborde, and K. Siddig,
“The Russia-Ukraine Crisis: Implications for Global and Regional Food 4   IMF, Regional Economic Outlook: Middle East and Central Asia:
Security and Potential Policy Responses,” Global Food Security 36 Mounting Challenges, Decisive Times (Washington, DC: 2022).

(2023): 10675. 5   Central Bank of Uzbekistan, Monetary Policy Survey, Quarter IV, 2022, in
Uzbek (2023).
3   Ibid.
6   Agency for Strategic Panning and Reforms of the Republic of
4   D. Laborde and A. Mamun, “Documentation for Food and Fertilizers
Kazakhstan, Bureau of National Statistics, accessed Feb. 22, 2023.
Export Restriction Tracker: Tracking Export Policy Responses Affecting
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Global Food Markets during Crisis,” Food and Fertilizer Trade Policy
Working Paper 2, IFPRI, Washington, DC, 2022. 7   National Statistical Committee of the Kyrgyz Republic, Consumer Price
Index in the Kyrgyz Republic, database.
5   F. Belhaj, R. Gatti, D. Lederman, E.J. Sergenti, H. Assem, R. Lotfi,
and M.E. Mousa, A New State of Mind: Greater Transparency and 8   FAO/GIEWS (Food and Agriculture Organization, Global Information
Accountability in the Middle East and North Africa (Washington, DC: and Early Warning System), Tajikistan Country Brief, Jan. 3, 2023.
World Bank, 2022). 9   S. Sattar, Addressing the Gender Gap in Europe and Central Asia, World
Bank Knowledge Brief 71408 (Washington, DC: World Bank, 2012); T.
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Khitarishvili, “Gender Inequalities in Labour Markets in Central Asia,”
Ukraine and Global Crises on Poverty and Food Security,” Global Crisis
UNDP/ILO conference on Employment, Trade and Human Development
Country Series Brief 18 (Washington, DC: IFPRI, 2022).
in Central Asia; D. Abdurazzakova, K. Kosec, and Z. Parpiev, “Women’s
7   J. Glauber and D. Laborde, “How Sanctions on Russia and Belarus Are Involvement in Intra-household Decision-Making and Infant and Young
Impacting Exports of Agricultural Products and Fertilizer,” IFPRI Blog: Child’s Feeding Practices in Central Asia,” IFPRI Discussion Paper 2058,
Issue Post, November 9, 2022. IFPRI, Washington, DC, 2022.
8   D.D. Headey and H.H. Alderman, “The Relative Caloric Prices of Healthy 10   Household, institutional, and societal gender inequalities refer to gen-
and Unhealthy Foods Differ Systematically across Income Levels and der gaps in the following domains: time use and divisions of labor,
Continents,” Journal of Nutrition 149, 11 (2019): 2020–2033; K. Hirvonen, access and control over resources, intrahousehold decision-making,
Y. Bai, D. Headey, W.A. Masters, “Affordability of the EAT–Lancet Reference participation in public life and access to public services, institutional
Diet: A Global Analysis,” Lancet Global Health 8, 1 (2019): E59–E66. mechanisms for women’s empowerment, and human development.

132  Notes
UNICEF, Gender Counts–Central Asia: A Quantitative Assessment of 11   Pakistan, Ministry of Planning Development, and Special Initiatives,
Gender Inequality and Its Impact on Boys and Girls (2022). Pakistan Floods 2022: Post-Disaster Needs Assessment (Government of
Pakistan, Asian Development Bank, European Union, UNDP and World
11   WFP (World Food Programme), Climate Risks and Food Security in
Bank, 2022).
Tajikistan: A Review of Evidence and Priorities for Adaptation (2017).
12   D.P. Singh, A. Mishra, and P. Shaw, “Taking Cognisance of Households’
12   World Bank, Worldwide Governance Indicators, accessed Jan. 2023.
Inflation Expectations in India,” Reserve Bank of India Working Paper
13   C. Jarvis, G. Pierre, B. Baduel, D. Fayad, A. de Keyserling, B. Sarr, and 2, 2022; A. Dilip and S. Kundu, “Climate Change: Macroeconomic
M. Sumliński, Economic Governance Reforms to Support Inclusive Impact and Policy Options for Mitigating Risks,” RBI Bulletin 125 (2020):
Growth in the Middle East, North Africa, and Central Asia, IMF Middle 105–125.
East and Central Asia Department Policy Paper No. 21/01 (Washington,
13   World Bank, Bangladesh Country Climate and Development Report
DC: 2021); World Bank, Worldwide Governance Indicators, accessed
(Washington, DC: 2022).
Jan. 2023.
14   Indian Tsunami Early Warning System, https://tsunami.incois.gov.in/
14   IMF, Fiscal Monitor: Curbing Corruption (Washington, DC: April 2019).
TEWS/searlywarnings.jsp
15   K. Akramov, K. Kosec, and L. Carrillo, “Covid-19, Rural Poverty, and
15   C. Del Ninno, P.A. Dorosh, and L.C. Smith, “Public Policy, Markets, and
Women’s Role in Decision-Making: Evidence from Khatlon Province in
Household Coping Strategies in Bangladesh: Avoiding a Food Security
Tajikistan,” OSF Preprints, available online December 30, 2021.
Crisis Following the 1998 Floods,” World Development 31, 7 (2003):
16   There were widespread reports on social media and daily electronic 1221–1238.
news outlets about the misallocation of public resources and corruption
16   World Bank, “The World Bank in Afghanistan,” accessed Feb. 2023.
during the COVID-19 pandemic in the region.

17   WFP, Food Security Monitoring Update in the Kyrgyz Republic (Rome:
Dec. 2022).
EAST AND SOUTHEAST ASIA
18   OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development), 1   ADB (Asian Development Bank), Asian Development Outlook 2022
COVID-19 Crisis Response in Central Asia, Policy Note (Paris: 2020). Supplement: Recovery Faces Diverse Challenges (Manila: 2022).

19   E. Maltseva, Kazakhstan’s Social Policy Response to Covid-19: 2   M. Chepeliev, M. Maliszewska, I. Osorio-Rodarte, M.F. Seara, E Pereira,
Developmentalism and Productive Welfare, CRC 1342/No.20 Covid-19 and D. Van Der Mensbrugghe, “Pandemic, Climate Mitigation, and
Social Policy Response Series (Bremen: Global Dynamics of Social Reshoring: Impacts of a Changing Global Economy on Trade, Incomes,
Policy, 2021). and Poverty,” Policy Research Working Paper No. 9955, World Bank,
Washington, DC, 2022; UNECE (United Nations Economic Commission
20   World Bank, Europe and Central Asia Economic Update, Fall 2022: Social
for Europe), “Water-Food-Energy-Ecosystem Nexus,” accessed
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December 29, 2022.

3   UN (United Nations), “Transforming Our World: The 2030 Agenda for
SOUTH ASIA Sustainable Development,” https://sdgs.un.org/2030agenda

1   M.O. Nule and Z.L. Xie, “The Road Toward Economic Recovery in South 4   WFP (World Food Programme), “Hungermap: Asia and the Pacific
Asia,” World Bank Blog, Feb. 27, 2023; World Bank, Poverty and Shared Insights and Key Trends” (Rome: 2022).
Prosperity 2022: Correcting Course (Washington, DC: 2022). 5   FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations), The
2   World Bank, Global Economic Prospects 2023, January (Washington, State of Agricultural Commodity Markets 2022. The Geography of Food
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3   B. Rother, S. Sosa, D. Kim, et al. “Tackling the Global Food Crisis:
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Impact, Policy Response, and the Role of the IMF,” IMF Notes 2022/0004
WFP, and WHO (World Health Organization), The State of Food Security
(Washington, DC: International Monetary Fund, 2022).
and Nutrition in the World 2022: Repurposing Food and Agricultural
4   The World Bank estimates 6.9 percent growth for 2022/23 and 6.6 per- Policies to Make Healthy Diets More Affordable (Rome: FAO, 2022).
cent for 2023/24; the Asian Development Bank estimates 7.0 percent
7   Development Initiatives, 2021 Global Nutrition Report: The State of
and 7.2 percent for those periods..
Global Nutrition (Bristol: 2021).
5   The policy rate reached 2.25 percent between May and December 2022
8   A. Elbehri, T. Temel, F. Burcu Ceylan, S. Mittal, D. Kularatne, and D.
(Reserve Bank of India, Consumer Price Index—Annual average).
Dawe, COVID-19 Pandemic Impacts on Asia and the Pacific: A Regional
6   J. Alam, “Inflation, Unrest Challenge Bangladesh’s ‘Miracle Economy’,” Review of Socioeconomic, Agrifood and Nutrition Impacts and Policy
AP News, Sept. 23, 2022. Responses (Bangkok: FAO, 2022).
7   U. Jamal, “Pakistan’s New Budget Aims to Please the IMF,” The Diplomat, 9   ADB, Southeast Asia Rising from the Pandemic (Manila: 2022).
June 15, 2022.
10   World Bank, Global Economic Prospects, June 2022 (Washington,
8   World Bank, Pakistan Development Update: Inflation and the Poor DC: 2022).
(Washington, DC: 2022).
11   J-P. Duvieusart, “Emerging Asia Faces a Post-Covid Inequality Trap:
9   G.T. Hasnat, M.A. Kabir, and M.A. Hossain, “Major Environmental Issues Here’s How to Avoid It,” World Economic Forum, May 25, 2022; UNDP
and Problems of South Asia, Particularly Bangladesh,” in Handbook of (United Nations Development Progamme), Reducing Inequality in the
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10   World Bank, GFDRR Annual Report 2022: Bringing Resilience to Scale Recovery (Bangkok: UNDP Bangkok Regional Hub, 2022).

(Washington, DC: 2023). 12   ADB, Implementing a Green Recovery in Southeast Asia (Manila: 2022).

Notes  133
13   UN Thailand, “Thailand Economic Focus: Financial Stimulus Packages to 7   World Bank, The Gendered Impacts of COVID-19 on Labor Markets
Combat COVID-19 and Achieve SDGs,” press release, June 8, 2020. in Latin America and the Caribbean, Gender Innovation Lab for Latin
America and the Caribbean (LACGIL) Policy Brief (Washington,
14   A. Elbehri, T. Temel, F. Burcu Ceylan, S. Mittal, D. Kularatne, and D.
DC: 2021).
Dawe, COVID-19 Pandemic Impacts on Asia and the Pacific: A Regional
Review of Socioeconomic, Agrifood and Nutrition Impacts and Policy 8   Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), International Fund for
Responses (Bangkok: FAO, 2022). Agricultural Development (IFAD), UNICEF, World Food Programme
(WFP), and World Health Organization (WHO), The State of Food
15   M. Basyir, “2023 Budget: Rm1 Billion Parked under Bank Negara
Security and Nutrition in the World 2022. Repurposing Food and
Malaysia’s Agrofood Financing Scheme,” New Straits Times, Oct.
Agricultural Policies to Make Healthy Diets More Affordable (Rome:
7, 2022.
FAO, 2022).
16   D. Eckstein, V. Künzel, and L. Schäfer, Global Climate Risk Index 2021
9   For a discussion of policy options for Haiti, see E. Díaz-Bonilla, “Haiti and
(Bonn: Germanwatch, 2021).
its Multiple Tragedies: Much More Needs to Be Done,” LAC Working
17   Fitch Ratings, “China’s Drought Unlikely to Unsettle Global Rice Paper 26, IFPRI, Washington, DC, 2022.
Markets,” Fitch Ratings, Sept. 7, 2022.
10   IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change), Climate Change
18   IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change), Climate Change 2021: The Physical Science Basis, eds. V. Masson-Delmotte, P. Zhai, A.
2022: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability. Contribution of Working Pirani, et al. (Cambridge, UK, and New York: Cambridge University
Group II to the Sixth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel Press, 2021).
on Climate Change (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2022).
11   E. Díaz-Bonilla, “Fiscal and Monetary Responses to the COVID-19
19   S. Menegat, A. Ledo, and R. Tirado, “Greenhouse Gas Emissions Pandemic: Some Thoughts for Developing Countries and the
from Global Production and Use of Nitrogen Synthetic Fertilisers in International Community,” in COVID-19 and Global Food Security,
Agriculture,” Scientific Reports 12 (2022): 14490. eds. J. Swinnen and J. McDermott, Ch. 22, 98–101 (Washington, DC:
20   OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development), IFPRI, 2020).
Agricultural Policy Monitoring and Evaluation 2022 (Paris: 2022). 12   E. Díaz-Bonilla, Financing SGD2 and Ending Hunger, Food Systems
21   Global Index Insurance Facility, “China Weather Index-Based Insurance Summit Brief (Bonn: UN Food Systems Summit, 2021); E. Díaz-Bonilla,
Project (China WII),” (Beijing: World Bank Group, 2021). “Using the New IMF Special Drawing Rights for Larger Purposes:
Guaranteeing ‘Pandemic Recovery Bonds,’” IFPRI Blog, October 22,
22   W. J. Barbon, B. Punzalan, R. Wassmann, et al., “Scaling of Climate-
2021; J. von Braun and E. Díaz-Bonilla, “Letter: Perpetual Bonds Can
Smart Agriculture Via Climate-Smart Villages in Southeast Asia: Insights
Help States Fight Hunger,” Financial Times, June 6, 2021.
and Lessons from Vietnam, Laos, Philippines, Cambodia and Myanmar,”
Working Paper No. 376, CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, 13   J. von Braun and E. Díaz-Bonilla, “Letter: Perpetual Bonds Can Help
Wageningen, Netherlands, 2021. States Fight Hunger,” Financial Times, June 6, 2021.

23   K. Jones and F. Nti, Impacts and Repercussions of Price Increases on 14   G20 High Level Independent Panel, A Global Deal for Our Pandemic
the Global Fertilizer Market. (Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Age, (Financing the Global Commons for Pandemic Preparedness and
Agriculture, 2022). Response, 2021).

24   N. Childs and B. Lebeau, Rice Outlook: October 2022 (Washington, DC: 15   C. Andrews, A. de Montesquiou, I. Arévalo Sánchez, et al., The State of
U.S. Department of Agriculture Economic Research Service, 2022). Economic Inclusion Report 2021: The Potential to Scale (Washington,
DC: World Bank, 2021).
25   World Bank, Reforms for Recovery. World Bank East Asia and Pacific
Economic Update (October) (Washington, DC: 2022).

26   Oxford Economics, The Economic Impact of the Agri-Food Sector in


Southeast Asia (Oxford: 2022).

27   ADB, Implementing a Green Recovery in Southeast Asia (Manila: 2022).

LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN


1   E. Díaz-Bonilla, “Democracy and Commodity Cycles in Latin America
and the Caribbean,” IFPRI Blog, Nov. 25, 2019.

2   Economist Intelligence Unit, Democracy Index 2021: The China


Challenge (London: 2022).

3   E. Díaz-Bonilla and M. Centurion, “Fiscal and Monetary Responses to


the COVID-19 Pandemic: Current Conditions and Future Scenarios
in Developing Countries,” in COVID-19 and Global Food Security:
Two Years Later, eds. J. McDermott and J. Swinnen, Ch. 27, 162–171
(Washington, DC: IFPRI, 2022).

4   E. Díaz-Bonilla and V. Piñeiro, “Latin America and the Caribbean,”


in 2021 Global Food Policy Report: Transforming Food Systems
after COVID-19, Regional Developments, 74–105 (Washington, DC:
IFPRI, 2021).

5   World Bank, World Development Indicators, 2022.

6   Ibid.

134  Notes
2023 GLOBAL
FOOD POLICY REPORT
RETHINKING FOOD CRISIS
RESPONSES
RECENT SHOCKS TO GLOBAL AND NATIONAL FOOD SYSTEMS — INCLUDING CONFLICT, DISEASE, AND CLIMATE-
RELATED DISASTERS — HAVE HIGHLIGHTED THE PRESSING NEED FOR MORE PERMANENT AND EFFECTIVE RESPONSES
TO WIDE-REACHING, OFTEN PROTRACTED FOOD CRISES. The 2023 Global Food Policy Report looks at the continuum of
interventions to address crises, from early warning systems and anticipatory action to policies that increase the resilience
of vulnerable populations and agrifood value chains over time. The report emphasizes a set of policy options that can
improve our immediate response to crises and shift the longer-term approach toward building food system resilience to
ensure food security for all. IFPRI researchers and colleagues address the central challenges to strengthening our responses
to food crises:

■ How can the world respond effectively to more ■ How can social safety nets that provide in-kind and
frequent and damaging shocks and crises in our cash transfers be made “shock-responsive” to support
food systems, from natural disasters to conflict more immediate and widespread coverage of at-risk
to pandemics? populations when there is a food crisis?

■ How can early warning systems provide more ■ How can we ensure that crisis responses address
timely and actionable alerts for policymakers and the outsized risks faced by women and girls,
food system actors, and how can they contribute to especially in conflict-affected settings, and help to
preventive and early action when a crisis is forecast? reduce inequalities?

■ What forms of humanitarian aid and anticipatory ■ Can policy adjustments reduce the challenges of
action can reduce the impact of crises and promote forced migration and contribute to longer-term
longer-term resilience, including in fragile and benefits and resilience for migrants and for the
conflict-affected places? sending and hosting communities?

■ What characteristics of agrifood value chains and ■ What threats pose the greatest risk of food crises
supportive policies can make them more resilient in Asia, Africa, and Latin America, and what policy
and adaptable amid disruptions that threaten options are most promising for reducing the impact of
food supplies? future crises?

For more information about the 2023 Global Food Policy Report: gfpr.ifpri.info

INTERNATIONAL FOOD POLICY RESEARCH INSTITUTE


A world free of hunger and malnutrition

IFPRI is a CGIAR Research Center


1201 Eye Street, NW | Washington, DC 20005 USA
T. +1-202-862-5600 | F. +1-202-862-5606 | [email protected]

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