Policy Approaches to Undernutrition - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 24
About This Presentation
Title:

Policy Approaches to Undernutrition

Description:

Nutrition for every man, woman, and child? Food without pesticide residue? No pollution? ... var/news/storage/images/galleries/world_poverty_map/2452-1-eng-GB ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:19
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 25
Provided by: clark4
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Policy Approaches to Undernutrition


1
Policy Approaches to Undernutrition
  • Text extracted from
  • The World Food Problem
  • Leathers and Foster, 2004

http//www.lastfirst.net/images/product/R004548.jp
g
2
Ethics Pope John Paul II
  • Contrasts between poverty and wealth are
    intolerable for humanity
  • It is the task of nations, their leaders, their
    economic powers and all people of goodwill
  • to seek every opportunity for a more equitable
    sharing of resources
  • Example of Beneficence
  • Personal moral duty to help the poor

http//schoolnet.gov.mt/liceovassalli/mav/MAV20Zo
nes/Students/Essays/Pope20John20Paul20II.jpg
3
Ethics Right to Food?
  • Right to Food
  • Included in International Covenant on Economic,
    Social and Cultural Rights
  • Adopted by UN
  • Signed by 85 countries
  • Now must address hunger issue
  • to protect fundamental rights of society
  • Dont need to feel personal moral duty to help
    the poor

United Nations
http//orrinwoodward.blogharbor.com/United20Natio
ns20Assembly.jpg
4
Ethics Right to Food?
  • Rights taken very seriously
  • Absolute entitlement
  • Non-negotiable
  • Would require government to act to prevent hunger
  • Conflict with property rights?

Feeding orphans, Yemen
http//www.yobserver.com/uploads/1/orphans5.jpg
5
Economists Questions
  • What is the appropriate policy for society as a
    whole?
  • How can government best manipulate human greed to
    achieve its policy objectives?

http//neweconomist.blogs.com/photos/uncategorized
/20061110_inside_the_economists_mind_cove.gif
6
How to Move Society Forward
Government
Manipulate self-interest to achieve policy goals
Ideology
Economy
Self-interest
Capitalism
7
Economics Policy Decisions
  • Every action has costs and benefits
  • Marginal costs and benefits
  • For 1 increase in cost, what is the increase in
    benefits?
  • Ideal decision where marginal costs marginal
    benefits
  • Free market will allocate resources optimally,
    but
  • Without concern for
  • Social costs
  • Environmental costs
  • Can everything be put in dollar terms?

Three Gorges Dam, China
http//www.thelightisgreen.com/China20Three20Gor
ges20Dam2001.jpg
8
Externalities
  • Costs and benefits sometimes go to people outside
    the market transaction
  • Should wealthy benefit from costs borne
  • By the poor?
  • Exploitation externality
  • By the environment?
  • Exploitation externality
  • To feed hungry has indirect benefit to wealthy
  • We feel better externality
  • No market for this

http//wheresmyamerica.files.wordpress.com/2007/08
/smoke-stack1.jpg
9
Every action has costs and benefits
  • How much would you pay for
  • A human life?
  • Speed limit 10 MPH?
  • Nutrition for every man, woman, and child?
  • Food without pesticide residue?
  • No pollution?
  • Freedom?
  • Fair trade?

http//www.superkidsnutrition.com/app_themes/sba_n
utrition/images/NA_ProtectSelfFromPesticides.jpg
10
Harnessing greed in policy
  • Economic incentives
  • Can make it more expensive
  • To have children
  • To degrade the environment
  • Need property rights
  • Production increases with reward
  • If we eat less
  • other countries wont benefit
  • Farmers will produce less
  • As demand increases
  • efficiency increases
  • Products made available more cheaply
  • Alternatives found

http//sheepwaker.tripod.com/greed.jpg
11
Policy to reduce undernutrition?
  • 250 Calories/day would erase Calorie deficit of
    hungry
  • Cost 35 cents/day/person
  • 6,400 invested at 2 interest
  • Value of Human Life?
  • For 800 million people, this policy would
  • Increase food prices
  • Increase environmental costs of food production

http//www.pbs.org/newshour/images/africa/july-dec
07/1126_somalia_bhead2.jpg
12
Policies to raise incomes of poor
  • Redistribute income from rich to poor
  • Rationale declining marginal utility of income
  • Rich dont benefit from a dollar spent as much as
    poor do
  • But should incomes be equalized?
  • Improve rate of economic growth
  • Is Globalization beneficial to developing nations?

http//www.alliance2015.org/var/news/storage/image
s/galleries/world_poverty_map/2452-1-eng-GB/world_
poverty_map.jpg
13
Policies to reduce price of food
  • Population reduction
  • Demand will rise slower
  • Food prices will rise slower
  • Increasing supply
  • Research investment
  • Loans to farmers

http//farm3.static.flickr.com/2300/2198720003_b56
c80b97c_o.jpg
14
Policies to reduce cost of food
  • Price supports
  • Sell food to consumers
  • Subsidies to farmers
  • Both reduce economic efficiency
  • Therefore distortionary
  • Corrective price policies
  • Example correcting distortions that reduce food
    output

15
Aid Policies
  • Aid can help
  • If targeted to poor
  • Example School feeding
  • In emergencies
  • Aid can hurt
  • If wealthy elites profit from it
  • makes the problem worse
  • Often designed to further our national and trade
    interests
  • Directed mainly at political allies
  • not hungry nations

http//www.bread.org/assets/images/learn/food-aid.
jpg
16
http//static.flickr.com/51/189662626_257b15004f_o
.jpg
17
Aid Policies
  • Have been used as a lever
  • to impose structural adjustment on foreign
    trade policies
  • If foreign countries do not open up markets
  • or reduce subsidies as directed by U.S.
  • Aid may stop
  • Designed to create new markets
  • foster dependence on U.S. grain
  • Korea

http//ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/5111439M5NL.
_SL500_AA240_.jpg
18
Aid Policies
  • When aid is given as free grain
  • undermines prices for farmers
  • driving them out of business
  • Military aid can lead to armed conflicts
  • that generate hungry people
  • Well-off divert aid to help themselves
  • further widening gap between haves and have-nots

http//www.wfp.org/img/newsroom/afghanistan/310/ds
cn0678.jpg
19
U.S.Agency for International Development (USAID)
  • Started with Marshall Plan after WWII
  • Principal U.S. foreign aid agency to help
    countries
  • Recover from disaster
  • Escape poverty
  • Democratic reforms
  • Partnership with
  • 3,500 U.S. businesses
  • 3,000 Organizations
  • 8.8 Billion

USAID in Uganda
20
U.S. Foreign Aid
  • U.S. gave 28 billion (2007)
  • Largest Donor in world
  • Less generous based on capacity to give (GNP)
  • lt 0.22 Federal Budget
  • Majority think U.S. Aid is 20X more

http//news.bbc.co.uk/nol/shared/spl/hi/pop_ups/05
/business_aid_and_development/img/1.jpg
21
U.S. Foreign Aid Budget
http//farm3.static.flickr.com/2389/2429946098_2f2
4950561.jpg
22
U.S. Generosity
  • 2007 Government Aid
  • 28 billion
  • 2007 Private giving
  • 93 billion
  • 61 billion private payments to family members
  • 2007 Private Lending, Investment
  • 69 billion

http//photos.state.gov/libraries/usinfo-photo/39/
week_4_0507/052507-AidChart_en_200.jpg
23
Third World Debt
  • Forgiving third-world debt
  • would help countries become self-sufficient
  • Honduras annual debt payments
  • exceed amount spent on health and education
    combined
  • Total debt payments
  • greater than foreign aid and foreign investment
    combined

http//bloodbankers.typepad.com/submerging_markets
/chart_intro.1.20Growth20of20the20Debt.jpg
24
http//www1.worldbank.org/devoutreach/spring01/ima
ges7/hipc_map_7.gif
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com