Title: Policy Approaches to Undernutrition
1Policy Approaches to Undernutrition
- Text extracted from
- The World Food Problem
- Leathers and Foster, 2004
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2Ethics 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
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3Ethics 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
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4Ethics 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
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5Economists Questions
- What is the appropriate policy for society as a
whole? - How can government best manipulate human greed to
achieve its policy objectives?
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6How to Move Society Forward
Government
Manipulate self-interest to achieve policy goals
Ideology
Economy
Self-interest
Capitalism
7Economics 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
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ges20Dam2001.jpg
8Externalities
- 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
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9Every 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?
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utrition/images/NA_ProtectSelfFromPesticides.jpg
10Harnessing 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
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11Policy 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
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12Policies 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?
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13Policies to reduce price of food
- Population reduction
- Demand will rise slower
- Food prices will rise slower
- Increasing supply
- Research investment
- Loans to farmers
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14Policies 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
15Aid 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
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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
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18Aid 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
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19U.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
20U.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
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21U.S. Foreign Aid Budget
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22U.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
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week_4_0507/052507-AidChart_en_200.jpg
23Third 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
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