What we're doing to help end global hunger

People and children sitting together in South Sudan
October 11, 2018

Food is central to human well-being: it provides the body with nourishment, offers livelihoods that lift people out of poverty, and brings communities together. Although food is a basic human need, too many people are trapped in a cycle of hunger by forces beyond their immediate control, like poverty, disaster, conflict and inequality.

Despite decades of progress in reducing world hunger, 2017 saw increases in the number of people who are hungry. More than 820 million people still go to bed hungry every night — that’s one in every nine people who don’t have the food they need to live a healthy, productive life.

The World Health Organization considers this to be the single greatest threat to global health. Hunger is cyclical and generational: it inhibits people’s ability to work and learn to their fullest potential, which can curb their future and trap them and their families in more poverty — and more hunger.

The cycle of hunger

Mercy Corps takes a multi-pronged approach to helping end world hunger, including implementing programmes that tackle the multiple drivers of food security, while also engaging in policy discussions that influence our programmes. Learn about this work and what is being done to stop world hunger below.

Global hunger today

Dou’aa, 10, stands inside her father’s greenhouse in Syria. Here and around the world, the threat of hunger is a daily reality. Scroll through the images above and read below to learn more about global hunger and what can be done to end it. PHOTO: Ezra Millstein/Mercy Corps
Iman and her 6-year-old daughter, Israa, are Syrian refugees in Lebanon, where resources to support the refugee population are scarce. Through Mercy Corps' livelihood program in her community, Iman earned income to help them cover their basic needs. PHOTO: Ezra Millstein/Mercy Corps
Julio lives in an area of Guatemala vulnerable to hunger and malnutrition. He struggled to provide for his family until Mercy Corps helped him turn his small farm into a thriving business with training and more diverse crops. PHOTO: Laura Hajar for Mercy Corps (2015)
Families in South Sudan are enduring one of the world's worst food crises. Famine was declared in 2017, and without consistent humanitarian aid and access, another famine declaration in 2018 is likely. PHOTO: Jennifer Huxta for Mercy Corps
Herders in Mongolia, like Enkh, live in extremely isolated areas that are cut off from resources that help them keep their animals healthy during harsh winter weather. We're working to help them grow more food and improve their herds' productivity, so they can feed their families year-round. PHOTO: Sean Sheridan for Mercy Corps
Having access to purchase and sell food is instrumental in fighting hunger. In Myanmar, we help farmers grow more bountiful and diverse crops then connect them to area markets, which boosts their individual incomes and benefits the nutrition of entire communities. PHOTO: Ezra Millstein/Mercy Corps
When people flee from conflict, they are often forced to leave their livelihoods and farms behind. In Nigeria, we've provided food vouchers so displaced people can purchase what they need to feed their families while they work to restore their lives. PHOTO: Tom Saater for Mercy Corps

 

Common causes of hunger

World hunger is caused by so much more than a shortage of food. Even in places where food is plentiful or can be grown, challenges like disasters, conflict or poverty prevent people from accessing it.

People in poverty generally spend between 60 and 80 percent of their income on food, which can force them to prioritise feeding their families over meeting other basic needs or reaching long-term goals, like sending their children to school. If an emergency strikes, they may need to skip meals in order to cope financially — and the cycle of hunger continues.

According to the Food Security Information Network, conflict and insecurity were primary drivers of food insecurity in 2017, alone accountable for putting 74 million people in need of urgent assistance. Climate change is also eroding existing efforts to improve food security.

Hunger can also stem from inadequate food systems, like a lack of road infrastructure to connect people to markets, or poor storage facilities, through which food gets wasted and never reaches those who need it.

Woman with goats in a field
Extreme weather, like drought or flooding, can be devastating for pastoralists — like Ali in Ethiopia — who rely on regular rains to supply water and fodder for their herds. PHOTO: Sean Sheridan for Mercy Corps

Weather shocks, due in part to climate change, are also increasingly driving hunger. Half the world’s poor grow their own food, and natural disasters like droughts and floods frequently wipe out vulnerable families’ entire food supply and income.

Read more: A hotter planet, a hungrier world ▸

But even if all these obstacles to food access were removed, the world will still need to change its agriculture practices to meet the needs of its growing population.

Where in the world is hunger the worst?

Nearly all the world’s hungry — 98 per cent — live in developing regions. Over 500 million live in Asia and the Pacific, in countries like Afghanistan and Timor-Leste, while 243 million live in sub-Saharan Africa.

The Food Security Information Network reports the worst food crises in 2017 were in northeast NigeriaSomaliaYemen and South Sudan, where famine was declared in two counties.

In 2018, the network expects conflict and insecurity to remain a primary driver of hunger, especially in countries including Afghanistan, the Central African RepublicDemocratic Republic of Congo, Nigeria, South Sudan, Syria, Libya and Yemen, which is right now the world’s most dire food crisis.

Weather-related disasters, like drought, are also anticipated to be a major catalyst of hunger around the world in 2018 — but the impact will likely be greatest in West Africa and the Sahel, in places like EthiopiaNigerMaliKenya and Somalia.

What is being done to end world hunger?

Women in niger standing in front of a field
Women in Niger gather for Mercy Corps’ farm training, which helps them grow better, stronger crops to last them through the lean season they face every year. PHOTO: Sean Sheridan for Mercy Corps

Work humanitarian organisations are doing

We can only tackle world hunger effectively if we address what causes it in the first place. This means improving systems and behaviours that enable secure access, availability and use of food.

Fighting the drivers of hunger is key to Mercy Corps’ work with vulnerable communities in more than 40 countries:

Read more about our approach to building food security ▸

During acute crises, we provide at-risk communities with lifesaving assistance and the tools to re-establish healthy bodies and prosperous livelihoods. We help people with food, livelihood tools, and cash donations when food supplies are low or unaffordable, such as when people are displaced by conflict or natural disasters.

We also work with governments, multilateral institutions and other key stakeholders to support funding programmes and implementing policies that help stop global hunger and malnutrition and improve the lives of millions around the world.

Legislation and help from the government

Hands full of grain
Our collaboration with partner organizations and the government is vital to securing long-term access to food and a strong future for everyone. PHOTO: Ezra Millstein/Mercy Corps

After decades of underinvestment, countries have begun to reinvest in programmes to fight global hunger. The effort has built momentum over the years, culminating in 2015 when the global community came together to commit to pursuing the Sustainable Development Goals, with ending hunger as a top priority.

Private companies, NGOs, universities and academic institutions joined national governments with new agriculture and nutrition investments in response.

Help us to provide emergency relief for families facing hunger and others in crisis around the world.
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