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Mar. 11, 2010: Aid that
promotes nutrition and food security has wide-ranging
benefits compared to its costs in the fight against
poverty-related problems, a top humanitarian policy
analyst at international aid agency World Vision said
Thursday during a Congressional hearing on global
hunger.
"In this tight budget environment, improving nutrition
is one of the most cost-effective ways to address many
global problems," said Robert Zachritz, World Vision's
advocacy director. "While it is a basic human right,
access to sufficient food for a healthy, productive life
has not been secured for millions around the world and
the consequences are more illness and death."
According to the most recent statistics, more than a
billion people today (or one in every six persons on
earth) live on the verge of hunger.
And every year, nearly nine million children under age
five die of preventable causes, and malnutrition
underlies more than one-third of these deaths.
During Thursday’s hearing, World Vision's Zachritz cited
a panel of eight economists, including five Nobel Prize
laureates, who in May 2008 ranked the most
cost-effective interventions to address 10 major global
challenges.
The economists had found that half of the top 10
solutions with the most benefit for cost related
specifically to nutrition. These target nutrition for
children under age two, fortifying foods with iron and
iodine, and promoting nutrition at the community level.
World Vision is appealing to members of the
Congressional Human Rights Caucus at the hearing, titled
"Facing Global Hunger: Food as Right," to fully fund the
U.S. Food for Peace and McGovern-Dole International Food
for Education programs and to support the Global Hunger
and Food Security Initiative proposed last year by
President Obama, including nutrition and agriculture
development programs.
"There is a big difference between stating a right and
ensuring that right is preserved," said Zachritz.
The Christian humanitarian agency World Vision is
actively fighting hunger and poverty in almost 100
countries. The organization distributes emergency food
aid and also works to combat hunger's causes through
longer-term agricultural and livelihood programs such as
providing local farmers with the seeds, tools and
training they need to grow their own food and feed their
own communities. Aaron J. Leichman, Christian Post
Reporter
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