It is estimated that around 10 percent of the world’s population, or up to 811 million people, go hungry daily. The ongoing crisis in Ukraine is expected to make situations worse in 2022 since conflicts tend to reduce global food supply, causing prices to rise and threats to the lives of individuals in different parts of the country.Â
Second Harvest Food Bank of Northeast Tennessee is playing a huge role to control food hunger. Here are some statistics concerning hunger and food insecurity throughout the world that you need to be aware of:
More People Are Hungry
The World Food Programme reveals, that more than 48 million people are suffering emergency levels of hunger, with the possibility of acute malnutrition, starvation, and death (WFP).Â
The GNAFC revealed in the year 2022, about 193 million people living in 53 countries and territories will face acute food insecurity as crisis levels will get worse. This is an increase of almost 40 million people compared to 2020.
Sixty Percent Of Malnourished People Are Women
Girls and women, especially in underdeveloped nations, are at a disadvantage when it comes to meeting their fundamental requirements, such as ensuring that they have sufficient food to eat. These imbalances are assumed to stem from the preferential treatment of males in family healthcare-seeking behavior and nutrition and these inequities have been perpetuated for generations.
In certain parts of the world, women are not allowed to eat until all the males in the home have had their meals. Even pregnant women are affected by these differences, which results in around one in six newborns born in underdeveloped countries having a low birth weight.
Poverty And Inequality Fuel World Hunger
Conflict, harsh weather patterns, inequality induced by economic shocks, and health crises, such as the coronavirus pandemic, are some of the primary reasons behind the growth of food insecurity.Â
A significant cause of food insecurity continues to be armed conflict, which has resulted in 139 million people in 24 countries and territories being driven into acute levels of food insecurity. This number represents an increase from 99 million people in 23 countries and territories in 2020.
One In Four Sub-Saharan Africans Is Hungry
Sub-Saharan Africa has more than 220 million people who are hungry as a result of climate change. Extreme weather events have taken a heavy toll on human lives and economic losses, impeding attempts to improve food security in sub-Saharan Africa, according to a report from the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization.
Fighting and conflict play a significant part in the perpetuation of poverty and civil upheaval in many of the nations located in this area, another factor contributing to the region’s overall lack of food security.
The Danger Of Starvation Is Far Greater In Certain Areas Than In Others
In the year 2021, the nations of Afghanistan, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Haiti, Ethiopia, Nigeria, Syria, Sudan, South Sudan, and Yemen were home to about 70 percent of the world’s population that was experiencing a degree of starvation that qualified as a humanitarian disaster.Â
About 40 million individuals in 36 different nations were in danger of dying from starvation. The fact that more than 570,000 people in only four countries—Ethiopia, southern Madagascar, South Sudan, and Yemen—faced the prospect of famine and death is a matter of grave concern.