2020 Global Nutrition Report 2hrssko
2020 Global Nutrition Report 2hrssko
2020 Global Nutrition Report 2hrssko
Global
Nutrition
Report
Action on equity to end malnutrition
ENDORSEMENTS
Dr Lawrence Haddad, Executive Director of The Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN)
The Covid-19 crisis has made it ever clearer that inequity is a maker and a marker of malnutrition.
The crisis hurts the nutrition status of the most vulnerable first and hardest. In turn, the malnourished
will be more susceptible to the virus. This report shows us how to move towards greater equity and,
hence, improved nutrition outcomes.
Gerda Verburg, United Nations Assistant Secretary General and Coordinator of the Scaling Up
Nutrition (SUN) Movement
The 2020 Global Nutrition Report is launched in the midst of the Covid-19 crisis. This is not only
a health crisis followed by an economic crisis. In many developing countries, it is a health and
nutrition crisis, combined with a socioeconomic crisis. Lockdowns impact people’s income, and
their capacity to achieve food and nutrition security. Closed schools mean that school-meals
programmes are no longer providing nutritious meals for children. Smallholder farmers and food
producers, often women with few rights and limited ability to make decisions, will be particularly
affected. In any new normal after this crisis, nutrition must be understood and recognised as an
indispensable part of health, food, education and economic development. Particular attention
must be paid to equity, the theme of this year’s report, ensuring that all forms of policy, action and
systemic change support the poorest and most vulnerable, leaving no one behind.
As the 2020 Global Nutrition Report highlights, now more than ever, we need to strengthen our
collective efforts to ensure that the most vulnerable children benefit from good diets and nutrition
services and practices. In particular, we need food systems and food environments that deliver
nutritious, safe, affordable and sustainable diets for all children, no matter where they live.
As we enter the final decade of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, we have an
opportunity to accelerate our progress towards this goal, by more rigorously collecting, analysing
and applying good-quality data to shape programmes that can bring us closer to ending
malnutrition in all its forms. UNICEF is proud to be part of this important effort.
Ahead of the Nutrition for Growth Summit, the 2020 Global Nutrition Report is a must-read. The world is in
the middle of a war with the unprecedented threat of Covid-19. The endeavour to address malnutrition
in all its forms, in addition to medical intervention, is an indispensable element in combating such
infectious diseases. Balanced intake of nutritious food is essential for improving fundamental immunity.
In this sense, we should emphasise the importance of improving nutritional status as a preventive
measure, key to establishing a resilient society. Because good nutrition for everyone is also an important
element of human security, taking swift action on nutrition will help to protect lives and dignity.
Based on this understanding, JICA will make continued efforts to tackle malnutrition.
Dr Qu Dongyu, Director-General, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)
The call for transformation of food systems – to make healthy diets available, accessible, attractive
and safe – has never been more relevant than now. The emergence of Covid-19 has highlighted
the fragility of our food systems. We need to seize upon this crisis as an opportunity to rebuild and
reshape food systems to be more resilient, equitable and sustainable. This calls for united action on
all fronts to end the inequities in food systems that fail to make nutrition accessible and affordable
for all. We should not settle for a world where over 800 million people go to bed hungry and where
over two billion do not have access to quality diets. FAO stands ready to work with all stakeholders
to make this food-systems transformation a reality and to ensure that no one is left behind.
Again this year, the Global Nutrition Report holds up a mirror to the world that reflects how well
we are keeping our promise to end malnutrition. While we see encouraging instances of progress,
the current global reality of conflict, and Covid-19 and its consequences, will throw us a significant
curveball, and, as always, it’s the vulnerable who will suffer most. Let’s use this year’s report to
examine, reflect and reset, and create a world where we like the face we see in the mirror.
Health inequities based on social factors such as employment status, income level, gender and
ethnicity have significant social and economic costs to both individuals and societies. Inequities are
at the root of many of the world’s greatest public health challenges. The focus of the 2020 Global
Nutrition Report on “Action on equity to end malnutrition” highlights dramatic inequities in the burden
of stunting, wasting, obesity, micronutrient deficiencies, and diet-related non-communicable diseases.
It clearly lays out the issues in our health systems and food systems that limit the ability of vulnerable
populations to receive the nutrition and care they need to live healthy and productive lives. Now is the
time to take dramatic action and commit ourselves to eliminating inequities in malnutrition.
Rt Hon. Anne-Marie Trevelyan MP, Secretary of State for International Development of the
United Kingdom
The 2020 Global Nutrition Report is an important reminder that the world needs to work together to
tackle malnutrition, which has such a major impact on people’s lives. We must use these findings as
a catalyst for more progress. The release of this report during the Covid-19 outbreak serves to remind
us that those who are malnourished, including girls and women, will be particularly vulnerable to this
disease, and Covid-19 will likely exacerbate malnutrition in low- and middle-income countries. The UK
remains committed to a humane and responsible approach to preventing and treating malnutrition.
It is part of our ambition to end the preventable deaths of newborns, children and mothers by
2030. Furthermore, preventing malnutrition can support efforts to boost economic productivity and
resilience in low- and middle-income countries to reduce the impact of climate change. The UK
especially supports the calls in this report to address inequalities in all forms of malnutrition, to make
nutrition an integral part of healthcare provision and to support a shift to healthier, equitable and
sustainable diets. Investment and action on nutrition is more crucial than ever.
Amir M. Abdulla, UN Nutrition Chair, United Nations System Standing Committee on Nutrition (UNSCN)
The theme for this year’s report is timely and important: action on equity to end malnutrition.
This edition of the Global Nutrition Report focuses on the inequities in basic social services and
malnutrition outcomes. Earlier reports, including previous editions of the Global Nutrition Report,
have already identified inequality as a major determinant for malnutrition. As the editorial
of UNSCN News 43 (2018, ‘Advancing equity, equality and non-discrimination in food systems:
pathways to reform’) states, “we need to reframe the problem of hunger and malnutrition as
a problem of social justice, to address power in the food chains, to narrow the divide in social
protection schemes and to strengthen the accountability of government”.
The Covid-19 pandemic shows the interconnectedness of the various systems that determine
nutrition outcomes: the food, health and socioeconomic systems. It also shows that these systems
now function in a way that means the most powerful and rich suffer less from the pandemic.
Let’s join forces and use the lessons of this year’s Global Nutrition Report to address inequities in
the system to end all forms of malnutrition and leave no one behind.
We are also grateful to peer reviewers from Global Food Security for carrying out the external peer
review of the report this year: Namukolo Covic, Mario Herrero, Thorne Lynam, John McDermott and
Boyd Swinburne.
The Independent Expert Group is guided by the Global Nutrition Report Stakeholder Group, which
provided feedback on the outline, draft and outreach plans for the report: Dr Mohamed Abdi Farah,
SUN, Office of the Prime Minister, Federal Republic of Somalia, Somalia; Victor Aguayo, UNICEF,
US; Francesco Branca, WHO, Switzerland; John Cordaro, Mars, Incorporated, US; Juliane Friedrich,
International Fund for Agricultural Development, Italy; Lawrence Haddad, GAIN, UK; Martin Hoppe,
BMZ, Germany; Kate Houston, Cargill, US; Lauren Landis, World Food Programme, Italy; Anna Lartey,
FAO, Italy; Dr Ferew Lemma, Ministry of Health, Ethiopia; Dr Cornelia Loechl, International Atomic
Energy Agency, Austria; Erin Milner, USAID, US; Katherine Richards, Save the Children UK; Tadashi Sato,
Japan International Cooperation Agency, Japan; Ben Siddle, Irish Aid, Ireland; Carla da Silva Sorneta,
European Commission, Belgium; Rachel Toku-Appiah, Graça Machel Trust; Gerda Verburg, United
Nations and SUN Movement; Frits van der Wal, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Netherlands; Neil Watkins,
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, US.
We are particularly grateful to the co-chairs of the Stakeholder Group: Abigail Perry, DFID, UK, and
Lucy Sullivan, Feed the Truth, US .
We also received written contributions from people whose work could not be included in this year’s
report but nevertheless informed our thinking: Lawrence Haddad, GAIN, UK; Luc Laviolette, Global
Financing Facility, USA; Donald Mavundese, Azita Shamsolahi and Paul Stuart, Send a Cow, UK;
Will Nicholson, Food Foundation, UK; James Ronicle, Ecorys, UK; Meera Shekar, World Bank, USA;
and members of the Independent Expert Group.
The 2020 Global Nutrition Report was made possible through funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates
Foundation, the European Commission, the government of Canada, Germany’s Federal Ministry of
Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ), Irish Aid, the UK’s Department for International
Development (DFID) and the US Agency for International Development (USAID). The views and
opinions expressed in this report are those of the authors and may not necessarily reflect the views or
opinions of the donors.
Finally, we thank you, the readers of the Global Nutrition Report, for your enthusiasm and constructive
feedback from the 2014 Global Nutrition Report to today. We aim to ensure the report stays relevant
using data, analysis and evidence-based success stories that respond to the needs of your work, from
decision-making to implementation, across the development landscape.
Suggested citation: 2020 Global Nutrition Report: Action on equity to end malnutrition. Bristol, UK:
Development Initiatives.
Disclaimer: Any opinions stated herein are those of the authors and are not necessarily representative
of or endorsed by Development Initiatives Poverty Research Ltd or any of the partner organisations
involved in the 2020 Global Nutrition Report. Not all Independent Expert Group members will necessarily
agree with every word in the report. The boundaries and names used do not imply official endorsement
or acceptance by Development Initiatives Poverty Research Ltd.
In May 2020, updates to the report were made on pages 36, 37, 52, 54, 55, 56, 129, 131 and 159.
In July 2020, updates to the report were made on pages 66 and 109.
North Quay House, Quay Side, Temple Back, Bristol, BS1 6FL, UK
ISBN: 978-1-9164452-6-0
Executive summary 12
Appendix 3: Countries on track for the 2025 global nutrition targets 132
Notes 136
Glossary 161
Spotlights 168
Boxes 169
Figures 169
Tables 171
Although the 2020 Global Nutrition Report was written before the current coronavirus pandemic,
its emphasis on nutritional well-being for all, particularly the most vulnerable, has a heightened
significance in the face of this new global threat. The need for more equitable, resilient and
sustainable food and health systems has never been more urgent.
Covid-19 does not treat us equally. Undernourished people have weaker immune systems, and
may be at greater risk of severe illness due to the virus. At the same time, poor metabolic health,
including obesity and diabetes, is strongly linked to worse Covid-19 outcomes, including risk of
hospitalisation and death.
People who already suffer as a consequence of inequities – including the poor, women and children,
those living in fragile or conflict-affected states, minorities, refugees and the unsheltered – are
particularly affected by both the virus and the impact of containment measures. It is essential that
they are protected, especially when responses are implemented.
Good nutrition is an essential part of an individual’s defence against Covid-19. Nutritional resilience
is a key element of a society’s readiness to combat the threat. Focusing on nutritional well-being
provides opportunities for establishing synergies between public health and equity, in line with the
2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
Covid-19 exposes the vulnerability and weaknesses of our already fragile food systems. Covid-19 has
tested our food systems, already stressed by increasing climate extremes. Containing the virus
has caused food and nutrition shortages and driven governments to reduce social services, such
as school nutrition programmes, that the most marginalised rely upon. In the context of food
and nutrition shortages, accessibility and affordability of healthy, sustainably produced food
becomes even more challenging. Access to staple food distribution and local food markets is at
risk. Millions of households in formerly food-secure regions of the world have fallen into severe food
insecurity. Levels of hunger and malnutrition could double within the space of just a few weeks.
As measures to slow the spread of Covid-19 are enacted around the world, we must ensure that
there is enough nutritious food, distributed fairly, to cover basic nutrition needs – especially for
the most vulnerable. Quite simply, and as the 2020 Global Nutrition Report highlights, food systems
everywhere must become equitable, nutritious, efficient and inclusive.
Covid-19 exposes deadly healthcare disparities. Transformed and strengthened health systems
must focus on delivering preventive nutrition and health services and be ready to respond to crises.
The 2020 Global Nutrition Report highlights the need to integrate nutrition into universal health
coverage as an indispensable prerequisite for improving diets, saving lives and reducing healthcare
spending, while ensuring that no one is left behind. Reversing the obesity epidemic would also
lessen the burden on our healthcare systems, as obesity is not only one of the costliest health
conditions but also a major risk of Covid-19 hospitalisations and complications.
The way forward: strengthened coordination, alignment, financing and accountability. We are only just
beginning to feel the full range of disruptions to health service delivery, food supply chains, economies
and livelihoods as a result of the virus. As Covid-19 spreads in lower-income countries across the world,
people’s health, food, education and social protection systems are being tested. Contributions from all
sectors of society are necessary to address our diverse challenges. National governments are leading
the response, providing strategic direction and ensuring coordinated and aligned programming.
Civil society organisations are also key. Yet additional resources will be needed to combat the virus at
different levels of these vital systems; this should not come at the expense of essential public health
and nutrition actions. Special attention should be paid to supporting women, as they play such a vital
role in helping societies everywhere to become Covid-ready.
There is a real risk that, as nations strive to control the virus, the gains they have made in reducing
hunger and malnutrition will be lost. These gains must be protected through increased and well-targeted
official development assistance, as well as domestic resource allocations, focused on nutritional well-
being. We must actively prevent the main drivers of malnutrition through more equitable, resilient,
sustainable systems for food and health security, backed up by responsive social protection mechanisms.
We know that tackling malnutrition requires political commitment and simultaneous actions
across multiple sectors, as well as considerable investment in data systems for implementation
of programmes and tracking of progress. As the new Covid-19 reality emerges, it is important to
avoid the wholesale displacement of the gains that have been made, while managing a new and
ever-present threat. Looking beyond the present pandemic emergency, there is a need for well-
functioning, well-funded and coordinated preventive public health strategies that pay attention to
food, nutrition, health and social protection. We must learn from the challenges posed by Covid-19
and turn them into opportunities to accelerate actions needed to address inequities across
malnutrition in all its forms, as called for by the 2020 Global Nutrition Report.
Co-chairs
Renata Micha
Venkatesh Mannar
Special Envoy of the World Health Organization (WHO) Director-General on Covid-19, Co-Director
of the Imperial College Institute of Global Health Innovation at the Imperial College London, and
Strategic Director of 4SD
Dr David Nabarro
Everyone deserves access to healthy, affordable food and quality nutrition care. This access is
hindered by deeper inequities that arise from unjust systems and processes that structure everyday
living conditions. This year’s Global Nutrition Report uses the concept of nutrition equity to
elucidate these inequities and show how they determine opportunities and barriers to attaining
healthy diets and lives, leading to unequal nutrition outcomes. We examine the global burden of
malnutrition with an equity lens to develop a fuller understanding of nutrition inequalities. In doing
this, we pinpoint and prioritise key actions to amplify our efforts and propel progress towards
ending malnutrition in all its forms.
The Global Nutrition Report calls for a pro-equity agenda that mainstreams nutrition into food
systems and health systems, supported by strong financing and accountability. With only five years
left to meet the 2025 global nutrition targets, time is running out. We must focus action where the need
is greatest for maximum impact.
The trend is clear: progress is too slow to meet the global targets. Not one country is on course to meet
all ten of the 2025 global nutrition targets and just 8 of 194 countries are on track to meet four targets.
Almost a quarter of all children under 5 years of age are stunted. At the same time, overweight and
obesity are increasing rapidly in nearly every country in the world, with no signs of slowing.
Progress on malnutrition is not just too slow, it is also deeply unfair. New analysis shows that global
and national patterns mask significant inequalities within countries and populations, with the most
vulnerable groups being most affected. Nutrition outcomes also vary substantially across countries.
Underweight is a persisting issue for the poorest countries and can be ten times higher than in
wealthier countries. Overweight and obesity prevail in wealthier countries at rates of up to five
times higher than in poorer countries.
Within every country in the world, we see striking inequalities according to location, age, sex,
education and wealth – while conflict and other forms of fragility compound the problem. This report
finds a strong urban–rural divide, and even larger differences across communities. In children under
5 years of age, wasting can be up to nine times higher in certain communities within countries, four
times higher for stunting and three times higher for overweight and obesity.
There is a clear link between infant and young child feeding practices and household
characteristics. Continued breastfeeding up to 1 or 2 years of age is less common for children in
wealthier households, urban areas or with a more educated mother. In contrast, rates of solid
food introduction and minimum diet diversity are substantially lower for children in the poorest
households, in rural areas or with a less educated mother. Although more granular high-quality
nutrition data is needed, we have enough to act.
Today, significant New analysis shows that Poor diets and resulting Now is the time to act.
barriers hold back global and national patterns malnutrition are not simply Stakeholders must work in
millions of people from hide inequalities within a matter of personal choices. coordination to overcome
healthy diets and lives countries and communities, Most people cannot access barriers that are holding back
with vulnerable groups being or afford a healthy diet progress to end malnutrition
most affected or quality nutrition care
Globally, 1 in 9 people is Build equitable,
hungry or undernourished Underweight persists in the poorest
resilient and
countries, with rates up to 10 times Food and health systems
higher compared to the richest
sustainable
need to be transformed
countries. In contrast, overweight food and
and obesity are prevailing in the health systems
richest countries, up to 5 times higher.
Invest in nutrition,
especially in the
communities
most affected
We should address inequities
in food systems and make
healthy, sustainable food Focus on joint
the most accessible and efforts – global
affordable choice for all. challenges show
how vital this is
1 in 3 people is overweight
or obese Leverage key
moments to
renew and
Rates of solid, semi-solid or soft food We should fully integrate expand nutrition
introduction and minimum diet diversity nutrition in health systems commitments
are substantially lower for children in and make nutrition care, and strengthen
the poorest households, rural areas preventive and curative, accountability
or with a less-educated mother. universally available.
14 2020 GLOBAL NUTRITION REPORT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 15
For sources and full notes for country- and regional-level data, please see: 2020 Global Nutrition Report, figures 2.6 and 2.13. Global data taken from: FAO, 2019. The state of food security and nutrition in the world; Ng M., Fleming T., Robinson M. et al., 2014.
Global, regional, and national prevalence of overweight and obesity in children and adults during 1980–2013: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2013. The Lancet 384(9945); NCD Risk factor Collaboration, 2019.
Tackling injustices in food and health systems
Poor diets and resulting malnutrition are among the greatest current societal challenges, causing
vast health, economic and environmental burdens. To fix the global nutrition crisis equitably, we
must shift our approach dramatically in two ways: focusing on food and health.
First, we must address inequities in food systems, from production to consumption. Current food
systems do not enable people to make healthy food choices. The vast majority of people today
simply cannot access or afford a healthy diet. The reasons for this are complex. Existing agriculture
systems are largely focused on an overabundance of staple grains like rice, wheat and maize, rather
than producing a broader range of more diverse and healthier foods, like fruits, nuts and vegetables.
Meanwhile, highly processed foods are available, cheap and intensively marketed; their sales are still
high in high-income countries and growing fast in upper-middle- and lower-middle-income countries.
The climate emergency makes it critical to rethink food systems. And this presents an opportunity
to shift to approaches ensuring that healthy and sustainably produced food is the most accessible,
affordable and desirable choice for all. These approaches must amplify the voices of marginalised
groups and address the true cost of food to the environment, as well as to human health. Likewise, they
must work both within specific contexts and across sectors to address all elements of the food system.
Second, we must address nutrition inequities in health systems. Malnutrition in all its forms has
become the leading cause of ill health and death, and the rapid rise of diet-related NCDs is putting
an intolerable strain on health systems. Yet, most people cannot access or afford quality nutrition
care for prevention or treatment. Worldwide, only about one-quarter of the 16.6 million children under
5 years of age with severe acute malnutrition received treatment in 2017, highlighting the urgent
need to address this unacceptable burden. Nutrition actions represent only a tiny portion of national
health budgets, although they can be highly cost-effective and can reduce healthcare spending in
the long term. These are largely focused on undernutrition and are rarely delivered by skilled nutrition
professionals. At the same time, health records and checks are not optimised to screen, monitor and
treat malnutrition, such as through assessments of diet quality and food security.
Global commitment to universal health coverage is an opportunity to integrate nutrition care fully
into health systems. Essential nutrition services – preventive and curative – should be universally
available to all, with a focus on those who need it most. Strong governance and coordination across
sectors is key to building functional and resilient health systems. Mainstreaming and scaling up
nutrition care within health systems would save lives and reduce staggering healthcare spending.
Only by tackling injustices in food and health systems will we achieve the transformations needed
to end malnutrition in all its forms.
So far, investments have focused on addressing undernutrition. We have seen some success here, as
rates of stunting are gradually decreasing over time. In contrast, overweight and obesity are rapidly
increasing. The funding gap to address overweight, obesity and other diet-related NCDs is growing
too. Countries have to be equipped to fight both sides of malnutrition at the same time.
We urge leaders to prioritise action to ensure that all people, particularly those most affected
by malnutrition, have unhindered access to healthy and affordable food, and to quality nutrition
care. Governments must work with stakeholders across sectors to overcome the inequities holding
back progress to end malnutrition. To drive the transformative change needed to achieve nutrition
equity, and end malnutrition in all its forms, we must focus on three key areas: food systems, health
systems and financing. The Global Nutrition Report proposes the following specific actions.
Food systems
To ensure that healthy and sustainably produced food is the most accessible, affordable and
desirable choice for all, sectors must work together to mainstream nutrition into all elements of the
food system.
• Implement strong regulatory and policy frameworks to support healthier diets for all at country
and community level and across sectors, from production to consumption.
• Optimise agricultural subsidies and increase public investment for producing a broader range of
more diverse and healthier foods.
• Provide support for public transport schemes and shorter supply chains for fresh-food delivery
products, particularly to the most nutritionally disadvantaged or harder-to-reach groups.
• Implement, monitor and evaluate evidence-based food policies to support healthy, sustainable
and equitable diets, such as fiscal, reformulation, school- and worksite-based, labelling and
marketing policies.
• Hold the food industry accountable for producing and marketing healthier and more
sustainable food products through strengthened mechanisms.
• Strengthen and increase research spending to address major nutrition questions, identify cost-
effective solutions and stimulate innovation.
To save lives and cut healthcare costs, sectors must work in collaboration to mainstream nutrition as
a basic health service through leveraging existing infrastructure and introducing new technologies.
• Roll out nutrition services within health services by developing costed nutrition care plans, that
should be scaled up and sustained to cover all forms of malnutrition, including overweight,
obesity and other diet-related NCDs.
• Invest in human resources to increase the number of qualified nutrition professionals and level-
out access to quality nutrition care.
• Use a variety of health professionals and workers to alleviate inequities in access, and enhance
their performance through educational and development opportunities.
• Include nutrition-related health products like therapeutic foods and innovative technological
solutions like digital nutrition counselling, where appropriate – especially when working with
more remote and harder-to-reach communities.
• Optimise health records and checks for nutrition care, to deliver preventive and curative
nutrition services and identify those in greatest need.
• Commit to routine and systematic collection of equity-sensitive nutrition data at the community
level, disaggregated by key population characteristics to strengthen the evidence base and
inform targeted priority-setting.
• Increase domestic financing to respond to the needs of communities most affected by malnutrition
– including undernutrition, as well as overweight, obesity and other diet-related NCDs.
• Invest in data management systems to strengthen data on financial flows, enabling alignment
with national nutrition priorities.
• Increase international nutrition financing and coordination, targeting populations most in need
– especially in fragile and conflict-affected countries and in those with limited possibility for
domestic resource mobilisation.
• Establish support spaces for dialogue on coordinated action to achieve nutrition equity and
sensitise the policy space through lobbying for community involvement – from design to evaluation.
• Undertake situational assessments to identify bottlenecks in food, health, education and social
protection, to remove barriers to improving nutrition outcomes.
We need to act now. We need to be well resourced, strongly coordinated and accountable. Meeting
the global nutrition targets would enable healthier, happier lives for all. With an extra push at the
N4G summit, this success is within reach.
Introduction:
towards global
nutrition equity
2014. Rwanda.
A volunteer leads a nutrition education class.
Photo: Global Communities/Juozas Cernius.
Inequalities in all forms Global leaders affirmed a vision for a world
that ‘leaves no-one behind’ by committing to
of malnutrition the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).8
This vision includes a world free from
Poor diet is the leading cause of mortality and malnutrition in all its forms.9 Immediately
morbidity worldwide, exceeding the burdens following the SDGs, the United Nations (UN)
attributable to many other major global health Decade of Action on Nutrition 2016–202510
challenges.1 The resulting global malnutrition articulated the goal of eliminating all forms of
crisis includes hunger and undernutrition – malnutrition by 2025, a goal underpinned by
mainly stunting, wasting, underweight and the principle of universality and achieving food
micronutrient deficiencies – and diet-related and nutrition security for all.11 The principle of
non-communicable diseases (NCDs) – mainly universality refers to an inclusive approach
overweight, obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular ensuring that everyone has fair access to the
disease and cancer. This double burden of resources and services they need to achieve
malnutrition – two sides of one crisis – has optimal nutritional health. Equity adds an
vast health, economic and environmental ethical dimension and focuses on opportunities
implications, affecting every country of the rather than outcomes. Unequal nutrition
world in some form. Yet, there are marked outcomes are rooted in deeper inequities
differences in nutrition outcomes, or nutrition that arise from unjust systems and processes
inequalities, by key sociodemographic that structure everyday living conditions.
characteristics, such as geographic location, These systems and processes shape opportunities
age, gender, ethnicity, education and wealth. and barriers to attaining healthy diets, healthy
The 2020 Global Nutrition Report provides environments, adequate healthcare and
high-quality data and in-depth analyses to healthy lives. Considerable progress has been
shed light on the global burden of malnutrition. made in measuring nutrition inequalities, but
Our aim is to help disentangle the patterns and we have been less clear on understanding and
causes of nutrition inequalities to drive action confronting inequity. Recognising this gap,
and ensure that no one is left behind. this year’s Global Nutrition Report focuses on
nutrition equity.
Currently, 1 in 9 people – 820 million worldwide
– are hungry or undernourished, with numbers Inequity affects people throughout the social
rising since 2015, especially in Africa, West Asia hierarchy and is grounded in the marginalisation,
and Latin America. 2 Around 113 million people stigmatisation or relative disempowerment of
across 53 countries experience acute hunger, as different individuals and groups. As the voices
a result of conflict and food insecurity, climate and ideas of marginalised people are unheard
shocks and economic turbulence. 3 At the or ignored, their health and nutrition needs are
same time, more than one-third of the world’s not addressed. While a focus on inequality is
adult population is overweight or obese, with about understanding the differences in nutrition
increasing trends over the past two decades. 4 outcomes, such as diets and disease patterns,
among different population groups, looking
Latest data reveals some progress towards select at inequity shifts the focus to the underlying
2025 global nutrition targets, including maternal, systems and processes that generate unequal
infant and young child nutrition (MIYCN) targets,5 distributions of outcomes.12 If inequalities in
and diet-related NCD targets.6 Childhood stunting nutrition outcomes are avoidable through
has dropped globally from 165.8 million in human intervention – and evidence suggests
2012 to 149 million in 2018, representing a 10% they are – then these inequalities are by
relative decrease. No country worldwide has definition inequitable.13 We need a pro-equity
managed to reverse the rising overweight and policy agenda to inform priority-setting, target
obesity trend. Overall, progress towards global resources according to needs, and ensure that
nutrition targets is far too slow or non-existent no one is left behind. To achieve the SDGs and
(see Chapter 2).7 Malnutrition is persisting related global nutrition targets for all, it is critical
at unacceptably high levels, with marked to explain the reasons for inequalities in nutrition
differences between countries, within countries outcomes through understanding nutrition
and by population characteristics. inequities and their determinants.
INTRODUCTION 21
FIGURE 1.1
Nutrition equity framework
Social determinants
Underlying determinants
Processes of unfairness,
injustice and social
Basic determinants exclusion start at the
basic level and extend
to the underlying level
Socioeconomic and
political context
Cultural and societal norms
and values
Governance, institutions,
policies, fragility,
commercial interests
Processes
of inequity
Source: Adapted from the World Health Organization (WHO) Commission on the Social Determinants of Health14 and broadly aligned with the United Nations
Children’s Fund (UNICEF) framework.15
INTRODUCTION 23
BOX 1.1
What causes inequity?
Injustice: Social injustice occurs due to discrimination against individuals or groups because
of social norms and cultural values, leading to them being treated as unequal, unwanted or
stigmatised. Often, these forms of discrimination intersect 20 and policy failure to recognise this
discrimination perpetuates the inequities. 21 The resulting social position – ‘a disabled boy’ or ‘a
low-caste woman’ – becomes a source of repeated unfairness throughout lives and generations,
affecting access to education, health and nutrition. 22
Unfairness: Multiple points of unfairness throughout the life course stem from basic social
injustices. Suboptimal access to life chances (such as education)23 result in suboptimal
knowledge, services and physical environments. 24 Some social groups may find that they are
further discriminated against, by health workers25 for example. The same ‘disabled boy’ or
‘low-caste woman’ may find themselves unable to access adequate healthcare because
services are neither designed for their needs nor available in their communities, or because they
lack the knowledge to seek help. Similar factors may bar access to food markets, or adequate
sanitation, collectively contributing to poorer nutrition outcomes.
Political exclusion and imbalances in power: Those in marginalised social positions are less
likely to be represented in institutions that allocate educational or economic opportunities26
and frame policies and programmes that address the underlying causes of nutrition inequities.
This lack of power works at multiple levels, from assumptions that dictate what happens
within a family (such as whether a girl goes to school), through barriers in setting public
health standards, 27 to the relative voices of different countries within trade or other global
agreements28 and powerful food manufacturers lobbying behind closed doors against public
health measures or undermining scientific research. 29
BOX 1.2
Equity and the focus on justice, vulnerability and non-discrimination
Sustainable Development Goal 10: Reduce inequality within and among countries
SDG 10 recognises that equality and the pursuit of equity are inextricably linked in the
imperative to ‘leave no one behind’:
“We envisage a world of universal respect for human rights and human dignity, the rule of law,
justice, equality and non-discrimination; of respect for race, ethnicity and cultural diversity; and
of equal opportunity permitting the full realisation of human potential and contributing to shared
prosperity. A world which invests in its children and in which every child grows up free from violence
and exploitation. A world in which every woman and girl enjoys full gender equality and all legal,
social and economic barriers to their empowerment have been removed. A just, equitable, tolerant,
open and socially inclusive world in which the needs of the most vulnerable are met.”35
Source: Transforming our world: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. 36
INTRODUCTION 25
Governance to This requires a renewed focus on inclusive
governance, human rights and accountability.
address nutrition Such ‘thinking and working politically’ is being
embraced by international development
inequities actors, 39 and has catalysed multiple studies
of nutrition governance. 40 Previous Global
Strengthened governance, coordination, Nutrition Reports have highlighted efforts
political commitment and accountability is to build and sustain political commitment
crucial to address nutrition inequities, as further to nutrition through renewed emphasis on
emphasised by the WHO Commission on the governance and accountability. This includes
Social Determinants of Health (CSDH): forms of social accountability involving people
participating and auditing the decisions and
In order to address health services that affect them most.41 Examples of a
rights-based approach to nutrition, in terms
inequities, and inequitable of national programmes, legislation and
conditions of daily living, constitutional guarantees, are Brazil’s Right to
Food movement42 and India’s Transformation of
it is necessary to address Aspirational Districts initiative43 (see Spotlight 3.1
inequities – such as those in Chapter 3).
between men and women – in
Better government structure and coordination
the way society is organized… has a direct bearing on mitigating nutrition
To achieve that requires more inequalities. A study of 116 countries, over a
15-year period, compared changes in childhood
than strengthened government stunting against basic governance attributes
– it requires strengthened (bureaucratic effectiveness, law and order,
governance: legitimacy, space, political stability, restraint of corruption and
democratic accountability), concluding that
and support for civil society, for “better quality of governance in countries serves
an accountable private sector, to reduce child undernutrition, independent
of income”. 44
and for people across society
to agree public interests Under conditions of political and economic
and reinvest in the value of instability, or other forms of fragility,
governance is often compromised, leading to
collective action.37 aggravation of nutrition inequities and resulting
nutrition inequalities. Fragility and conflict can
At global and national levels, it will be undermine basic services and infrastructure,
necessary to prioritise policies and financing raise food prices, devalue currencies and
to address the broader social determinants introduce damaging coping mechanisms
of nutrition inequities. The ability of different (such as missing meals or withdrawing children
groups and individuals to access healthy, from school) that can have longer-term
nutritious diets is ultimately related to “the consequences. This calls for specific actions to
inequitable distribution of power, money bridge the humanitarian–development divide
and resources” highlighted by the WHO and address multiple drivers and manifestations
Commission. 38 Addressing these inequities of nutrition inequities in fragile states.
through greater political commitment,
leadership and governance, combined with
capacity-building, training and earmarked
financial and human resources, is required to
achieve equality in nutrition outcomes.
This calls for action by key stakeholders,
including national governments, the UN system,
civil society organisations and businesses.
Action must also take place at subnational
levels, to address inequities within countries.
BOX 1.3
Designing equitable nutrition actions
The following questions can be applied to most areas of analysis and action on nutrition.
Situation analysis
• Are nutrition outcomes distributed fairly? How do they differ when disaggregated by a range of
potential forms of social discrimination and marginalisation – not only by wealth (e.g. income),
but also by gender, ethnicity, sexuality, disability, migration status, geography and broader
determinants of social position such as entitlements and social and cultural capital?
• Which aspects of people’s daily living conditions – including housing, sanitation and basic income
levels – may be contributing to their differential exposure to these different environments?
• Are there particular assumptions about forms of social identity (e.g. gender, ethnicity, disability)
that are contributing to the marginalisation of some groups from decision-making structures?
INTRODUCTION 27
BOX 1.3 (CONTINUED)
Designing equitable nutrition actions
Designing action
• What kind of governance arrangements, policy and programming actions would tackle
the basic and systemic drivers of these inequities, among those most at risk of exclusion,
marginalisation or discrimination?
• Is refocusing with a more specific equity lens likely to improve their effectiveness at
preventing unequal nutrition outcomes?
• How does this apply to more macro-level policies such as trade or labour policy, agricultural
subsidies or social protection?
• How do we give more power to those most at risk of exclusion, marginalisation or discrimination?
FIGURE 1.2
How stakeholders can address nutrition inequities
Ensure policy choices Focus on addressing health Reduce the gap between Seek to flatten the
do not make consequences for most most advantaged and most gradient across the
inequities worse disadvantaged people disadvantaged people whole population
NUTRITION SECTOR • Ensure universal access to and coverage of nutrition services, such as community-based
support for infant and young child feeding, treatment of acute malnutrition and maternal
Universally address
health services. 47
the broader social
determinants of nutrition • Ensure universal access to services relating to the social determinants of nutrition, including
primary healthcare, immunisation, agricultural extension, nutrition education, sanitation
and safe drinking water. 48
• Provide additional funding and resources for those most nutritionally disadvantaged,
including young children, expectant and nursing mothers, adolescents and older people,
in line with commitments to universal health coverage.
• Provide financial and other resources for civil society organisations and community groups
reaching and including nutritionally vulnerable communities.
• Invest in health/nutrition workforces, increasing nutrition and equity awareness and
knowledge across sectors, and develop clear processes for ensuring that specific groups do
not experience exclusion or discrimination at the point of service. 49
MULTISECTORAL • Tackle inequities in resource distribution via, for example, systems of social protection,
Universally target support for stable employment, agrarian and land reform. 50
the broader social
• Adopt government-wide approaches to policy and regulation to target multiple drivers
determinants of nutrition
of nutrition inequity simultaneously – including housing, education, planning, food
systems, transport and finance.
GOVERNANCE • Incorporate nutrition-equity considerations into decisions on macro-economic policies
Leverage SDG 10 on in trade, investment, debt/finance and taxation.
inequality to address
• Address power imbalances in food systems, via a strengthened system of international
the broader social
determinants of nutrition governance and accountability, rights-based approaches to food and nutrition policy
development and programming, responsible business models and civil society action. 51
• As part of this, establish and support new spaces for dialogue, participation
and coordinated action, whether globally (e.g. UN Committee on World Food
Security, 52 the Scaling Up Nutrition (SUN) movement53) and within climate
change forums (e.g. Conference of the Parties54) or nationally (e.g. SUN
networks55 or food policy councils).
• Include alternative voices in thinking and action to sensitise policy spaces and systems
that affect nutrition – in particular, ensure community involvement in the design,
provision, monitoring, evaluation or audit of services.
INTRODUCTION 29
The 2020 Global Chapter 3 recognises the centrality of nutrition
to a healthy life and emphasises the need to
Nutrition Report integrate and mainstream nutrition within
our health systems. It identifies inequities
Since 2014, the Global Nutrition Report has and challenges in such integration and
provided high-quality, comprehensive and proposes actions across each of the WHO’s
credible data for tracking progress, guiding six health system building blocks to ensure
action, inspiring commitment and mobilising universally covered, equitable, effective and
financing to end malnutrition in all its forms. sustained access to high-quality nutrition care.
It is a key mechanism to hold all stakeholders Implementing effective and cost-effective
(public and private, from all relevant sectors) nutrition actions would improve diets, save lives
accountable to the commitments made by and reduce health spending.
global leaders.
Chapter 4 examines the crucial role food systems
The 2020 Global Nutrition Report presents the can play in supporting healthier, equitable and
latest data and evidence on the state of global sustainable diets. Addressing inequities in food
nutrition. 56 There is now an increased global systems (from production to consumption)
recognition that poor diet and consequent through equity-sensitive food policies – such
malnutrition are among the greatest health as agricultural, labelling, fiscal, reformulation,
and societal challenges of our time. This year’s school procurement and marketing policies –
report applies an equity lens to analyse and could ensure that healthy, sustainably produced
interpret global nutrition data, elucidate how foods are the most accessible, desirable,
nutrition can be integrated into the health affordable and convenient choices for all.
system, understand the role of food systems Everyone needs to be part of the solution, with
in shaping healthier diets and environments, appropriate mechanisms in place to track
and highlight nutrition financing needs and effectiveness, financing and accountability.
accountability. The presence of nutrition
inequities in health systems, food systems Chapter 5 presents and analyses the current
and financing, and inequalities in all forms state of global nutrition financing, primarily from
of malnutrition all highlight the need for domestic and donor resources. The analysis
multifaceted equitable nutrition action. reveals that nutrition financing remains
This is crucial to achieving the 2025 global particularly low, with differences noted by sector,
nutrition targets. malnutrition form, and population covered,
and that more granular data is needed for
Chapter 2 presents and analyses the latest equitable resource prioritisation. A renewed and
available data on the global burden of increased focus on equitable nutrition financing,
malnutrition and progress towards meeting leveraging both existing and innovative funding
the 2025 global nutrition targets (on MIYCN mechanisms, is critical to universally achieving
and NCDs). It goes deeper to characterise the 2025 global nutrition targets.
inequalities in nutrition indicators across
countries and within countries with a focus Chapter 6 highlights that equitable nutrition
on location, and further by key population is a collective responsibility and calls for all
characteristics, such as age, sex, wealth and stakeholders to engage and act. This year
education. It highlights key data gaps and the marks the midpoint of the UN Decade of
need for granular, systematically collected Action on Nutrition, and the upcoming Tokyo
nutrition data for informed priority-setting and Nutrition for Growth Summit will offer a unique
resource targeting according to needs. opportunity for world leaders to make bold
nutrition commitments that support a
pro-equity agenda, so that all people can
survive and thrive.
Inequalities in the
global burden of
malnutrition
This chapter presents the latest data on the Looking at the MIYCN targets, the world is
2025 global nutrition targets, collectively ‘off course’ to meet the anaemia target, with
referring to the maternal, infant and young child 613.2 million (32.8% prevalence) adolescent
nutrition (MIYCN) targets, and the diet-related girls and women aged 15 to 49 years being
non-communicable disease (NCD) targets. affected. Anaemia prevalence is substantially
These include targets for six MIYCN indicators: higher in pregnant (35.3 million, 40.1%) than
low birth weight, stunting in children under non-pregnant (577.9 million, 32.5%) adolescent
5 years of age, wasting in children under 5 years girls and women. There has been some progress
of age, overweight in children under 5 years of towards achieving the exclusive breastfeeding
age, anaemia in women of reproductive age target, with 42.2% of infants under 6 months
and exclusive breastfeeding. They also include being exclusively breastfed; yet, accelerated
diet-related NCD indicators in adults: salt intake, improvements would be needed to reach the
raised blood pressure, diabetes and obesity. 2025 target. Globally, 20.5 million newborns
In recognition of the need to evaluate other key (14.6%) have a low birth weight, with levels of
nutrition indicators and comprehensively assess progress well below those required to achieve
the state of global nutrition across the life the 2025 target. Stunting still affects 149.0 million
course, data is also tracked and presented for: (21.9%) children under 5 years of age, and
multiple infant and young child feeding (IYCF) wasting affects 49.5 million (7.3%) children
indicators, child and adolescent anthropometric under 5 years of age; progress is far too slow to
indicators (underweight, overweight, and achieve any of those targets. Notably, Asia is
obesity), and adult anthropometric indicators home to more than half of the world’s stunted
(underweight and overweight, in addition to children (81.7 million, 54.8%). 3 We are also off
obesity). Definitions of all indicators can be course to meet the target for overweight in
found in Appendix 1. children, with 40.1 million (5.9%) children under
5 years of age being overweight.
This chapter provides an overview of
inequalities in these nutrition indicators across
countries and within countries by location and
key population characteristics such as age,
sex, wealth and education. More detailed data
at global, regional and country levels, at the
most granular level available, is available on
the Global Nutrition Report website. 2 This data
and findings are an indispensable prerequisite
for informed priority-setting targeting the
intersections between diet and disease, and
ensuring that no one is left behind.
target 50% reduction of anaemia target Increase the rate of exclusive target 30% reduction in low birth weight.
in women of reproductive age. breastfeeding in the first 6 months up
to at least 50%.
NON-PREGNANT WOMEN 32.5% Target (2025) 50% or more Target (2025) 10.5%
target 40% reduction in the number target Reduce and maintain childhood target No increase in childhood
of children under 5 who are stunted. wasting to less than 5%. overweight.
Target (2025) Around 100m Target (2025) Less than 5% Target (2025) 5.5% or less
In 2018, 149.0 million children In 2018, 7.3% of children were wasted, In 2018, 5.9% of children were overweight,
were stunted. equivalent to 49.5 million children. equivalent to 40.1 million children.
The current AARR (2.2%) is below the required Global prevalence was 7.3% in 2018, compared The baseline status has been updated from 5.4%
AARR (4.0%). There will be about 30 million stunted to 7.9% in 2012, demonstrating negligible progress in the 2018 Global Nutrition Report to 5.5%.
children above the 100 million target of 2025 towards the 5% target for 2025. A substantial
if current trends continue. The baseline status increase in efforts will be required to break the
has been updated from 165.2 million children in global status of inertia in wasting and lower the
the 2018 Global Nutrition Report to 165.8 million. rate in the direction of the 5% target by 2025.
target 30% relative reduction in mean target A 25% relative reduction in the
population intake of salt (sodium chloride). prevalence of raised blood pressure or
contain the prevalence of raised blood
pressure, according to national circumstance.
MEN
Baseline (2010) 5.6g per day Baseline (2014) 24.3%
UPDATED DATA
target Halt the rise in prevalence. target Halt the rise in prevalence.
MEN MEN
Baseline (2014) 10.4% Baseline (2012) 8.7%
WOMEN WOMEN
Baseline (2014) 14.4% Baseline (2012) 7.7%
In 2016, 284.1 million men and In 2014, 217.8 million men and 204.4 million
393.5 million women were obese – women were living with diabetes –
677.6 million adults in total. 422.1 million adults in total.
Probability of meeting the global target is almost Probability of meeting the global target is low (<1% for
zero for both sexes based on projections to 2025. men, 1% for women) based on projections to 2025.
Source: UNICEF global databases Infant and Young Child Feeding, 2019, UNICEF/WHO/World Bank Joint Child Malnutrition Estimates Expanded Database:
Stunting, Wasting and Overweight, (March 2019, New York), NCD Risk Factor Collaboration, WHO Global Health Observatory and Global Burden of Disease, the
Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, UNICEF-WHO low birthweight estimates, 2019.
Note: Baseline year aligns as close as possible to the year that each target was adopted (generally 2012 for maternal, infant and young child nutrition targets, and
2014 for diet-related non-communicable disease (NCD) targets). For diabetes, given the lack of global post-2014 data, data in 2012 are shown as the baseline for
reference. Latest year reflects the most recent year for which data is shown. Childhood refers to children under 5 years of age; salt intake is adults aged 25 years
and older, all other adult targets are for those 18 years and over. Data on diet-related NCDs (all but salt) is age-standardised using the WHO standard population.
The methodologies for tracking progress differ across targets. See Appendix 1 for definitions of indicators. See Appendix 2 for details on data and methods used to
assess progress towards global nutrition targets.
All diet-related NCD targets are globally off Overall, malnutrition persists at unacceptably
course and at alarming levels, with projected high levels on a global scale. Despite some
probabilities of meeting any of the targets improvements in exclusive breastfeeding,
being close to zero. Mean global salt intake for progress overall is far too slow to meet the
adults (aged 25+ years) is estimated at 5.6g/day, 2025 global nutrition targets. Intensified efforts
slightly higher in men (5.8g/day) than women and actions are needed to reach each of
(5.3g/day). Globally, 1.13 billion (22.1%) adults those targets.
(18+ years) have raised blood pressure, more men
(597.4 million, 24.1%) than women (529.2 million,
20.1%). A staggering 677.6 million (13.1%) adults
(18+ years) are obese worldwide, with more
women being obese (393.5 million, 15.1%) than
men (284.1 million, 11.1%). Diabetes affects
422.1 million (8.5%) adults (18+ years), with slightly
more men living with diabetes (217.8 million, 9.0%)
than women (204.4 million, 7.9%).
FIGURE 2.2
Global prevalence of infant and young child feeding indicators, child and adolescent and adult nutrition indicators
Source: UNICEF global databases Infant and Young Child Feeding, 2019, NCD Risk Factor Collaboration 2019, WHO Global Health Observatory 2019 and Global
Burden of Disease, the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation 2019, UNICEF-WHO low birthweight estimates, 2019.
Note: Data on adult indicators for those aged 18 and older and child and adolescent indicators for those aged 5–19 is age-standardised using the WHO standard
population. The methodologies for tracking progress differ between targets. See Appendix 1 for definitions of indicators. See Appendix 2 for details of data and methods
used to assess progress towards global nutrition targets.
Anaemia
49 138 7
12 49 85 48
Exclusive breastfeeding
33 16 22 123
Childhood stunting
31 28 17 118
Childhood wasting
40 15 24 115
Childhood overweight
41 31 122
180 14
Obesity, women
178 16
Diabetes, men
8 182 4
Diabetes, women
26 164 4
Source: UNICEF global databases Infant and Young Child Feeding, 2019, UNICEF/WHO/World Bank Joint Child Malnutrition Estimates Expanded Database: Stunting,
Wasting and Overweight, (March 2019, New York), NCD Risk Factor Collaboration 2019, WHO Global Health Observatory 2019, UNICEF-WHO Low birthweight
estimates, 2019.
Notes: Assessment based on 194 countries. Childhood is under-5, and diet-related non-communicable disease (NCD) targets are assessed for adults 18 years and
over. The methodologies for tracking progress differ between targets. See Appendix 1 for definitions of indicators. See Appendix 2 for details of data and methods
used to assess progress towards global nutrition targets.
FIGURE 2.4
Map of countries with overlapping forms of stunting in children under 5, anaemia among women of reproductive age, and
overweight in adult women
COUNTRY BURDEN
Insufficient data Anaemia only Overweight and anaemia Anaemia and stunting
Overweight only Stunting only Overweight and stunting Overweight, anaemia and stunting
SAINT LUCIA
BARBADOS
TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO
MARSHALL IS.
MALDIVES
SÃO TOMÉ
AND PRINCIPE SEYCHELLES
VANUATU SAMOA
FIJI
TONGA
Source: UNICEF/WHO/World Bank Joint Child Malnutrition Estimates Expanded Database: Stunting, Wasting and Overweight, (March 2019, New York), NCD Risk
Factor Collaboration 2019, WHO Global Health Observatory 2019.
Notes: Prevalence (%) thresholds used to determine whether a country is experiencing a high prevalence for a given form of malnutrition: stunting in children aged
under 5 years: ≥20%; anaemia among women of reproductive age (15–49 years): ≥20%; overweight (including obesity) in adult women aged ≥18 years: body mass
index of ≥25kg/m2 ≥35%. Based on latest data available for 143 countries.
Countries affected by conflict or other forms New analysis by the Global Nutrition Report
of fragility (as discussed in Chapter 1) are at a demonstrates that fragile countries (20 of 43,
higher risk for malnutrition. In 2016, 1.8 billion 46.5%) and extremely fragile countries (7 of 15,
people (24% of the world’s population) were 46.7%) are disproportionally burdened by
living in fragile or extremely fragile countries. 5 high levels of all three forms of malnutrition
This figure is projected to grow to 2.3 billion compared to non-fragile countries (10 of 136,
people by 2030 and 3.3 billion by 2050. In such 7.4%) (Figure 2.5). Likewise, a greater proportion
settings, prevalence of wasting 6 among of fragile countries (42 of 43, 97.7%) and
children under 5 years of age, an acute form of extremely fragile countries (14 of 15, 93.3%)
malnutrition, can be used to assess the recent experience at least two forms of malnutrition
nutrition status of these young children, as well at high levels compared with non-fragile
as the overall food and nutrition situation of countries (68 of 136, 50.0%). Of note, there
the general population.7 A wasting prevalence are variations in the forms of malnutrition
of 15% or more is regarded as very high and a that fragile, extremely fragile and non-fragile
trigger for intervention.8 Tufts University carried settings mostly face. Non-fragile countries are
out a study in four countries: Bangladesh and mostly burdened by high levels of overweight
Niger (both fragile, following the classification (overweight alone or overlapping with other
of OECD),9 and Chad and South Sudan forms, 74 of 136, 54.4%), whereas fragile
(both extremely fragile, following the same countries experience high levels of anaemia
classification). This study found that, over the (41 of 43, 95.3%) and extremely fragile countries
last decade, acute malnutrition prevalence10 have high levels of anaemia and stunting
has occasionally dipped below 15%, but has (14 of 15, 93.3%). These findings highlight the
generally remained above this threshold, need to understand and address drivers of
despite substantial humanitarian efforts. fragility itself, and how these lead to unequal
nutrition outcomes.
FIGURE 2.5
Overlapping forms of stunting in children under 5, anaemia in adolescent girls and women, and overweight in adult women,
by fragility
COUNTRY BURDEN
Insufficient data Anaemia only Overweight and anaemia Anaemia and stunting
Overweight only Stunting only Overweight and stunting Overweight, anaemia and stunting
100%
Percentage of countries with those
defined forms of overlapping malnutrition
7.4%
0.7%
80%
46.5% 46.7%
38.2%
60%
3.7% 0.7% 4.7%
8.1% 9.3%
40% 4.4%
46.7%
20% 37.2%
36.8%
0% 2.3% 6.7%
136 Non-fragile countries 43 Fragile countries 15 Extremely fragile countries
Source: UNICEF/WHO/World Bank Joint Child Malnutrition Estimates Expanded Database: Stunting, Wasting and Overweight, (March 2019, New York), NCD Risk
Factor Collaboration 2019, WHO Global Health Observatory 2019, OECD 2018.
Notes: Prevalence (%) thresholds used to determine whether a country is experiencing a high prevalence for a given form of malnutrition: stunting in children under
5 years: ≥20%; anaemia in adolescent girls and women aged 15–49 years: ≥20%; overweight (including obesity) in adult women aged ≥18 years: body mass index of
≥25kg/m2 ≥35%. The figure is based on latest data for 194 countries. Numbers and percentages shown in each column correspond to each country group, classified
by fragility state, as non-fragile, fragile and extremely fragile. This determination is based on the OECD States of Fragility 2018 framework, assessed by five core
dimensions: political, societal, economic, environmental, and security.11
Source: UNICEF global databases Infant and Young Child Feeding, 2019.
Notes: Prevalence (%) estimates are based on population-weighted means of between 70 and 85 countries, using latest available data across all population groups
by indicator (number of countries varies by indicator due to differences in available surveys). Inferences may be affected by the different number of included
countries. Location is classified as ‘urban’ and ‘rural’ (as defined in the survey). Wealth is asset-based wealth scores at the household level and is classified as ‘poor’
(lowest wealth quintile) and ‘rich’ (highest wealth quintile). Education is classified as ‘none or primary’ and ‘secondary or higher’ and refers to educational level of
the mother. Definitions of all indicators can be found in Appendix 1.
Inequalities in stunting, 79 countries, and 10% or higher in 62 countries.
This wealth gap is greatest in Guatemala
wasting and overweight (poorest 66.4%, richest 17.5%, difference 49.0%),
among children under 5 Nigeria (poorest 62.8%, richest 18.3%, difference
44.5%) and Lao PDR (poorest 60.6%, richest
Figure 2.7 presents the prevalence of stunting, 19.7%, difference 40.9%).15
wasting and overweight (including obesity) in
children aged under 5 years by urban–rural Stunting is also higher among children with less
location, sex, wealth and education, using the educated (39.2%) versus more educated (24.0%)
population-weighted mean of 98 countries mothers. Of 82 countries with available stunting
for which there is available data across all data by maternal education, the education
population groups. Similarly to IYCF indicators, gap is 5% or higher in 62 countries, and 10%
mostly low- and lower-middle-income countries or higher in 40 countries. This gap is largest
are represented. This data suggests that in Guatemala (higher 25.9%, lower 55.4%,
absolute inequalities are more profound for difference 29.5%), Burundi (higher 31.3%, lower
stunting compared to wasting and overweight. 58.6%, difference 27.3%) and Eritrea (higher
Across all three indicators, no major differences 19.4%, lower 46.2%, difference 26.8%).
are noted by sex, while largest inequalities are
seen by wealth: stunting and wasting are more Of 110 countries with available stunting data by
prevalent among the poorest, and overweight location, children living in rural areas (35.6%)
among the richest. have higher stunting rates than those living
in urban areas (25.6%). The location gap is at
Location and education show contrasting least 5% in 70 countries, and at least 10% in
inequalities for stunting and wasting versus 41. It is largest in Burundi (rural 58.8%, urban:
overweight. Stunting and wasting prevalence is 27.8%, difference 30.9%) and Lao PDR (rural
higher among children in rural areas and with 48.6%, urban 27.4%, difference 21.2%).
less educated mothers, whereas the reverse is Peru is a country with large location and
seen for overweight, which is higher for children wealth inequalities. Spotlight 2.1 shows the links
in urban areas and with more educated mothers. between urban–rural location and wealth, and
Such wealth, location and education gaps are how these impact stunting in Peru.
evident even in mostly low- and lower-middle-
income settings. This perpetuates vulnerability
and creates barriers to escaping poverty, posing Wasting
a significant challenge to the global community
and its commitment to leave no one behind and There are modest inequalities in wasting
reach the zero-hunger target. prevalence by wealth, with only small
differences by sex, location and education.
Rates are only slightly higher in boys (12.8%)
Stunting than girls (11.5%), for children located in rural
(12.4%) versus urban (11.4%) areas, and for
To quantify gaps by sociodemographics, we children of mothers with less (12.9%) versus
assessed all countries with available data for more (11.2%) education. For wasting, the
a given population group, and not just those gap was largest between children living in
with data for all groups. The largest inequalities the poorest (14.1%) versus the richest (10.0%)
are seen by wealth, followed by education and households. Of 107 countries with available
location, while stunting is only slightly higher in wasting data, the wealth gap is 5% or greater
boys (33.5%) than girls (31.2%). Average stunting in 15 countries. It is largest in Djibouti (poorest
rates are estimated to be more than twice 28.3%, richest 12.8%, difference 15.5%), South
as high among children living in the poorest Sudan (poorest 30.1%, richest 17.4%, difference
households (43.6%) compared with those in the 12.8%) and Eritrea (poorest 20.3%, richest 7.8%,
richest (18.6%). The magnitude of this wealth difference 12.5%).
gap varies across the 92 countries with available
stunting data by wealth, with the absolute
difference in prevalence being 5% or higher in
FIGURE 2.7
Inequalities in stunting, wasting and overweight in children under 5, by urban–rural location, sex, wealth and education
STUNTING
Urban 25.6% Rural 35.6%
WASTING
Urban 11.4% Rural 12.4%
OVERWEIGHT
Rural 4.0% Urban 4.9%
Source: UNICEF/WHO/World Bank Joint Child Malnutrition Estimates Expanded Database: Stunting, Wasting and Overweight, (March 2019, New York).
Notes: Childhood refers to 0–59 months. Estimates are based on population-weighted means of 98 countries for which there is available data across all population
groups by indicator using the latest available estimates for each country between the years 2000 and 2018. ‘None or primary’ and ‘secondary or higher’ refer to
education levels of the mother. Wealth quintiles are determined by asset-based wealth scores at the household level, where highest refers to the wealthiest quintile
and lowest to the least wealthy quintile. Definitions of all indicators can be found in Appendix 1.
Peru has made progress in reducing stunting, supported by cross-party political commitment
to nutrition policy.16 However, current levels sit at 12.9%. Inequalities in stunting are evident by
urban–rural location: stunting affects 25.5% of children in rural areas and 8.2% of children in urban
areas. Wealth also interacts with urban–rural location (Figure 2.8): while the richest households
are predominantly found in urban areas and the poorest in rural areas, the urban poor have
stunting rates almost as high as the rural average; and stunting rates for the rural rich are the same
as the urban average. These intersecting inequalities are probably based on inequities such as:
marginalised ethnic groups residing predominantly in rural areas; poor access to services in rural
areas and for the poor everywhere; and less voice in political or social decision-making for poor
and rural populations.17 We need more information on these deeper determinants of undernutrition
in Peru in order to understand and address the drivers of unequal nutrition outcomes.
FIGURE 2.8
Inequalities in stunting in children under 5 between urban–rural location and wealth in Peru, 2017
30.3%
30%
25.5%
25%
23.8%
20%
15%
12.9% 13.2%
11.7%
10%
9.0%
8.2% 8.4%
7.2% Rural
Rural second-highest
4.8% middle
5%
4.3%
0%
Source: UNICEF/WHO/World Bank Joint Child Malnutrition Estimates Expanded Database: Stunting, Wasting and Overweight (March 2019, New York). Adapted
from Save the Children’s GRID data tool (https://campaigns.savethechildren.net/grid).
Notes: Prevalence estimates are based on the latest DHS-style survey carried out in 2017 in Peru. Wealth is asset-based wealth scores at the household separated
into quintiles. Size of the bubble represents the number of stunted children in a given category.
Substantial inequalities within countries in childhood malnutrition have motivated calls for more
granular local estimates to inform appropriate interventions and policies at the subnational level.
In addition, rises in childhood overweight and obesity are prompting more holistic targeting of both
undernutrition and overweight. Recent geospatial estimates from the Institute for Health Metrics
and Evaluation (IHME)18 reveal how national-level figures can mask inequalities in prevalence and
levels of progress within nations and regions. Detailed results by country are available online via an
interactive visualisation tool,19 and the data can be downloaded from IHME’s website. 20
Using modelled estimates from 105 low- and middle-income countries in 2017, the analysis identified
the location of populations with highest prevalence, even within high-performing regions and countries
(Figure 2.9). Details on data and methods used have been published elsewhere.21 For example, much of
Latin America, the Caribbean, and East Asia have low national prevalence of stunting in children under
5 years of age. At the subnational level, however, prevalence can reach above 40% in communities
of southern Mexico and central Ecuador, approaching levels seen in sub-Saharan Africa and South
Asia. Critical wasting prevalence (≥15%) in 2017 was apparent across the Sahelian region, stretching
from Mauritania to Sudan, as well as in areas of South Asia. Although patterns varied broadly across
countries, large contiguous areas with ≥15% child overweight were found across most of Latin America,
the Caribbean, northern and southern African countries, and East and Central Asia.
Paired with other data analyses within countries, these results can pinpoint locations with persistently
high levels of malnutrition. In 2017, regions with the highest prevalence of stunting were primarily
throughout much of sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia, and Oceania. There were communities with
estimated levels of 40% and higher in Jigawa State in Nigeria, Karuzi Province in Burundi, Uttar Pradesh
State in India and Houaphan Province in Laos. Areas of Somalia, northeastern Kenya, and Ethiopia’s
Afar and Somali regions experienced critical wasting (≥15%), as they coped with erratic climatic
conditions, competition for resources and civil instability. Overweight exceeded 15% in eastern Brazilian
states (e.g., Rio Grande do Sul and Minas Gerais), and Peru’s coastal cities of Tacna, Ilo, Islay and Callao.
In Africa, areas with estimated overweight prevalence greater than 15% were concentrated in North
Africa throughout Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Egypt and parts of Libya, as well as along South Africa’s
southern coast and in parts of Botswana and Zambia. Large areas in eastern and northern China and
throughout Mongolia also had estimated overweight prevalence greater than 15%.
Countries with the largest within-country inequalities in malnutrition rates are also highlighted
by this analysis. The largest disparities in stunting were observed in Nigeria, Indonesia and India,
where the levels varied four-fold across communities. The greatest levels of disparity in wasting
were estimated in Indonesia, Ethiopia, Nigeria and Kenya, with nine-fold differences in wasting
prevalence across communities. Within-country differences in child overweight were highest in
South Africa, Peru and China, with three-fold differences across communities. Such instances of
within-country inequalities highlight areas that lag far behind and require focused attention.
The modelled estimates also confirmed exemplar locations that have demonstrated improvement.
For example, Peru’s cross-cutting community-level strategy (El Presupuesto por Resultados) has been
praised for contributing to halving stunting levels in less than a decade. 22 Algeria, Uzbekistan and
Egypt have shown impressive progress in reducing disparities in malnutrition prevalence during the
study period. 23
This data can be used to inform priority-setting and direct resources to the areas of greatest need,
particularly when representative survey-based data is not available. Such geospatial analysis
can be used to inform decision-makers by identifying locations disproportionally affected by
malnutrition, and highlighting within-country inequalities.
FIGURE 2.9
Prevalence of stunting, wasting and overweight among children under 5 at the 5 × 5-km grid cell-level, 2017
<10 20 30 40 ≥50
<5 10 15 20 ≥25
Source: Stunting and wasting maps: Kinyoki D.K. et al., 2020. Mapping child growth failure across low- and middle-income countries. Nature, 577, pp. 231–34,
doi:10.1038/s41586-019-1878-8 Overweight map: doi:10.1038/s41591-020-0807-6
Notes: Based on data from 105 low- and middle-income countries in 2017, at 5km x 5km grid cell-level. Light grey indicates high-income countries that were
excluded from the model, while dark grey indicates areas where the total population density was less than ten individuals per 1km×1km grid cell.
While the latest available data provides a Country-level analysis across 80 countries with
snapshot of existing inequalities, repeated data available survey data, mostly low- or lower-
shows how these differences have changed middle-income countries, reveals that the
over time. Stunting rates have been slowly median annualised decrease in stunting prevalence
but steadily declining, with global prevalence is larger in the poorest group (0.8%) than in the
falling from 32.5% in 2000 to 21.9% in 2018. richest group (0.5%). In fact, the inequality between
Wasting prevalence (measured at one point the poorest and richest households in stunting
in time) is typically not analysed over time, as (wealth gap) is decreasing in 47 countries but
wasting can fluctuate rapidly over the course of increasing in 33 (Figure 2.10). For the 47 countries
a year. In contrast, prevalence of overweight in where the wealth gap is decreasing, the median
children under the age of 5 was 5.9% for 2018, annualised decrease is 0.5%, mainly due to
with no major differences noted since 2000 larger decreases in the prevalence of the poorest
(4.9%). Inequalities across nutrition indicators group. Of the 33 countries where the wealth gap
for children under the age of 5, as shown in is increasing, the median annualised increase is
Figure 2.7, were largest for stunting, particularly 0.3%, mainly due to larger decreases in the richest
by wealth. Therefore, exploring how this wealth group. In roughly half of fragile or extremely fragile
gap in stunting changes over time would countries, the wealth gap is increasing; in the rest it
provide new insights into nutrition inequalities. is decreasing, warranting further investigation.
FIGURE 2.10
Annualised change in wealth inequality in stunting prevalence in children under 5 across 80 countries, by fragility, 2000–2018
1.5%
Annualised change in wealth gap (%)
1.0%
0.5%
0.0%
-0.5%
-1.0%
-1.5%
-2.0%
Source: UNICEF/WHO/World Bank Joint Child Malnutrition Estimates Expanded Database: Stunting, Wasting and Overweight, (March 2019, New York) and OECD, 2018.
Notes: Annualised change refers to the difference in stunting prevalence between the lowest and highest wealth quintiles observed in each country (bar) between the years
2000 and 2018. Positive values indicate that the difference in stunting prevalence between the lowest (poorest) and highest (richest) wealth quintiles is increasing (wealth gap
increasing), whereas negative values indicate that the wealth gap is closing. Fragility is determined by the OECD States of Fragility 2018 framework, and is based on five core
dimensions: political, societal, economic, environmental and security. Wealth quintiles are determined by asset-based wealth scores at the household level, where highest
refers to the wealthiest quintile and lowest to the least wealthy. In all but four countries (Madagascar, Trinidad and Tobago, Montenegro, and Bosnia and Herzegovina), the
poorest group has consistently higher prevalence than the richest. All of those four have reduced their wealth gap, with a median annualised decrease of 0.6%.
FIGURE 2.11
Prevalence of stunting in children under 5 by wealth for select countries, 2000–2017
60.7%
60% 53.3%
50.8%
50% 43.3% 45.6%
40% 31.2%
30%
20.2% 18.3%
20% 13.3%
10%
0%
2000 2004 2008 2012 2016 2002 2006 2010 2014 2004 2007 2010 2013 2016
60% 54.3%
50% 47.7%
40% 38.8%
29.2%
30% 24.8%
20% 17.1% 14.9% 13.5%
8.4%
10% 6.8% 4.8% 2.5%
0%
2001 2005 2009 2013 2017 2005 2008 2011 2014 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016
Source: UNICEF/WHO/World Bank Joint Child Malnutrition Estimates Expanded Database: Stunting, Wasting and Overweight (March 2019, New York).
Notes: Countries with greatest increases and decreases in the gap between the highest and lowest wealth quintiles for stunting are chosen using the earliest and
latest post-2000 data points and calculating the absolute change in gap. Wealth quintiles are determined by asset-based wealth scores at the household level,
where highest refers to the most wealthy quintile and lowest to the least wealthy.
FIGURE 2.12
Global prevalence of underweight, overweight and obesity in children and adolescents aged 5–19 years by sex, 2000–2016
Male Female
37.0%
40%
Prevalence (%)
31.6%
30%
19.2%
29.6%
20%
25.9%
10.3%
7.8%
10% 17.5% 3.3%
10.3%
0%
5.6%
2.5%
2000 2004 2008 2012 2016 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016
FIGURE 2.13
Global prevalence of underweight, overweight and obesity in children and adolescents aged 5–19 years and adults, by
country income, 2016
Male Female
Low-income countries Low-income countries
Lower-middle-income countries Lower-middle-income countries
Underweight
ADOLESCENT
CHILD AND
Overweight
Obesity
Underweight
ADULT
Overweight
Obesity
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70%
Male Female
39.2%
Underweight by gender Overweight by gender Obesity by gender
40%
Prevalence (%)
31.7%
38.5%
30%
29.7%
20% 15.1%
11.5% 10.6%
9.4%
10%
11.1% 11.1%
8.6%
0% 6.7%
2000 2004 2008 2012 2016 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016
FIGURE 2.15
Global annualised change in sex inequality for adult obesity, by fragility, 2000 and 2016
0.5%
Annualised change in gap between the sexes (%)
0.4%
0.3%
0.2%
0.1%
0.0%
-0.1%
-0.2%
-0.3%
FIGURE 2.16
Global prevalence of raised blood pressure and diabetes in adults by sex, 2000–2015
Male Female
Raised blood pressure by gender Diabetes by gender
40%
Prevalence (%)
30% 26.4%
24.1%
20%
22.8%
20.1%
9.0%
10% 6.7%
7.9%
0% 6.5%
2000 2003 2007 2011 2015 2000 2002 2006 2010 2014
Mainstreaming
nutrition within
universal health
coverage
2012. Washington DC, US.
A clinical dietitian teaches a patient how to manage weight and blood pressure through better nutrition.
Photo: US Department of Agriculture/Stephen Ausmus.
1 Poor diets and resulting malnutrition are among the greatest
KEY societal challenges in our era, causing vast health, economic
and environmental burdens.
FIGURE 3.1
Framework for equitable integration of nutrition within health systems
Integration of nutrition
within health systems
70%
Percentage of countries
66.7%
60.0%
60%
55.6% 56.3% 55.6%
53.8%
48.1%
50%
46.2% 46.2% 46.2%
43.8% 44.4%
42.3%
40% 37.5%
31.3%
29.6%
30% 26.9%
25.0%
18.8%
20%
16.0%
12.0%
10%
4.0% 4.0%
0.0%
0%
Anaemia Exclusive Low birth Childhood Childhood Childhood
breastfeeding weight stunting wasting overweight
80%
Percentage of countries
72.0%
70%
60%
52.0%
50%
42.3%
40.7%
40%
37.0%
34.6%
30.8%
29.6%
30%
25.9%
25.0%
23.1%
20.0%
20%
12.5%
8.0%
10%
6.3% 6.3%
0%
Salt intake Raised blood Adult and Diabetes
pressure adolescent
overweight
Source: Further analysis of GNPR2. 23
Notes: Bars correspond to the percentage (%) of countries within a given income group that have included in their health sector plans nutrition objectives
related to the global nutrition targets. Of 167 countries reporting nutrition policies in 2016–2017, 95 reported health sector plans with integral nutrition
objectives. Of those, 94 (all but Niue) were classified by gross national income per capita as high- (25, 26.6%), upper-middle- (26, 27.7%), lower-middle- (27,
28.7%) and low- (16, 17.0%) income groups. 24 Generalisations may be affected by the lack of representativeness within and across country income groups.
Health workforce Utilising a variety of health professionals
for delivery of nutrition interventions would
facilitate the integration of nutrition into
The health workforce is at the heart of
health platforms and help alleviate inequities
the healthcare delivery system, consisting
in access. The number of qualified nutrition
largely of healthcare providers/professionals,
professionals should be increased as part of
including physicians (medical doctors), nutrition
strengthening the delivery of nutrition services
professionals (dieticians/nutritionists), nurses
within the health system. Depending on the
and midwives, health management and support
type of the intervention and country-specific
workers. This includes both skilled professional
context, other health professionals could and
as well as lay health workers, those who are paid
should play important roles. Recognising the
and unpaid, and the public and private sector. 25
central role of physicians in healthcare provision,
benchmarks for minimum nutrition knowledge
Universal health coverage cannot be achieved
and skills should be established for physicians,
unless the capacity of the health workforce
such as through compulsory nutrition education
is increased. Health workforce capacity
and continuing educational requirements.
broadly relates to availability (numbers and
Yet, currently physicians are not necessarily
supply), distribution (recruitment, allocation
equipped to deliver high-quality and effective
and retention) and performance (productivity
nutrition care.36 Similar benchmarks for nutrition
and quality of delivered services). 26 Low- and
education should be established for all other key
middle-income countries are faced with large
allied healthcare providers, such as nurses and
deficiencies and inequitable distribution of
midwifes, to ensure that any health professionals
qualified health workers. This is a major barrier
involved in the delivery of nutrition care are
in delivering essential health services, 27 and the
consistently and rigorously trained.
situation is projected to worsen. 28
It is important also to recognise the critical role
In the case of nutrition, this inequitable
of frontline workers, such as community health
distribution is even more profound. The density
workers, in covering the increased demand for
of trained nutrition professionals29 (per 100,000
essential nutrition services at a lower cost and
people) has been identified as an appropriate
especially when there are key staff shortages
measure of capacity.30 While norms for an
(that can be further aggravated in humanitarian
acceptable level for this indicator have not yet
emergencies). It is imperative to ensure that
been developed, the figures are far too low at
these workers receive adequate nutrition training
the moment. Of the 194 countries surveyed, 159
and are appropriately equipped to provide
responded and 126 of those provided detailed
quality nutrition care. Yet, pre-service nutrition
information to enable assessment. The median
training curricula for health workers typically
number of trained nutrition professionals
lasts less than 20 hours, while the trainers have
stands at only 2.331 per 100,000 people.32
limited capacity. 37
Only 23 countries have densities of 10 nutrition
professionals per 100,000 population or higher
as reported in GNPR2.33 The same report also
highlights that the WHO Americas and Western
Pacific regions have the highest densities of
nutrition professionals (median 3.7 and 4.2 per
100,000 people respectively), while the Africa
region has the lowest (median 0.9 per 100,000
people), with no trained nutrition professionals at
all reported in six countries. 34 Quality standards
in nutrition education, by means of national
qualifying exams and board certification, as
well as continuous education requirements,
are also essential to ensure quality of provided
nutrition care. Notably, national licence
and qualification systems for dieticians and
nutritionists are currently largely absent from
lower-income countries. 35
FIGURE 3.3
Annual expenditure by disease category in 48 countries, 2016
35
Average expenditure (US$ per person)
30.8
30
25
20
16.0
15
9.6
10
7.3
5.9
5
1.3 1.2 1.5
0.7 0.6 0.3 0.4
0
al e
al e
m n
as le
m n
as le
s
s
as d
ie l
ie l
as d
he ctiv
he ctiv
m tio
nc a
rie
nc a
m tio
rie
se b
se an
se b
se an
th
th
es
es
es
ie ion
ie ion
es
di ica
es
di nica
s
es
ra sa
ju
ju
ra sa
u
di s
di s
In
In
ic iou
fic rit
fic rit
un
od
od
ic iou
og ni
og ni
de ut
de Nut
pr mu
pr mu
m
m
pr
sit ct
pr
sit ct
N
om
om
ra fe
Re
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ra fe
Im
Im
pa In
pa In
-c
-c
on
on
N
N
TABLE 3.1
Nutrition interventions included in the Essential Universal Health Coverage (EUHC) developed by the World Bank in 2017
SPOTLIGHT 3.1
Addressing equity and social justice: India’s Transformation of
Aspirational Districts initiative
Alok Kumar, Rajan Sankar and Basanta Kumar Kar
In India, one in two women of reproductive age is anaemic, one in three children under five years
of age is stunted, and one in five children under five years is wasted. Inequalities are evident for
stunting, with stunting prevalence being 10.1% higher in rural vs urban areas. Rates of overweight
or obesity reach 20.7% in adult women and 18.9% in adult men. With this coexistence of
undernutrition and overweight or obesity, India faces the double burden of malnutrition.66
Recognising that the quality of life of all its citizens is not consistent with India’s significant
economic growth over the past ten years, and that that there is major variation within states
in terms of social and economic development indicators, India launched the Transformation of
Aspirational Districts programme in January 2018. This is a unique programme that focuses policy
attention towards addressing inequity, social injustice and exclusion in 115 ‘aspirational districts’
in 28 states, through a concerted effort to improve the performance of services – including health,
nutrition, education, infrastructure, agriculture and water resources – in districts with pockets of
under-development. The programme aims to remove heterogeneity in living standards in India
and improve the ability of all individuals to participate fully in the economy through the rapid and
effective transformation of the target districts.
One aim of the programme is to increase the number of women and children in the 1,000-day window
of opportunity who are identified by Accredited Social Health Activists and Anganwadi67 workers in
these districts and targeted with a set of converging health and nutrition interventions. These include
four antenatal-care visits, iron supplementation during pregnancy, treatment of anaemia, increasing
the number of institutional and home deliveries attended by a skilled birth attendant, early initiation
of breastfeeding, counselling on infant and young-child feeding, birth weight measurement, child
growth monitoring and treatment of diarrhoea with oral rehydration salts and zinc.
A key innovation within this programme was to introduce six-monthly household surveys to gauge
the coverage and quality of the interventions. The results demonstrate encouraging progress
in health and nutrition outcomes (Figure 3.4). This progress can be attributed to an inclusive
approach with firm appreciation of ground realities, which ensures the district is kept at the locus
of inclusive development.
90% 90%
Percentage change between the two surveys
80% 80%
70% 70%
60% 60%
50% 50%
40% 40%
30% 30%
20% 20%
10% 10%
0% 0%
Percentage of pregnant and
recently pregnant women registered
for antenatal care
Pregnant and recently Child feeding and nutrition Child health services
pregnant women
Source: National Family Health Survey (NFHS-4), Champions of Change, Aspirational District, NITI Aayog, Poshan Abhiyaan (National Nutrition Mission), Ministry of
Women and Child Development, Government of India.
Note: The length of the line indicates the magnitude of the change (delta) between the two rounds of surveys; an upward pointing arrow denotes positive change,
and a downward pointing arrow a negative change.
Improved programme delivery is spurred by competition, based on outcomes and sustained targeted efforts of the
state and local governments. District implementation teams are also provided with small-area estimates derived from
sophisticated statistical analysis of the household data, providing ‘development intelligence’ to direct field action.
FIGURE 3.5
Population coverage of selected maternal, infant and young child interventions delivered in healthcare settings
Zinc supplementation
during diarrhoea (n=57) 15%
FIGURE 3.6
Population coverage of selected maternal, infant and young child interventions delivered in healthcare settings,
by population wealth
Richest Poorest
50.4% 83.6%
53.7% 61.4%
46.6% 68.9%
49.9% 54.4%
25.3% 42.7%
13.5% 18.6%
12.4% 17.8%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
Coverage (%)
Source: Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) and Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS) published between 2012 and 2018, latest available data used by country.
Notes: Coverage is defined as the proportion of people who receive a specific intervention or treatments. Interventions are ranked by the median percentage (%) of
whole population coverage as shown in Figure 3.5. Wealth is asset-based wealth score at the household level and is classified as ‘poor’ (lowest wealth quintile) and
‘rich’ (highest wealth quintile).
PERCENTAGE OF
Newborns receiving early initiation breastfeeding (within the first hour) 56.7%
n=32
Source: Demographic and Health Surveys (DHSs) published between 2012 and 2018, latest available data used by country.
Note: Population coverage is defined as the proportion of people who receive a specific intervention or treatments.
▶ Optimising health records for nutrition care should be the basis for delivering
sound nutrition services and identifying those in greater need. The collection,
analysis and dissemination of high-quality disaggregated nutrition data should
be mainstreamed in public health information systems, to underpin the design
and implementation of equitable nutrition interventions.
POINTS 2 There is a need for food systems to: go beyond a narrow focus
on energy intake; reduce the dominance of cereal production
(maize, rice and wheat); and increase the availability of healthy
foods such as fruits and vegetables, nuts and whole grains.
External drivers
Source: Adapted from HLPE (2017), Nutrition and food systems. A report by the High Level Panel of Experts on Food Security and Nutrition of the Committee on
World Food Security, Rome.
Inequities across food who do not have the resources to adapt fast
enough to environmental changes and are
environments limited in their options6 for accessing healthy
food. Between demand and supply, a well-
regulated food environment – with specific
attention to environmental impact, ecosystems
Food availability management and effect on climate change
– is an opportunity to ensure more equitable
Food availability refers to the type and diversity availability and accessibility of food for all, and
of food on offer, and is affected by food to reduce inequality of nutrition outcomes.
production systems. 2 Producing food to enable
quality, diversity, safety and healthy diets
requires consideration of issues such as: water
and land access, food losses at farm gates, loss
of biodiversity in species and varieties of food,
and marginalised traditional or indigenous
foods. 3 Global agriculture has largely focused on
FIGURE 4.2
Global average energy intake by food group, 1971–2013
3,000 2,875.7
Kcals per capita per day
Other
2,610.7 Animal fats
2,500 2,368.7
Meat and eggs
Pulses
1,500
Sugar and sweeteners
Other cereals
Source: Prabhu Pingali, 2015. Agricultural policy and nutrition outcomes – getting beyond the preoccupation with staple grains. Food Security, 7, pp. 583–91.
Donor funding for research and development has prioritised major staples at the cost of more
nutritious crops and livestock. The Consortium of International Agricultural Research Centers
(CGIAR),8 for instance, has traditionally allocated most of its commodity research budget to the major
staples, increasing this after the 2008 food price crisis.9 The balance of funding has to be shared
between fifteen crops, livestock, fish and trees. Research and development investments should
prioritise neglected staples such as sorghum, millets and tropical tubers. Such investments could
provide new opportunities for growth where agricultural conditions are not ideal. These opportunities
would make the production of healthy food more attractive to producers and therefore improve the
availability of more nutritious food, especially for the rural poor.10
Poorly developed market infrastructure and the large number of smallholders results in high
transaction costs (arising from bargaining, managing, policing and arbitration) for integration
into fresh food and livestock value chains. This has discouraged smallholders from diversifying
their production systems. Given the demonstrated link between food production and dietary
diversity, this affects dietary composition.11 Investments in transport systems, cold chains
(temperature controlled storage and transportation facilities) and improved connectivity allow
for better functioning of markets for perishable products. Institutional interventions, such as
producer organisations (formal rural organisations whose members organise themselves with the
objective of improving farm income through improved production, marketing, and local processing
activities) help to reduce transaction costs and form market linkages for small farms. A holistic
view of agricultural policy would require governments to look beyond the major staples to ensure
availability of and access to a wider and healthier basket of food.
FIGURE 4.3
Impacts of different food groups on the environment
200%
Environmental pressure (percentage of 2010 impact)
187.4%
180%
167.1% 165.0%
160%
151.4% 153.8%
140%
120%
100%
80%
60%
40%
20%
0%
2010 2050 2010 2050 2010 2050 2010 2050 2010 2050
Greenhouse Cropland use Bluewater use Nitrogen Phosphorus
gas emissions application application
People’s physical access to diverse types of Geographic conditions and lack of appropriate
food in a given food environment depends infrastructure can limit the availability and
on four types of food sources: production- distribution of food. This is especially true for
based entitlement (growing food); trade- perishable foods, in low-income contexts and
based entitlement (buying food); own-labour rural places where built living environments
entitlement (working for food); inheritance and are often inadequate for ensuring healthy
transfer entitlement (being given food and safe food supplies. Critical factors that
by others). influence access include: mobility (distance
to food entry points and available means of
transportation); health; purchasing power and
relative food prices; access to land of adequate
size and quality, agricultural inputs, technology
and services; time, facilities and equipment
available for food preparation; knowledge and
skills. The inequities in food accessibility for the
rural, the poor and the geographically isolated
result in limited access to sufficient quantities of
healthy food.13
SPOTLIGHT 4.2
The high cost of nutritious foods in poorer countries
Derek Headey
Poor diets during pregnancy and in early childhood are a leading cause of undernutrition in early
life, which manifest in compromised physical growth and brain development. But why are diets –
including those of infants and young children – so inadequate in less developed countries?
A recent study suggests that the affordability of nutritious foods may be a more serious constraint
than is commonly thought. For 657 foods in 176 countries, the study constructed ‘relative caloric
prices’ (RCPs), which measure the cost of a given food calorie (e.g. egg calories) relative to the cost
of a calorie from a staple food (e.g. rice). Conceptually, RCPs capture the cost of diversifying away
from the starchy staples that poor people depend on. They also have the convenient property of
being currency-free, making international comparisons relatively straightforward.
The authors found that nutrient-dense foods are often very expensive sources of calories relative
to staples (Figure 4.4). Egg calories in Burkina Faso, for example, are around 15 times as expensive
as calories from starchy staples like maize, rice and sorghum, whereas egg calories in the US are
just 1.9 times as expensive as those from America’s main staples.16 Throughout sub-Saharan Africa,
eggs, fresh milk and fortified infant cereals are prohibitively expensive for the poor, though fish is
relatively affordable in West and Central Africa. Dairy is quite cheap in India, while fish is relatively
cheap in Southeast Asia.
The high cost of many nutrient-dense foods in populations most at risk of undernutrition is a major
barrier to resolving undernutrition and warrants urgent policy attention. A key objective of pro-equity,
nutrition-sensitive food policies should be to improve the affordability of nutrient-rich foods, both
economy-wide and for the poorest households. At the level of a whole economy, this could be
done by achieving lower prices through improved agricultural and trade policies. For the poorest
households, affordability could be increased by targeted income support, nutritional assistance
and agricultural development programmes that encourage diversification and consumption of
home-produced foods. The critical importance of feeding nutrient-dense foods to infants and
young children, and for pregnant and breastfeeding women, also justifies efforts to improve
nutritional knowledge among both present and future care-givers.
FIGURE 4.4
Heat map of RCPs of animal-sourced foods in 176 countries, 2011
Very cheap = RCP of <2 Cheap = RCP of 2–4 Expensive = RCP of 4–8 Very expensive = RCP of >8
Red meat Milk White meat Eggs Fish and Other dairy Red meat
(unprocessed) seafood (processed)
All countries
(N=176)
Country income status
High income
(N=64)
Upper middle
(N=44)
Lower middle
(N=41)
Low income
(N=27)
Europe
(N=39)
Latin America and Caribbean
Regions
(N=38)
Middle East and North Africa
(N=18)
North America and Australasia
(N=6)
Central Asia
(N=6)
South-East Asia
(N=10)
China
(N=1)
Asia
(N=19)
Western and Central Africa
(N=27)
SPOTLIGHT 4.3
Global trends and patterns in processed food and drink sales
Phillip Baker, Priscila Machado, Kate Sievert, Kathryn Backholer, Colin Bell and
Mark Lawrence
Processed foods, and especially ‘ultra-processed foods’ such as savoury snacks, processed meats,
sugar-sweetened drinks, confectionery, frozen desserts, breakfast cereals and dairy products, now
comprise a significant share of many diets around the world. They are widely available, cheap
and intensively marketed. Such foods are often high in added sugars, trans fats and salt, as well
as low in fibre and nutrient-density. They are the major contributor to dietary energy in many
high-income countries and play an increasing role in the nutrition transition underway in countries
undergoing rapid economic and social change.
Yet there is still relatively little data on the role of processed foods and sugary drinks in diets,
especially in middle- and low-income countries (MICs and LICs), often because these categories are
absent from health and dietary surveys. Instead, industry sales data is often used to shine a light on
how purchasing these products is changing worldwide. Euromonitor International sales data reveals
patterns in worldwide purchasing, and differences between countries at different stages of economic
and social transition. Sales are increasing modestly or declining in many high-income countries (HICs)
but growing quickly in upper-middle- and lower-middle-income countries (UMICs and LMICs).
There are notable differences between countries in the types of foods and drinks purchased.
In HICs, a wider diversity of processed food types is purchased when compared to other regions.
However there are large increases in purchases of processed and convenience foods such as
savoury snacks, sweet biscuits, fruit snacks, baked goods, processed meat and meat substitutes.
In UMICs, the ‘culinary food ingredient’ categories (vegetable oils, sauces, dressings and
condiments) comprise a much greater share of purchases than in HICs (Figure 4.5).
Fizzy drinks make up the largest category of beverages consumed globally. However, sales in this
category are sharply declining or stagnant in many HICs and UMICs, but growing strongly from a
low baseline in LMICs and LICs. However, declines in the carbonates category in HICs have been
offset by significant growth in non-carbonate categories – for example, sports and energy drinks,
and the ready-to-drink coffee and tea categories (Figure 4.6).
foods
125.6
122.0 122.2 122.5 Meat substitutes
120
Breakfast cereals
Sweet biscuits,
100 snack bars and
fruit snacks
Processed seafood
80
Savoury snacks
Vegetable oil
60
Confectionary and
50.5
sweet spreads
44.5
37.8 Ice cream and
40 frozen desserts
27.8 Ready meals
22.0
20 16.2 Baked goods
11.0
7.7 Dairy products
3.9 4.2 4.3 4.5
and alternatives
0
Sauces, dressings
2003
2010
2017
2022
2003
2010
2017
2022
2003
2010
2017
2022
2003
2010
2017
2022
and condiments
High income Upper-middle income Lower-middle income Low income Processed meat
FIGURE 4.6
Sales of non-alcoholic drinks by country-income level, 2003–2017 with projections to 2022
180 Concentrates
Apparent consumption (kg per person)
173.8
169.9 167.7 168.4
160 Flavoured
milk drinks
140
Sports and
energy drinks
120
Fruit and
100 vegetable juice
Juice drinks
80 and nectars
62.8
59.1 61.8
60 Ready-to-drink
coffee, tea and
36.0 Asian specialty
40 drinks
2010
2017
2022
2003
2010
2017
2022
2003
2010
2017
2022
2003
2010
2017
2022
Note: Data from Euromonitor Passport Market Information Database for 73 high-income countries, 55 upper-middle-income countries, 43 lower-middle-income
countries, and 34 low-income countries.
FOOD SYSTEMS AND NUTRITION EQUITY 87
A recent study tried to address the question of whether the spread of supermarkets contributes
to rising overweight and obesity, with data from Kenya, 23 one of the countries with the highest
supermarket growth rates in Africa. The study focused on consumers in medium-sized towns.
Around 500 households were randomly selected, and, in these households, socioeconomic and
nutrition data was collected from male and female adults, first in 2012 and then again in 2015.
In 2015, more detailed medical data was also collected.
Mean body mass index (BMI) and the proportion of adults being overweight or obese were found
to be higher among those who bought some or all of their food in supermarkets than among
those who used only traditional retailers (Figure 4.7). However, this simple comparison does not
allow causal interpretation because supermarket users and non-users may also differ in terms
of other factors. The analysis on shopping in supermarkets and obesity found that buying food
in supermarkets instead of traditional markets is associated with an increased BMI of 0.64kg/m2
on average. The estimates also suggest that using supermarkets is associated with a 7% higher
probability of being overweight or obese (Figure 4.7). 24
Rising rates of obesity are known to contribute to several non-communicable diseases (NCDs).
Evaluating the medical data collected in 2015 reveals that buying food in supermarkets raises the
likelihood of suffering from pre-diabetes (by 16%) and the metabolic syndrome (by 7%). 25
These negative effects of supermarkets on adult nutrition and health can be attributed to the
fact that the average price per calorie of food from supermarkets is lower than from traditional
retailers. “Cheaper calories contribute to higher calorie consumption, which may improve food
security for households that suffer from calorie undersupply”. 26 However, in urban areas of Kenya,
adult overweight is now more prevalent than underweight. Also, supermarket users often consume
more processed foods.
The study results suggest that supermarkets can influence dietary habits to a significant extent.
Nevertheless, if properly managed, they could also have positive effects, such as making nutritious
foods more accessible to poor consumers at affordable prices.
FIGURE 4.7
Supermarket users and non-users in Kenya: body mass index and overweight, 2012 and 2015
Shopping in supermarkets Not shopping in supermarkets Shopping in supermarkets Not shopping in supermarkets
27 70%
Prevalence of overweight (%)
BMI
26.3
26 60%
58%
25.3 25.1
25 50%
46%
24.4 45%
24 40%
35%
23 30%
22 20%
21 10%
20 0%
2012 2015 2012 2015
Source: Demmler et al., 2018.
Notes: BMI = body mass index measured in kg/m2; overweight or obese = BMI>25kg/m2.
There is mounting global literature on the relationship between the food environment and
public health. This is particularly so around the effective prevention of non-communicable
diseases (NCDs) and prevention and management strategies concerning the food environment,
including food policy, promotion and marketing. However, there are gaps in evidence to inform
the development of appropriate interventions, especially within the context of LICs and LMICs.
Additionally, consensus on the definition, purpose and depth of the ‘food environment’ is required
to streamline future research.
There is also considerable diversity of opinion on standardised metrics and tools to measure the
food environment. Unlike high-income countries where formal channels to acquire food allow for
convenient measurement, LMIC food retail environments are dynamic, unregulated and possess
a large proportion of informal food vendors. This results in enormous variety in metrics in terms
of reference points (i.e. food accessibility), media coverage (i.e. food promotion) and level of
implementation (i.e. policies). Moreover, tools to measure the food environment are limited to
labour-intensive data collection processes in LMICs, compared to the use of global positioning
systems, geographical information systems, remote sensing and satellite imagery in richer
countries. Similarly, other dimensions of the food environment, such as food safety and food
quality, are often difficult to measure in an LMIC setting due to poor government regulation and
compliance, as well as instability.
The household food environment is a critical space for food purchasing decisions, food
preparation and, ultimately, development of food attitudes, knowledge, preferences and
behaviours. However, little is known about appropriate effective measures at this level.
A consensus on valid and reliable metrics and tools in an LMIC context is urgently needed to
assess the impact on health outcomes.
Within food-environment literature, there is a need for better representation of participants from
low- and lower-middle-income countries and of those from rural settings to discern demographic-
specific health needs. Finally, there are various empirical research gaps relating to data analysis,
including adjustment for confounding variables and poor disaggregation of data, for example, by
income level, gender and age.
The private food and drink sector has a responsibility both to promote healthy eating and
to prevent unhealthy diets under human rights principles. The sector must act following
established codes of conduct; governments and civil society should hold organisations
accountable to their commitments. There are ways in which commercial goals can work for the
public good as well. An example is the Scaling Up Nutrition (SUN) Business Network (SBN),62
established in 2015 as the business arm of the SUN Movement. The SUN Business Network
Indonesia has identified five key areas through which the private sector can contribute to
improved nutrition:
4. Workforce nutrition programmes, educating employees about the importance of nutritious foods
Through these approaches, food companies can help to make nutritious foods more accessible
to consumers, which in turn can significantly improve diets and health. The actions should
include transparent labelling, reducing sugar, salt and fat content in their products, and
fortifying their products with essential nutrients.64 Governments are also imposing regulations
to compel businesses to do more. For example, Denmark has introduced a ban on products
containing trans fats, while South Africa was the first country to legislate maximum salt levels in
foods.65 Food companies can also work with the nutrition community to improve the nutritional
quality of their products.
▶ The food and drink industry should comply with international and national
codes of conduct, including health and nutrition benefits to society and
environmental protection and improvement.
Equitable
financing for
nutrition
9.3
9.0 9.1
0.4 0.4
0.4 0.1 0.1
0.4 0.4 0.1
0.1
0.1
8 7.5 2.1
2.6
0.1 0.3 3.1
6.2 3.5
3.9
6 0.1 0.3
4.6 3.5
FIGURE 5.2
Government revenue and stunting prevalence in 61 countries
Botswana
2,500
2,000
Namibia
Costa Rica
1,500
1,000
Guatemala
500
Papua New Guinea
Madagascar
Burundi
0
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60%
Prevalence of stunting among children under 5 (%)
Source: UNICEF/WHO/World Bank Group: Joint child malnutrition estimates, OECD Development Assistance Committee (DAC) Creditor Reporting System (CRS), World Bank, 2019.
Notes: Non-grant government revenue includes tax and non-tax revenue but excludes grants. Amounts for 2017, divided by 2017 population data. Income groups as
defined by the World Bank country and lending groups, June 2019.
In 2018, the Federal Government of Somalia undertook nutrition budget analysis on its own
budget and five state governments.7 The investigation detailed both nutrition-sensitive spending
funded by domestic public resources and all aid spending reported to governments (Figure 5.3).
This produced several key findings, as follows.
Aid played a crucial role in financing for nutrition – the aid component of nutrition-sensitive areas
in 2017 was almost ten times larger than the share of domestic public resources (US$490 million
compared to US$55 million). A primary focus of aid in that year was in response to droughts, which
left an estimated 3.2 million people severely food-insecure and created a crisis that could not be
dealt with by governments alone.
Domestic public investment in nutrition was significantly lower in newly formed states – compared
to more established states in Somalia, state government investment in nutrition was substantially
lower in Galmudug (US$0.05/capita), Jubbaland (US$0.6/capita) and South West (US$0.2/capita).
FIGURE 5.3
Nutrition-sensitive aid and domestic public resource funding in Somalia
Federal
Galmudug
Jubbaland
Puntland
Somaliland
South West
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90
US$ per person
Source: 2017 budget documents of the Federal, Galmudug, Jubbaland, Puntland, Somaliland and South West governments; ‘Aid Flows in Somalia: Analysis of Aid
Flow Data’, March 2018. Ministry of Planning, Investment and Economic Development, Federal Government of Somalia.
The significant differences in the share of nutrition-sensitive funding between aid and domestic public
resources in Somalia are primarily a result of low domestic revenue mobilisation. At present, the
revenue base is very narrow, with a high dependence on port duties in the Federal (Mogadishu port),
Somaliland (Berbera port) and Puntland (Bosaso port) governments. Other newly formed governments
without established major ports are facing even more significant challenges in raising revenue,
highlighted by the lower investments in nutrition by Galmudug, Jubbaland and South West states.
With a significant focus of current government spending on administration and security, it will
be essential to increase domestic revenue mobilisation to free fiscal space to enable further
investment in nutrition. There has been some progress in this regard, with the federal government
reporting a 30% rise in non-grant revenue in 2018 compared to 2017, with plans to develop fiscal
federalism structures through a fishery and petroleum revenue-sharing framework. 8 However, given
the fragile context of Somalia, it is likely in the medium term that external support in financing
nutrition will remain critical.
Source: Budget analysis exercise, SUN Movement Secretariat, 2019. Mobilising donor
Note: Based on 45 countries with data points ranging from
2015 to 2019.
resources
Donor resources refers to the external
Data limitations inhibit an assessment of
support provided to scale up national-level
nutrition spending over time within these
nutrition programming from country donors,
sectors. However, inadequate government
multilateral donors (including the European
spending on many sectors, such as agriculture
Union, development banks and UN institutions)
and education – that are important sources
and private donors. 20 Limitations in the data
of nutrition-sensitive spending – is a matter of
available restrict efforts to map these resources
concern for indirect nutrition investments.15
accurately. Beyond donors that report their
spending through the N4G process (Table 5.1),
• In agriculture, there is little progress in
there is poor tracking of nutrition-sensitive
public funding outside East Asia, the Pacific,
ODA. There is limited information on the
the Middle East and North Africa.16
expenditures and activities of donors outside
the OECD Development Assistance Committee
• Education expenditure in 29 SUN countries
(DAC) and of South–South donors. Improved
increased only by 6.6% in real terms from
clarity on this data is vital for improving
2015 to 2017, with 12 countries showing
nutrition outcomes and coordination efforts.
either a growth of less than 1% or an
Several initiatives and mechanisms to monitor
absolute decline.17
donor resources for nutrition-specific aid, and
emerging tools, are enabling improved tracking
• The water, sanitation and hygiene sector
and analyses of nutrition aid beyond the basic
is an exception, with mixed trends. In 24
nutrition purpose code21 (Spotlight 5.2).
countries with available data, total real-term
funding increased from 2017 to 2019 by 11.1%
per year, although 9 countries reported
declines.18 Despite increases, however,
a substantial financing gap remains,
which has an indirect impact on nutrition.
According to the recent GLAAS report,19
Tracking aid for nutrition is critical for monitoring and accountability. The SUN Donor Network has
been using data from the OECD DAC Creditor Reporting System (CRS) to monitor spending against
commitments made at the first Nutrition for Growth (N4G) Summit in 2013. The CRS previously had
limited ability to track aid for nutrition but has recently been improved in the following ways.
• The purpose code for basic nutrition has been amended to remove school feeding and match
the global definition of ‘nutrition-specific’. The CRS has also added new purpose codes for
non-communicable diseases that will make it easier to track aid projects including investments
to reduce exposure to unhealthy diets that contribute to obesity.
• A nutrition policy marker, to improve tracking of nutrition aid across sectors, has been adopted
voluntarily. This has been developed in collaboration with the SUN Donor Network and other
SUN Movement partners, including Action Contre la Faim. The SUN Donor Network, the SUN
Movement Secretariat and the OECD Secretariat are currently developing guidance to support
DAC member agencies to adopt and implement the nutrition policy marker.
• New private philanthropic donors, such as the Children’s Investment Fund Foundation, have begun
reporting to the OECD. This enables the CRS to capture additional information on donor financing.
All these improvements come at an opportune time. Better systems to track aid for nutrition
will enable a better understanding of funding trends and gaps and could lead to an improved
perspective on whether vulnerable and marginalised populations are being reached with appropriate
interventions. This will support more accurate and comparable monitoring of overall progress, and of
the anticipated donors’ financial commitments at the N4G Tokyo Nutrition Summit.
FIGURE 5.5
ODA disbursements for basic nutrition, 2007–2017
1.4 0.7%
US$ billions
% of total ODA
1.2 0.6%
1.0 0.5%
0.8 0.4%
0.6 0.3%
0.4 0.2%
0.2 0.1%
0.0 0.0%
2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 2017
Source: Development Initiatives based on OECD Development Assistance Committee (DAC) Creditor Reporting System (CRS). Data downloaded on 29 January 2020.
Notes: ODA amounts are based on gross ODA disbursements, and include ODA grants and loans but exclude other official flows reported to the OECD DAC CRS.
Government donors include DAC-member country donors and other government donors (Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates). Multilateral institutions include
all multilateral organisations reporting ODA to the OECD DAC CRS. The amounts for private donors are based on private development assistance reported to the
OECD DAC. Such assistance includes all international concessional resource flows voluntarily transferred from private sources for international development. These
flows are the private finance channelled through NGOs, foundations and corporate philanthropic activities. All amounts are constant 2017 prices.
70%
Prevalence of stunting in children under 5 (%)
Timor-Leste,
US$3.17 per person
60%
Yemen,
Eritrea, US$1.23 per person
US$0.03 per person
50%
40%
Gambia,
US$2.11 per person
20%
10% Gabon,
US$0.003 per person
0%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80%
Prevalence of anaemia in women of reproductive age (%)
Source: UNICEF/WHO/World Bank Group: joint child malnutrition estimates; WHO Global Health Observatory; OECD Development Assistance Committee (DAC)
Creditor Reporting System (CRS); World Bank, 2019.
Note: Bubble size represents the average basic nutrition aid received across 2015, 2016 and 2017, divided by 2017 population to show per capita amounts.
In consultation with the SUN Donor Network, Nutrition for Growth (N4G) was established
researchers have been tracking donor aid through a partnership between the
in support of the IFN priority package of governments of the United Kingdom, Brazil and
interventions to assess whether the donor Japan, championed by leading philanthropic
financial targets have been met. 29 Using data foundations and civil society organisations.
from the OECD CRS that includes aid from Its goal is to secure new financial and political
both within and outside the basic nutrition commitments from governments, donors,
code, the analysis finds that donors have made civil society, the UN and business, to help end
positive progress in mobilising funding for the malnutrition in all its forms by 2030. Every year,
WHA targets. Between 2015 and 2017, priority- the GNR tracks the commitments made by
package aid increased by 11% (annualised), from stakeholders through the N4G process. Table 5.1
US$1.1 billion to US$1.4 billion.30 Mapping these shows the latest donor-reported disbursements
disbursements to the IFN priority-package to nutrition-specific and nutrition-sensitive
financing scenario benchmarks suggests that, actions between 2010 and 2017.
overall, donors mobilised 93% of their proposed
share of priority-package costs for 2017. While this
is positive, more is needed: there was still a
gap of US$100 million in external donor
support needed for priority interventions in
2017. More importantly, the gap in support of
the full IFN package costing US$7 billion per
year, as shown in Figure 5.1, will be substantially
more significant, although this is yet to be
quantified. As Figure 5.8 shows, not all targets
have seen the same funding increases.
FIGURE 5.7
Donor spending on diet-related NCDs
60 0.030% 0.030%
US$ millions
50 0.025%
51.2
49.1
44.7 0.020%
40 0.020%
0.018% 39.8
25.3 24.5
20 0.010%
10 0.005%
0 0.000%
2014 2015 2016 2017
Source: Development Initiatives based on OECD Development Assistance Committee (DAC) Creditor Reporting System (CRS). Data downloaded on 11 July 2019.
Note: The graph presents donor spending coded under the purpose codes for NCDs. However, actual donor spending on addressing NCDs is likely to be quite
different, as investments under many other purpose codes will also impact diet-related NCDs.
Exclusive
Stunting Wasting Anaemia
breastfeeding
652
347 178 123
180
600 350 120
162
160 105
500 300
500 263 140 100
258
250
389 120
400 80
200 100
84 56
300 60
80
150
60 40
200
100
40
100 50 20
20
0 0 0 0
2015 2016 2017 2015 2016 2017 2015 2016 2017 2015 2016 2017
Source: Results for Development, 2019. Tracking aid for the WHA nutrition targets: progress towards the global nutrition goals between 2015–2017. Washington, DC:
Results for Development.
Notes: Disbursements across the WHA targets cannot be summed due to intervention overlap. See endnotes for details of the actions and targets of the package. 31
REPORTED AS NUTRITION-SPECIFIC
US$ THOUSANDS 2010 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
AUSTRALIA 6,672 16,516 NA 20,857 NA 15,639 NA
CANADA 98,846 205,463 169,350 159,300 108,600 97,628 93,099
EU 50,889 8 54,352 44,680 48,270 29,721 57,097
FRANCE 2,895 3,852 2,606 6,005 4,660 8,572 4,339
GERMANY 2,987 2,719 35,666 50,572 51,399 18,047 19,621
IRELAND 7,691 7,565 10,776 19,154 13,079 12,391 18,238
NETHERLANDS 2,661 4,007 20,216 25,025 31,604 46,331 32,837
SWITZERLAND 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
UK 39,860 63,127 105,000 87,000 92,400 156,000 188,294
US 82,613 229,353 288,649 263,241 382,891 296,974 195,921
GATES FOUNDATION 50,060 80,610 83,534 61,700 96,500 96,616 144,532
CIFF 980 5,481 37,482 26,750 53,607 32,784 63,180
WORLD BANK NA NA NA NA NA NA NA
REPORTED AS NUTRITION-SENSITIVE
US$ THOUSANDS 2010 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
AUSTRALIA 49,903 114,553 NA 87,598 NA 128,706 NA
CANADA 80,179 90,171 NA 998,674 1,271,986 1,309,732 1,102,545
EU 392,563 309,209 315,419 570,890 423,704 496,672 538,637
FRANCE 23,003 27,141 33,599 NR 23,781 16,446 25,991
GERMANY 18,856 29,139 20,642 51,547 84,174 186,780 142,809
IRELAND 34,806 45,412 48,326 56,154 54,217 54,248 56,843
NETHERLANDS 2,484 20,160 21,616 18,274 28,422 56,510 53,917
SWITZERLAND 21,099 28,800 29,160 26,501 43,656 42,190 59,971
UK 302,215 412,737 734,700 780,500 928,300 693,000 706,334
US 2,005,880 1,968,759 2,449,706 2,656,269 2,555,332 3,038,180 3,548,197
GATES FOUNDATION 12,320 34,860 43,500 29,200 42,000 62,619 37,289
CIFF 0 0 854 154 20,725 21,595 38,538
WORLD BANK NA NA NA NA NA NA NA
REPORTED AS TOTAL
US$ THOUSANDS 2010 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
AUSTRALIA 56,575 131,069 NA 108,455 NA 144,345 NA
CANADA 179,025 295,634 NA 1,157,974 1,380,586 1,407,360 1,195,645
EU 443,452 309,217 369,771 615,570 471,974 526,393 595,734
FRANCE 25,898 30,993 36,205 NA 28,441 25,018 30,330
GERMANY 21,843 31,858 56,308 102,119 135,573 204,827 162,430
IRELAND 42,497 52,977 59,102 75,308 67,295 66,640 75,081
NETHERLANDS 5,145 24,167 41,832 43,299 60,027 102,841 86,754
SWITZERLAND 21,099 28,800 29,160 26,501 43,656 42,190 59,971
UK 342,075 475,864 839,700 867,500 1,020,700 849,000 894,628
US 2,088,493 2,198,112 2,738,356 2,919,510 2,938,223 3,335,154 3,744,118
GATES FOUNDATION 62,380 115,470 127,034 90,900 138,500 159,235 181,822
CIFF 980 5,481 38,336 26,904 74,332 54,379 101,718
WORLD BANK NA NA NA NA NA NA NA
FIGURE 5.9
Nutrition-specific public financing as a percentage of investment needs within the health sector in six African countries
Domestic general government expenditure on nutritional deficiencies External sources of funding on nutritional deficiencies
45%
nutrition-specific interventions
Public expenditure on nutritional deficiencies as a %
of the estimated yearly public investment on 10
42%
40%
35%
30%
28%
30%
24%
25%
20%
20%
16% 16%
15%
11%
9% 9% 10%
10%
7%
5% 4%
2%
0%
2015 2016 2017 2015 2016 2017 2015 2016 2017 2015 2016 2017 2015 2016 2017 2015 2016 2017
DRC Kenya Mali Nigeria Uganda Zambia
Source: WHO global health expenditure database; Scaling Up Nutrition: What Will it Cost? – World Bank 6 country case studies.
Note: Although health expenditure on nutritional deficiencies covers the majority of the nutrition-specific interventions within the nutrition framework, there may
be elements that are included within other sectors (e.g. child feeding). Therefore, the funding gap should be treated as an estimate rather than a direct comparison
of progress.
FIGURE 5.10
Projected and optimal scenarios for tax revenue in SUN countries to 2025
1000
US$ billions, constant 2017 prices
800
600
400
200
0
2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025
FIGURE 5.11
Projected government health spending on nutritional deficiencies based on three scenarios (2016–2025)
120%
Increase (%)
100%
80%
60%
40%
20%
0%
% increase 2016 to 2022 % increase 2016 to 2025
Source: IMF article IV staff reports; WHO global health expenditure database.
Notes: Estimates for 33 SUN countries. Median values for the proportion of health funding on nutritional deficiencies calculated by income groups.
The Global Investment Framework for Nutrition (2017) estimated that an additional US$7 billion
per year would be needed for 2016–2025 to reach four global nutrition targets. To achieve this
aim requires improvement in the efficiency of spending through the use of better nutrition cost
estimations, cost-effectiveness analyses and benefit–cost analyses. However, many questions
remain unanswered to date:
• What is the optimal allocation of resources across interventions, given a government’s budget
for nutrition?
• How can these analytics help generate more national political commitments for nutrition?
Optima Nutrition is a tool created in 2017 for impact and economic analyses for nutrition. For different
funding levels, Optima Nutrition helps to estimate resources to be allocated across a mix of
nutrition interventions, and the associated achievable impact. For example, considering an overall
public health budget available for nutrition, Optima Nutrition will provide to policymakers the
investment combination leading to optimal outcomes. Optima Nutrition can be used to inform:
• budget allocations within existing nutrition programmes or projects at the national and
subnational levels.
Every SUN country can use this modelling tool to assess the impact of its interventions on multiple
malnutrition conditions: stunting, wasting, anaemia in children and in women of reproductive age,
child and maternal deaths. In preparation for the next N4G summit, Optima Nutrition can help
SUN countries to:
• estimate the potential achievements if the current allocation or current volume of financing is
reallocated optimally
• estimate the minimum funding required and its optimal allocation to meet nutrition targets.
FIGURE 5.12
Optima Nutrition in Bangladesh: comparison of planned and optimised budget
Vitamin A supplementation Infant and young child feeding education Breastfeeding promotion
Antenatal micronutrient Public provision of complementary foods Balanced energy-protein
supplementation supplementation
25
Spending (US$ millions)
20
15
10
0
2014 budget Optimised
Source: http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/859891555500406318/pdf/Optima-Nutrition-An-Allocative-Efficiency-Tool-to-Reduce-Childhood-Stunting-
by-Better-Targeting-of-Nutrition-Related-Interventions.pdf
Notes: Estimated 2014 allocation and optimal annual allocation across nutrition-specific interventions with budget fixed to 2014 levels. Optimisation is with respect
to maximising the number of children not stunted at 5 years of age, over the 15-year period from 2016 to 2030.
FIGURE 5.13
An overview of innovative financing mechanisms
Outcome-based financing
Impact bonds, social success notes
Source: The Global Fund, 2018. Update on innovative financing, p. 31. Available at www.theglobalfund.org/media/7435/bm39_25-innovativefinance_update_en.pdf
Notes: There are many definitions and typologies of innovative financing instruments for development and global health. This functional typology is borrowed from
a Global Fund simplified landscape of innovative financing instruments.
▶ The Japan N4G summit is a critical opportunity for planners and policymakers
to make a strong case for renewed and expanded financial commitments for
nutrition, using equitable approaches to maximise nutritional impact.
Ensuring equitable
nutrition: a
collective
responsibility
2014. Cheshire, UK.
A school meal is served.
Photo: Cheshire East Council.
We need to address releasing a report linking healthy diets to
environmental sustainability ahead of the Tokyo
the persistent burden Nutrition for Growth Summit.4 Recently The Lancet
published a series of papers on the double burden
of malnutrition of malnutrition to explore the coexistence of
Nutrition is central to the SDGs, with 12 of Mainstreaming nutrition within UHC will also
the 17 SDGs containing indicators relevant to help to ensure equitable access to a standard
nutrition. Ending malnutrition in all its forms package of universally available nutrition
will catalyse improved outcomes and have services that improve diets and reduce
powerful multiplier effects across the SDGs. illness – resulting in better health outcomes
Likewise, progress across the SDGs is essential for all. Specific interventions would include
to address the causes and consequences of optimisation of electronic health records
malnutrition. Proactive consideration and for nutritional screening and assessment,
inclusion of nutrition actions, goals and micronutrient supplementation, infant and
indicators across the SDGs will ensure that young child feeding promotion, and counselling
nutrition becomes a cross-cutting priority or treatment of acute malnutrition, where
on the global development agenda and will prevention fails.
promote engagement at all levels. In addition
to the vast health and economic consequences,
the global malnutrition burden has environmental
impacts affecting the entire planet. Climate change
and food systems are interrelated; we need
to understand both the environmental
consequences of poor diets and the impacts
of climate change on agriculture. Future policy
recommendations for optimal nutrition should
include equity considerations, and be given in
the context of potential environmental effects to
address these issues simultaneously. This requires
a more robust governance structure for nutrition
– including high-level central coordination and
subnational governance mechanisms. This can
ensure greater participation and accountability
for all key sectors, including health, education,
water and sanitation, as well as food, economics,
finance and planning.
Adolescent Children and adolescents aged 5–19 years who are more than one standard
underweight deviation below the median BMI for age of the WHO growth reference for
school-aged children and adolescents.
Adolescent Children and adolescents aged 5–19 years who are more than one standard
overweight deviation above the median BMI for age of the WHO growth reference for
school-aged children and adolescents.
Adolescent obesity Children and adolescents aged 5–19 years who are more than two standard
deviations above the median BMI for age of the WHO growth reference for
school-aged children and adolescents.
Adult diabetes Adults aged 18 and older with fasting glucose ≥7.0mmol/L, on medication for
raised blood glucose or with a history of diagnosis of diabetes.
Adult underweight Adults aged 18 and over with a BMI of 18.5kg/m² or lower.
Adult overweight Adults aged 18 and over with a BMI of 25kg/m² or higher.
Adult obesity Adults aged 18 and over with a BMI of 30kg/m² or higher.
Anaemia in Pregnant women with haemoglobin levels below 110 grams per litre at sea level.
women
Non-pregnant women with haemoglobin levels below 120 grams per litre at
sea level.
Childhood Children aged 0–59 months who are more than two standard deviations
overweight (moderate and severe) above the median weight-for-height of the WHO Child
Growth Standards.
Childhood Children aged 0–59 months who are more than two standard deviations
stunting (moderate and severe) below the median height-for-age of the WHO Child
Growth Standards.
Childhood wasting Children aged 0–59 months who are more than two standard deviations
(moderate and severe) below the median weight-for-height of the WHO Child
Growth Standards.
Continued Children 20–23 months of age who are fed breast milk.
breastfeeding at 2
years
Early initiation of Children born in the last 24 months who were put to the breast within one
breastfeeding hour of birth.
Exclusive Infants 0–5 months of age who are fed exclusively with breast milk during the
breastfeeding previous day.
Introduction of Infants 6–8 months of age who received solid, semi-solid or soft foods during the
solid, semi-solid or previous day.
soft foods
Low birth weight Live births weighing less than 2,500 grams.
Minimum Children aged 6–23 months who received a minimum acceptable diet (apart
acceptable diet from breastmilk) during the previous day.
Minimum dietary Children aged 6–23 months who received minimum dietary diversity during the
diversity previous day.
Minimum meal Children aged 6–23 months who received minimum meal frequency during
frequency the previous day.
Raised blood Adults aged 18 and over with raised blood pressure: systolic and/or diastolic
pressure blood pressure ≥140/90mmHg.
Salt The mean intake of salt (sodium chloride) of adults aged 25 and over,
expressed in grams per day.
Low birth weight AARR ≥2.74+ or level <5% AARR <2.74 but ≥0.5 AARR <0.5
Not exclusively breastfed AARR ≥2.74++ or level <30% AARR <2.74 but ≥0.8 AARR <0.8
Wasting Level <5% Level ≥5% but AARR ≥2.0 Level ≥5% and AARR <2.0
Source: WHO and UNICEF for the WHO-UNICEF Technical Expert Advisory Group on Nutrition Monitoring. Methodology for monitoring progress towards the global
nutrition targets for 2025: Technical report. Geneva: WHO, UNICEF: New York, 2017.
Notes: *Required AARR based on the stunting prevalence change corresponding to a 40% reduction in number of stunted children between 2012 and 2025,
considering the estimated population growth (based on UN Population Prospects). **Required AARR based on a 50% reduction in prevalence of anaemia in
women of reproductive age between 2012 and 2025. +Required AARR based on a 30% reduction in prevalence of low birth weight between 2012 and 2025.
++
Required AARR based on a 30% reduction in not exclusively breastfed rate between 2012 and 2025.
TABLE A3
Countries on track to meet the global nutrition targets
ON TRACK FOR ON TRACK FOR ON TRACK FOR ON TRACK FOR ON TRACK FOR
0 TARGETS 1 TARGET 2 TARGETS 3 TARGETS 4 TARGETS
88 50 35 13 8
Afghanistan Andorra Australia Chile Albania
Algeria Angola Bangladesh El Salvador Armenia
Antigua and Barbuda Austria Belgium Finland Belize
Argentina Azerbaijan Bolivia Ghana Democratic People's
(Plurinational State of) Republic of Korea
Bahamas Bosnia and Burkina Faso Iceland Kenya
Herzegovina
Bahrain Brunei Darussalam Burundi Kazakhstan Mexico
Barbados Cameroon China Kuwait Sao Tome and Principe
Belarus Canada Côte d'Ivoire Lesotho Swaziland
Benin Chad Democratic Republic Peru
of the Congo
Bhutan Congo Denmark Rwanda
Botswana Dominican Republic Egypt Serbia
Brazil Ecuador Guatemala State of Palestine
Bulgaria Estonia Guinea-Bissau Sweden
Cabo Verde France Guyana
ON TRACK FOR ON TRACK FOR ON TRACK FOR ON TRACK FOR ON TRACK FOR
0 TARGETS 1 TARGET 2 TARGETS 3 TARGETS 4 TARGETS
88 50 35 13 8
Cambodia Gambia Haiti
Central African Republic Germany Kyrgyzstan
Colombia Guinea Malawi
Comoros Indonesia Mongolia
Costa Rica Israel Myanmar
Croatia Italy Nauru
Cuba Jamaica Norway
Cyprus Japan Pakistan
Czechia Latvia Paraguay
Djibouti Liberia Sierra Leone
Dominica Lithuania Singapore
Equatorial Guinea Luxembourg South Africa
Eritrea Malaysia Tajikistan
Ethiopia Mali Thailand
Fiji Malta Turkey
Gabon Mauritania Turkmenistan
Georgia Montenegro Uganda
Greece Nepal United Republic
of Tanzania
Grenada Netherlands United States
of America
Honduras Niger Vanuatu
Hungary Nigeria Zimbabwe
India Poland
Iran Portugal
(Islamic Republic of)
Iraq Republic of Korea
Ireland Samoa
Jordan San Marino
Kiribati Senegal
Lao People's Solomon Islands
Democratic Republic
Lebanon Spain
Libya Sri Lanka
Liechtenstein Sudan
Madagascar Switzerland
Maldives Timor-Leste
Marshall Islands Togo
Mauritius Viet Nam
Micronesia Zambia
(Federated States of)
Monaco
Morocco
Mozambique
Namibia
New Zealand
Nicaragua
Oman
Palau
Panama
ON TRACK FOR ON TRACK FOR ON TRACK FOR ON TRACK FOR ON TRACK FOR
0 TARGETS 1 TARGET 2 TARGETS 3 TARGETS 4 TARGETS
88 50 35 13 8
Papua New Guinea
Philippines
Qatar
Republic of Moldova
Romania
Russian Federation
Saint Kitts and Nevis
Saint Lucia
Saint Vincent and
the Grenadines
Saudi Arabia
Seychelles
Slovakia
Slovenia
Somalia
South Sudan
Suriname
Syrian Arab Republic
The former Yugoslav
Republic of Macedonia
Tonga
Trinidad and Tobago
Tunisia
Tuvalu
Ukraine
United Arab Emirates
United Kingdom of
Great Britain and
Northern Ireland
Uruguay
Uzbekistan
Venezuela
(Bolivarian Republic of)
Yemen
Source: UNICEF global databases Infant and Young Child Feeding, 2019, UNICEF/WHO/World Bank Joint Child Malnutrition Estimates Expanded Database:
Stunting, Wasting and Overweight, (March 2019, New York), NCD Risk Factor Collaboration 2019, WHO Global Health Observatory 2019, UNICEF-WHO Low
birthweight estimates, 2019.
Notes: Assessment based on 194 countries. Childhood is under-5, and diet-related non-communicable disease (NCD) targets are assessed for adults 18 years and
over. The methodologies for tracking progress differ between targets. See Appendix 1 for definitions of indicators. See Appendix 2 for details of data and methods
used to assess progress towards the global nutrition targets.
2 FAO, 2019. The state of food security and nutrition in the world. Available at:
www.fao.org/state-of-food-security-nutrition/en
3 Food Security Information Network, 2019. Global report on food crisis. Available at:
https://reliefweb.int/report/world/global-report-food-crises-2019
4 Ng M., Fleming T., Robinson M. et al., 2014. Global, regional, and national prevalence of overweight and obesity
in children and adults during 1980–2013: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2013.
The Lancet 384(9945), available at: www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(14)60460-8/fulltext
5 Global nutrition targets to improve maternal, infant and young child nutrition. Available at:
www.who.int/nutrition/global-target-2025/en/
8 UN Committee for Development Policy, Leaving no one behind; 2018. Available at: https://sustainabledevelopment.
un.org/content/documents/2754713_July_PM_2._Leaving_no_one_behind_Summary_from_UN_Committee_for_
Development_Policy.pdf
9 UN Resolution adopted by the General Assembly on 25 September 2015. 70/1. Transforming our world: the 2030
Agenda for Sustainable Development.
11 Development Initiatives, 2017. Global Nutrition Report 2017: nourishing the SDGs. Available at:
www.globalnutritionreport.org
12 Norheim O.F. and Asada Y., 2009. The ideal of equal health revisited: definitions and measures of inequity in
health should be better integrated with theories of distributive justice. International Journal for Equity in Health
8:40, available at: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19922612; UNSCN, 2018. Advancing equity, equality and non-
discrimination in food systems: pathways to reform. UNSCN News 43, available at: www.unscn.org/en/Unscn-
news?idnews=1838
13 World Health Organization Commission, 2008. Closing the gap in a generation: health equity through action on
the social determinants of health. Final report of the Commission on Social determinants of Health. Available at:
www.who.int/social_determinants/thecommission/finalreport/en/
14 World Health Organization Commission, 2008. Closing the gap in a generation: health equity through action on
the social determinants of health. Final report of the Commission on Social determinants of Health. Available at:
www.who.int/social_determinants/thecommission/finalreport/en/
15 For an updated version, see: State of the world’s children, 2019. New York: UNICEF, p. 97.
16 World Health Organization Commission, 2008. Closing the gap in a generation: health equity through action on
the social determinants of health. Final report of the Commission on Social determinants of Health. Available at:
www.who.int/social_determinants/thecommission/finalreport/en/
18 “The OECD characterises fragility as the combination of exposure to risk and insufficient coping capacity of
the state, system and/or communities to manage, absorb or mitigate those risks. Fragility can lead to negative
outcomes including violence, the breakdown of institutions, displacement, humanitarian crises or other
emergencies.” Fragility can also be viewed in terms of multidimensional interactions between different forms of
fragility, including, in the OECD Fragility Framework: economic, environmental, political, security and societal
fragility (OECD, 2016, States of fragility 2016: understanding violence. Available at:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/9789264267213-en).
19 World Health Organization Commission, 2008. Closing the gap in a generation: health equity through action on
the social determinants of health. Final report of the Commission on Social determinants of Health. Available
at: www.who.int/social_determinants/thecommission/finalreport/en/; Baker Phillip, Hawkes Corinna, Wingrove
Kate et al., 2018. What drives political commitment for nutrition? A review and framework synthesis to inform the
United Nations Decade of Action on Nutrition. BMJ Global Health 3(1): e000485.
20 Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, 2018. Opening remarks by UN Women Executive Director at the 62nd session of the
UN Commission on the Status of Women.
21 UNDP, 2018. What does it mean to leave no one behind? A UNDP discussion paper and framework for
implementation. New York: United Nations Development Programme. Available at: www.undp.org/content/
undp/en/home/librarypage/poverty-reduction/what-does-it-mean-to-leave-no-one-behind-.html
22 World Health Organization Commission, 2008. Closing the gap in a generation: health equity through action on
the social determinants of health. Final report of the Commission on Social determinants of Health. Available at:
www.who.int/social_determinants/thecommission/finalreport/en/, pp. 50–59.
23 UNDP, 2018. What does it mean to leave no one behind? A UNDP discussion paper and framework for
implementation. New York: United Nations Development Programme. Available at: www.undp.org/content/
undp/en/home/librarypage/poverty-reduction/what-does-it-mean-to-leave-no-one-behind-.html
24 World Health Organization Commission, 2008. Closing the gap in a generation: health equity through action on
the social determinants of health. Final report of the Commission on Social determinants of Health. Available
at: www.who.int/social_determinants/thecommission/finalreport/en/, pp. 50–59; Barros F.C., Victora C.G.,
Scherpbier R. et al., 2010. Socioeconomic inequities in the health and nutrition of children in low/middle income
countries. Revista de Saúde Pública 44(1): pp. 1–16.
25 Campbell J., Hirnschall G. and Magar V., 2017. Ending discrimination in healthcare settings. Commentary.
Geneva: the World Health Organization. Available at:
www.who.int/news-room/commentaries/detail/ending-discrimination-in-health-care-settings
26 UNDP, 2018. What does it mean to leave no one behind? A UNDP discussion paper and framework for
implementation. New York: United Nations Development Programme. Available at: www.undp.org/content/
undp/en/home/librarypage/poverty-reduction/what-does-it-mean-to-leave-no-one-behind-.html, pp. 13–14.
27 UNDP, 2018. What does it mean to leave no one behind? A UNDP discussion paper and framework for
implementation. New York: United Nations Development Programme. Available at: www.undp.org/content/
undp/en/home/librarypage/poverty-reduction/what-does-it-mean-to-leave-no-one-behind-.html, p. 14.
28 Thow A.M. and Nisbett N., 2019. Trade, nutrition, and sustainable food systems. The Lancet 394(10200): pp. 716–18.
29 Hagenaars L.L., Jeurissen P.P.T. and Klazinga N.S., 2017. The taxation of unhealthy energy-dense foods (EDFs)
and sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs): an overview of patterns observed in the policy content and policy
context of 13 case studies. Health Policy 121(8): pp. 887–94. (doi:10.1016/j.healthpol.2017.06.011); Swinburn B.A.,
Kraak V.I., Allender S. et al., 2019. The global syndemic of obesity, undernutrition, and climate change: The
Lancet Commission report. The Lancet 393(10173): pp. 791–846.
30 Barros F.C., Victora C.G., Scherpbier R. et al., 2010. Socioeconomic inequities in the health and nutrition of
children in low/middle income countries. Revista de Saúde Pública 44(1): pp. 1–16; World Health Organization
Commission, 2008. Closing the gap in a generation: health equity through action on the social determinants of
health. Final report of the Commission on Social determinants of Health. Available at:
www.who.int/social_determinants/thecommission/finalreport/en
NOTES 137
31 Irish Aid, 2019. A better world. Ireland’s policy for international development.
32 Hawkes C. and Halliday J., 2017. What makes urban food policy happen? Insights from five case studies.
International Panel of Experts on Sustainable Food Systems.
33 Brighton and Hove Food Partnership, Brighton and Hove Connected, Community Works, the Living Coast,
Brighton and Hove National Health Service Clinical Commission Group, Brighton and Hove City Council,
Brighton and Hove Food Strategy Action Plan – 2018–2023.
34 Swinburn B.A., Kraak V.I., Allender S. et al., 2019. The global syndemic of obesity, undernutrition, and climate
change: The Lancet Commission report. The Lancet 393(10173), pp. 791–846.
35 See: https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/post2015/transformingourworld
36 Transforming our world: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development Adopted at the United Nations
Sustainable Development Summit on 25 September 2015. Available at:
https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/post2015/transformingourworld
37 World Health Organization Commission, 2008. Closing the gap in a generation: health equity through action on
the social determinants of health. Final report of the Commission on Social determinants of Health. Available at:
www.who.int/social_determinants/thecommission/finalreport/en/, p. 2.
38 World Health Organization Commission, 2008. Closing the gap in a generation: health equity through action on
the social determinants of health. Final report of the Commission on Social determinants of Health. Available at:
www.who.int/social_determinants/thecommission/finalreport/en/
39 See: www.gov.uk/dfid-research-outputs/thinking-and-working-politically-gsdrc-professional-development-
reading-pack-no-13
40 Summarised in Gillespie et al., 2014. The politics of reducing malnutrition: building commitment and accelerating
progress. The Lancet 382(9891), pp. 552–69; Nisbett et al., 2015. What drives and constrains effective leadership
in tackling child undernutrition? Findings from Bangladesh, Ethiopia, India and Kenya. Food Policy, 53, May, pp.
33–45; and Baker et al., 2018. Addressing trade policy as a macro-structural determinant of health: The role of
institutions and ideas. Global Social Policy 18(1), pp: 94–101.
41 International Food Policy Research Institute, 2015. Global nutrition report 2015: actions and accountability to
advance nutrition and sustainable development. Chapter 9, Assessing whether the commitment has been met.
Washington, DC: IFPRI.
42 FAO, 2007. Right to food: lessons learnt in Brazil. Available at: www.fao.org/3/a-a1331e.pdf
43 https://nhm.gov.in/index1.php?lang=1&level=2&sublinkid=967&lid=587
44 Smith L.C. and Haddad L., 2015. Reducing child undernutrition: past drivers and priorities for the post-MDG era.
World Development 68: pp. 180–204. The authors used the International Country Risk Guide (ICRG) indicators
published by the Political Risk Services Group in 2013. A similar set of indicators is available via the Worldwide
Governance Indicators project of the World Bank (https://info.worldbank.org/governance/wgi/).
45 UN Women, Women Count and United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, 2019. Progress on
the Sustainable Development Goals. The Gender Snapshot 2019. Available at: www.unwomen.org/en/digital-
library/publications/2019/09/progress-on-the-sustainable-development-goals-the-gender-snapshot-2019
46 UN Women, Women Count and United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, 2019. Progress on
the Sustainable Development Goals. The Gender Snapshot 2019. Available at: www.unwomen.org/en/digital-
library/publications/2019/09/progress-on-the-sustainable-development-goals-the-gender-snapshot-2019
47 Bhutta et al., 2013. Evidence-based interventions for improvement of maternal and child nutrition: what can be
done and at what cost? The Lancet 382(9890), pp. 452–77.
48 Ruel et al., 2013. Nutrition-sensitive interventions and programmes: how can they help to accelerate progress in
improving maternal and child nutrition? The Lancet 382(9891).
50 World Health Organization Commission, 2008. Closing the gap in a generation: health equity through action on
the social determinants of health. Final report of the Commission on Social determinants of Health. Available at:
www.who.int/social_determinants/thecommission/finalreport/en/
51 Swinburn B.A., Kraak V.I., Allender S. et al., 2019. The global syndemic of obesity, undernutrition, and climate
change: The Lancet Commission report. The Lancet 393(10173), pp. 791–846.
55 See: https://scalingupnutrition.org/sun-countries/about-sun-countries/
56 This edition of the Global Nutrition Report uses the latest available data at the time the analysis was performed.
Chapter 2
1 Global Nutrition Report – Country Nutrition Profiles. Available at:
https://globalnutritionreport.org/resources/nutrition-profiles/
4 The WHO defines ‘double burden’ as the “coexistence of undernutrition along with overweight and obesity, or diet-
related noncommunicable diseases, within individuals, households and populations, and across the lifecourse”.
For further information, see: The double burden of malnutrition, Lancet series, December 2019. Available at:
www.thelancet.com/series/double-burden-malnutrition
6 Wasting reflects one form of acute malnutrition; in humanitarian emergencies, prevalence of global acute
malnutrition (GAM), which includes both wasting and bilateral pitting oedema, is often reported on instead of
wasting prevalence alone. However, GAM is also often referred to as wasting.
8 World Health Organization, 2000. The management of nutrition in major emergencies. Geneva: WHO; De Onis M.,
Borghi E., Arimond M. et al., 2019. Prevalence thresholds for wasting, overweight and stunting in children under 5
years. Public Health Nutrition, 22:1, pp. 175–79, doi:10.1017/S1368980018002434
9 Young H. and Marshak A., 2018. Persistent global acute malnutrition. Friedman School of Nutrition Science and
Policy, Tufts University; OECD States of Fragility 2018 framework – a multidimensional approach to measure the
magnitude of fragility between countries. This is based on five core dimensions: political, societal, economic,
environmental and security. Risks are identified as a contributing factor that could change the forecast of a
country’s stance in each dimension. Countries are given scores for each dimension based on these risks, which
then feed into the country’s overall fragility score (www3.compareyourcountry.org/states-of-fragility/about/0/).
NOTES 139
10 Wasting reflects one form of acute malnutrition; in humanitarian emergencies, prevalence of global acute
malnutrition (GAM), which includes both wasting and bilateral pitting oedema, is often reported on instead of
wasting prevalence alone. However, GAM is also often referred to as wasting.
11 OECD States of Fragility 2018 framework – a multidimensional approach to measure the magnitude of fragility
between countries. This is based on five core dimensions: political, societal, economic, environmental and
security. Risks are identified as a contributing factor that could change the forecast of a country’s stance in each
dimension. Countries are given scores for each dimension based on these risks, which then feed into the country’s
overall fragility score (www3.compareyourcountry.org/states-of-fragility/about/0/).
12 2018 Global Nutrition Report: Shining a light to spur action on nutrition. Development Initiatives, Chapter 2,
‘The burden of malnutrition,’ available at:
https://globalnutritionreport.org/reports/global-nutrition-report-2018/burden-malnutrition
13 Cyril S., Oldroyd J.C. and Renzaho A., 2013. Urbanisation, urbanicity, and health: a systematic review of the
reliability and validity of urbanicity scales. Available at:
https://bmcpublichealth.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1471-2458-13-513
14 The educational level of the mother is referred to as ‘more’ (including those with secondary or higher education)
and ‘less’ (those with either no formal or only primary-level education).
15 All figures are presented to one decimal place, however differences are calculated with unrounded figures.
Therefore, the difference rounded to one decimal place may not be the same as the difference between the two
rounded figures.
16 Yosef S. and Goulden J., 2016. Commitments and accountability: Peru’s unique nutrition journey, in Gillespie S.,
Hodge J., Yosef S. and Pandya-Lorch R., eds., Nourishing millions: Stories of change in nutrition. Washington, D.C.,
International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), pp. 125–32. Available at:
http://ebrary.ifpri.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15738coll2/id/130409
17 Paredes M., 2008. Weak Indigenous Politics in Peru. Centre for Research on Inequality, Human Security
and Ethnicity (CRISE), University of Oxford. Available at: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/
media/57a08bc0e5274a27b2000d25/wp33.pdf; Anticona Huaynate C.F., Pajuelo Travezaño M.J., Correa M. et al.,
2015. Diagnostics barriers and innovations in rural areas: insights from junior medical doctors on the frontlines of
rural care in Peru. BMC Health Services Research, 15:454. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-015-1114-7
18 Kinyoki D.K. et al., 2020. Mapping child growth failure across low- and middle-income countries. Nature, 577, pp.
231–34, doi:10.1038/s41586-019-1878-8 and doi:10.1038/s41591-020-0807-6
19 IHME, 2017. Local burden of disease – child growth failure. Available at: https://vizhub.healthdata.org/lbd/cgf
20 IHME, 2020. Low- and middle-income country child growth failure geospatial estimates 2000–2017. Available at:
http://ghdx.healthdata.org/record/ihme-data/lmic-child-growth-failure-geospatial-estimates-2000-2017
21 The 2017 prevalence here is based on a model that uses a range of surveys between 1998 and 2018. This method
differs from the prevalence figures shown elsewhere in this chapter, which use the latest post-2000 survey data
available for each country. The probability estimates are relative to 2012 prevalence estimates when most of
the countries adopted the global nutrition targets. For IHME’s full methods, please see: Kinyoki D.K. et al., 2020.
Mapping child growth failure across low- and middle-income countries. Nature, 577, pp. 231–34, doi:10.1038/
s41586-019-1878-8 and doi:10.1038/s41591-020-0807-6
22 Marini A., Rokx C. and Gallagher P., 2017. Standing tall: Peru’s success in overcoming its stunting crisis. World Bank Group.
23 Kinyoki D.K. et al., 2020. Mapping child growth failure across low- and middle-income countries. Nature, 577, pp.
231–34, doi:10.1038/s41586-019-1878-8
24 The Lancet, 2016. Trends in adult body-mass index in 200 countries from 1975 to 2014: a pooled analysis of 1968
population-based measurement studies with 19.2 million participants. Available at:
www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(16)30054-X/fulltext
27 OECD States of Fragility 2018 framework – a multidimensional approach to measure the magnitude of fragility
between countries. This is based on five core dimensions: political, societal, economic, environmental and
security. Risks are identified as a contributing factor that could change the forecast of a country’s stance in each
dimension. Countries are given scores for each dimension based on these risks, which then feed into the country’s
overall fragility score (www3.compareyourcountry.org/states-of-fragility/about/0/).
28 Global Burden of Disease Collaborators, 2019. Health effects of dietary risks in 195 countries, 1990–2017: a
systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2017. The Lancet, (393:10184), available at:
www.thelancet.com/article/S0140-6736(19)30041-8/fulltext; Micha R., Peñalvo J.L., Cudhea F. et al., 2017.
Association between dietary factors and mortality from heart disease, stroke, and type 2 diabetes in the United
States. JAMA, 317:9, available at: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/article-abstract/2608221; Mozaffarian
D., Fahimi S., Singh, G.M. et al., 2014. Global sodium consumption and death from cardiovascular causes. The New
England Journal of Medicine, 371. Available at: www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/nejmoa1304127
29 Micha R., Peñalvo J.L., Cudhea F. et al., 2017. Association between dietary factors and mortality from heart
disease, stroke, and type 2 diabetes in the United States. JAMA, 317(9), available at:
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/article-abstract/2608221
31 The Lancet, 2016. Worldwide trends in blood pressure from 1975 to 2015: a pooled analysis of 1479 population-
based measurement studies with 19.1 million participants. Available at:
www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(16)31919-5/fulltext
32 OECD States of Fragility 2018 framework – a multidimensional approach to measure the magnitude of fragility
between countries. This is based on five core dimensions: political, societal, economic, environmental and
security. Risks are identified as a contributing factor that could change the forecast of a country’s stance in each
dimension. Countries are given scores for each dimension based on these risks, which then feed into the country’s
overall fragility score (www3.compareyourcountry.org/states-of-fragility/about/0/).
33 For more details, see: ‘Global data on cost of consequences of obesity’. World Obesity Federation. Available
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27 Reardon T., Timmer C.P., Barrett C.B. and Berdegué J., 2003. The rise of supermarkets in Africa, Asia, and Latin
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28 Lang T. et al., 2009. Food policy: integrating health, environment and society. Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK;
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31 Demmler K.M., Klasen S., Nzuma J.M. and Qaim, M., 2017. Supermarket purchase contributes to nutrition-related
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32 Qaim M., 2019. How ‘supermarketisation’ affects nutrition and health in Kenya. Rural 21, The International Journal
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33 Demmler K.M., Ecke O. and Qaim M., 2018. Supermarket shopping and nutritional outcomes: a panel data
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34 HLPE, 2017. Nutrition and food systems. A report by the High Level Panel of Experts on Food Security and Nutrition
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35 Stuckler D., McKee M., Ebrahim S. et al., 2012. Manufacturing epidemics: the role of global producers in increased
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36 2018 Global Nutrition Report: Shining a light to spur action on nutrition. Development Initiatives, p. 50.
37 Sadeghirad B., Duhaney T., Motaghipisheh S. et al., 2016. Influence of unhealthy food and beverage marketing
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38 Yancey A.K. et al., 2009. A cross-sectional prevalence study of ethnically targeted and general audience outdoor
obesity-related advertising. The Milbank Quarterly, 87(1), pp. 155–84, DOI: 10.1111/j.1468-0009.2009.00551.x
39 Harris J.L., Frazier III, W., Kumanyika S. and Ramirez A.G., 2019. Increasing disparities in unhealthy food advertising
targeted to Hispanic and Black youth. Rudd Center for Food Policy & Obesity, University of Connecticut.
40 Bragg M.A., Eby M., Arshonsky J. et al., 2017. Comparison of online marketing techniques on food and beverage
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42 Pereira C., Ford R., Feeley A.B. et al., 2016. Cross-sectional survey shows that follow-up formula and growing-
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43 Vergeer L., Vanderlee L., Potvin Kent M. et al., 2019. The effectiveness of voluntary policies and commitments
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Story M., 2015. An accountability evaluation for the industry’s responsible use of brand mascots and licensed
media characters to market a healthy diet to American children. Obesity Reviews, 16(6), pp. 433–53, DOI: 10.1111/
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44 Kelly B. et al., 2019. Global benchmarking of children’s exposure to television advertising of unhealthy foods and
beverages across 22 countries. Obesity Reviews, 20(S2), p. 116–28, DOI: 10.1111/obr.12840
45 Cluss P.A., Ewing L., King W.C. et al., 2013. Nutrition knowledge of low-income parents of obese children.
Translational Behavioral Medicine, 3(2), pp. 218–25.
46 Lorenc T., Petticrew M., Welch V. and Tugwell P., 2013. What types of interventions generate inequalities? Evidence
from systematic reviews. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 67, pp. 190–93.
47 Friel S., Hattersley L., Ford L. and O’Rourke K., 2015. Addressing inequities in healthy eating. Health Promotion
International, 30(S2) pp. ii77–ii88, DOI: 10.1093/heapro/dav073
48 See World Cancer Research Fund International, 2018. Building momentum: lessons on implementing a robust
sugar sweetened beverage tax. Available at:
www.wcrf.org/int/policy/our-publications/lessons-implementing-sugar-sweetened-beverage-tax
49 INFORMAS (International Network for Food and Obesity / Non-communicable Diseases (NCDs) Research,
Monitoring and Action Support) is a global network of public-interest organisations and researchers that aims
to monitor, benchmark and support public and private sector actions to increase healthy food environments and
reduce obesity and NCDs and their related inequalities.
50 Bixby H., Bentham J., Zhou B. et al., 2019. Rising rural body-mass index is the main driver of the global obesity
epidemic in adults. Nature, 569, pp. 260–64, DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-1171-x
51 Thow A.M. and McGrady B., 2014. Protecting policy space for public health nutrition in an era of international investment
agreements. Bulletin of the World Health Organization, 92, pp. 139–45, DOI: dx.doi.org/10.2471/BLT.13.120543
52 HLPE, 2017. Nutrition and food systems. A report by the High Level Panel of Experts on Food Security and Nutrition
of the Committee on World Food Security, Rome.
53 Adams J., Mytton O., White M. and Monsivais P., 2016. Why are some population interventions for diet and obesity
more equitable and effective than others? The role of individual agency. PLoS Medicine 13(4), e1001990,
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001990
54 Friel S., Pescud M., Malbon E. et al., 2017. Using systems science to understand the determinants of inequities in
healthy eating. PLoS One 12(11), e0188872, DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0188872
55 Adams J., Mytton O., White M. and Monsivais P., 2016. Why are some population interventions for diet and obesity
more equitable and effective than others? The role of individual agency. PLoS Medicine 13(4), e1001990,
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001990
56 Willett W., Rockström J., Loken B. et al., 2019. Food in the anthropocene: the EAT-Lancet Commission on healthy
diets from sustainable food systems. The Lancet. 2–8 February.
57 Swinburn B.A., Kraak V.I., Allender S., et al., 2019. The global syndemic of obesity, undernutrition, and climate
change: The Lancet Commission report. The Lancet, 23 February – 1 March.
58 The double burden of malnutrition, Lancet series, December 2019. Available at:
www.thelancet.com/series/double-burden-malnutrition
59 Friel S., Hattersley L., Ford L. and O’Rourke K., 2015. Addressing inequities in healthy eating. Health Promotion
International, 30(S2) pp. ii77–ii88, DOI: 10.1093/heapro/dav073
60 Fanzo J. and Davis C., 2019. Can diets be healthy, sustainable, and equitable? Current Obesity Reports, 8, pp.
495–503, DOI: 10.1007/s13679-019-00362-0
61 Fanzo J. and Davis C., 2019. Can diets be healthy, sustainable, and equitable? Current Obesity Reports, 8, pp.
495–503, DOI: 10.1007/s13679-019-00362-0
62 See the Scaling up Nutrition movement, SUN Business Network webpage: https://scalingupnutrition.org/sun-
supporters/sun-business-network/ (accessed 4 March 2020).
64 Acton R.B., Jones A.C., Kirkpatrick S.I. et al., 2019. Taxes and front-of-package labels improve the healthiness of
beverage and snack purchases: a randomized experimental marketplace. International Journal of Behavioral
Nutrition and Physical Activity, 16(46), DOI: 10.1186/s12966-019-0799-0
65 See: www.who.int/news-room/feature-stories/detail/denmark-trans-fat-ban-pioneer-lessons-for-other-countries
66 World Bank, 2014. Improving children’s nutrition through cash transfers to poor mothers. Available at:
www.worldbank.org/en/news/feature/2014/12/17/improving-childrens-nutrition-through-cash-transfers-to-poor-mothers
Chapter 5
1 Carrera C., Azrack A., Begkoyian G. et al., 2012. The comparative cost-effectiveness of an equity-focused
approach to child survival, health, and nutrition: a modelling approach. The Lancet, 380, pp. 1341–51,
doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(12)61378-6
2 World Bank, 2017. An investment framework for nutrition reaching the global targets for stunting, anemia,
breastfeeding, and wasting (authored by Shekar M., Kakietek J., Dayton Eberwein J. and Walters D.). Washington,
DC: World Bank Group.
3 Priority package interventions include: antenatal micronutrient supplementation; infant and young child nutrition
counselling; iron and folic acid supplementation for girls aged 15–19 years, in school; vitamin A supplementation;
treatment of severe acute malnutrition; breastfeeding promotion through social policy and national promotion
campaigns; staple food fortification (wheat and maize flour); and estimated costs for capacity strengthening,
monitoring and evaluation; and policy development in support of these interventions. The priority package also
includes intermittent presumptive treatment of malaria in pregnancy in malaria-endemic regions, although this is
not tracked.
4 World Bank, 2016. Investing in nutrition: the foundation for development – an investment framework to reach the
global nutrition targets (English). Washington, DC: World Bank Group. Available at: http://documents.worldbank.
org/curated/en/963161467989517289/Investing-in-nutrition-the-foundation-for-development-an-investment-
framework-to-reach-the-global-nutrition-targets
5 The WHO released a framework of ‘best buys’ to combat non-communicable diseases (NCDs), where the
most cost-effective strategy is to reduce unhealthy diets, with a return of almost US$13 expected for every
US$1 invested. For the first time, the financing needs to tackle NCDs are clear; however, mechanisms to track
funding are currently not established in order to comment on progress (https://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/
handle/10665/272534/WHO-NMH-NVI-18.8-eng.pdf).
6 World Bank, 2017. An investment framework for nutrition reaching the global targets for stunting, anemia,
breastfeeding, and wasting (authored by Shekar M., Kakietek J., Dayton Eberwein J. and Walters D.). Washington,
DC: World Bank Group, p. 170.
8 International Monetary Fund (Middle East and Central Asia Dept), 2019. Somalia, 2019, Article IV Consultation-
Second Review Under the Staff-Monitored Program, Country Report No. 19/256; Development Initiatives, 2016.
Somalia: an overview of poverty, vulnerability and financing. Available at:
www.devinit.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Somalia-an-overview-of-poverty-vulnerability-and-financing.pdf
9 Budget analysis by the Federal Government of Somalia in 2018 was produced with technical support from
MQSUN+ during the 4th round of the SUN Movement budget analysis exercise (which wasn’t published). Then,
under MQSUN+’s support to the Global Nutrition Report, this Spotlight was produced with permission from the
Federal Government, which included the data and some additional analysis on revenue mobilisation.
NOTES 153
10 Government spending in low- and middle-income countries can come from revenue generated from their tax base
along with borrowing from development partners and other means. It is often difficult to untangle the source of
funding for social programmes, which should be considered when analysing domestic flows. Some international
development loans or grants may be considered as part of a government’s fiscal space.
11 In this section we use the terms expenditure, spending, investment or funding (based on the source from which the
information is obtained) to refer to the resources that governments apply to nutritional interventions.
12 WHO, 2020. Global health expenditure database. Available at: https://apps.who.int/nha/database (accessed
27 March 2020); World Bank, 2020. GBP (current US$ database), accessed 25 March 2020; deflators based on
Development Initiatives analysis of OECD DAC deflators and IMF WEO GDP figures, April 2019.
13 Clift J. and D’Alimonte M., 2019. Domestic financing for nutrition. Blog, R4D. Available at:
www.r4d.org/blog/domestic-financing-for-nutrition/ (accessed 4 March 2020).
14 National Information Platforms for Nutrition, 2019. Inspiring the shift from nutrition policy to implementation, how
existing data can support nutrition decision-making in Guatemala. Available at:
www.nipn-nutrition-platforms.org/IMG/pdf/nipn_guatemala_case_study_-_brief_-_july_2019.pdf
15 International Food Policy Research Institute, 2018. Global food policy report. Available at: www.ifpri.org/
publication/2018-global-food-policy-report; UNESCO education expenditure database, 2019. Available at:
https://en.unesco.org/themes/education/databases
16 International Food Policy Research Institute, 2018. Global food policy report. Available at:
www.ifpri.org/publication/2018-global-food-policy-report
18 UN-Water Global Analysis and Assessment of Sanitation and Drinking-Water (GLAAS), 2019. National systems to
support drinking-water, sanitation and hygiene: global status report 2019. Available at:
https://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/326444/9789241516297-eng.pdf?ua=1
19 UN-Water Global Analysis and Assessment of Sanitation and Drinking-Water (GLAAS), 2019. National systems to
support drinking-water, sanitation and hygiene: global status report 2019. Available at:
https://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/326444/9789241516297-eng.pdf?ua=1
20 Philanthropic private contributions and civil society contributions are difficult to track and quantity although
could be a major source of funding. Due to data limitations, this is not captured comprehensively.
21 The OECD maintains various code lists which are used by donors to report on and classify their aid flows to the
DAC databases. Basic nutrition purpose code: 12240.
22 Nutrition aid delivered through humanitarian assistance, as identified in OCHA’s Finance Tracking Service, is not
correlated. The 121 basic nutrition ODA recipients have a positive correlation between basic nutrition ODA per
person (as a three-year average between 2015 and 2017) and stunting prevalence of 0.51. When humanitarian
assistance (also a three-year average between 2015 and 2017) is added to basic nutrition ODA and divided by
population, this correlation decreases to 0.36.
23 Correlation coefficients for 2017 basic nutrition ODA and anaemia and stunting: 0.30 and 0.51, respectively. When
these indicators are tested together in a t-test, stunting is shown to be a much better predictor than anaemia in
terms of where basic nutrition ODA per capita is allocated, with a p value for anaemia and stunting at 0.25 and
5.47e-07, respectively.
24 Global Burden of Disease, the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, results. Adults aged 25+.
25 GBD 2015 Risk Factors Collaborators, 2016. Global, regional, and national comparative risk assessment of 79
behavioural, environmental and occupational, and metabolic risks or clusters of risks, 1990–2015: a systematic
analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2015. Lancet, 388:10053, pp. 1659–1724, doi: https://doi.
org/10.1016/S0140-6736(16)31679-8; Melaku Y.A., Renzaho A., Gill T.K. et al., 2019. Burden and trend of diet-related
non-communicable diseases in Australia and comparison with 34 OECD countries, 1990–2015: findings from the
Global Burden of Disease Study 2015. European Journal of Nutrition, 58:3, pp. 1299–313.
27 Lancet series on the double burden of malnutrition, December 2019. Available at:
www.thelancet.com/series/double-burden-malnutrition
28 World Health Organization, 2017. Double-duty actions for nutrition. Policy brief. Geneva: WHO. Available at:
https://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/255414/WHO-NMH-NHD-17.2-eng.pdf?ua=1
29 Results for Development, 2019. Tracking aid for the WHA nutrition targets: progress towards the global nutrition
goals between 2015–2017. Washington, DC: Results for Development.
30 Results for Development, 2019. Tracking aid for the WHA nutrition targets: progress towards the global nutrition
goals between 2015-2017. Washington, DC: Results for Development.
31 Priority package interventions include: antenatal micronutrient supplementation; infant and young child nutrition
counselling; iron and folic acid supplementation for girls aged 15–19 years, in school; vitamin A supplementation;
treatment of severe acute malnutrition; breastfeeding promotion through social policy and national promotion
campaigns; staple food fortification (wheat and maize flour); and estimated costs for capacity strengthening,
monitoring and evaluation; and policy development in support of these interventions. The priority package also
includes intermittent presumptive treatment of malaria in pregnancy in malaria-endemic regions, although this is
not tracked.
NOTES 155
32 World Bank: does not submit disbursements to the Global Nutrition Report and reports only on commitments
through the N4G process. For the Bank, these commitments are legally binding and can be considered
disbursements. However, the reporting is not comparable to other donors’ disbursement figures hence not
presented in the table.
The Japan international Cooperation Agency (JICA): data on JICA’s nutrition interventions was sent separately
to the Global Nutrition Report and does not include figures from any other Japanese government agency.
In 2018, this was ¥487 million (US$4.4 million) for nutrition-specific interventions and ¥19,945 million (US$181
million) for nutrition-sensitive interventions. This represents an increase against 2016 for both nutrition-specific
disbursements (previously ¥273 million; US$2.51 million) and nutrition-sensitive disbursements (previously ¥17,090
million; US$157 million).
Australia: disbursement figures are reported biennially to the Global Nutrition Report.
Canada methodology: 1) for nutrition-specific disbursements, used Creditor Reporting System (CRS) purpose code
12240-basic nutrition disbursements as reported to the OECD DAC; 2) for nutrition-sensitive, used a pre-identified
subset of CRS codes linked to nutrition-sensitive outcomes to identify potential nutrition-sensitive projects,
manually assessed each referred project according to the SUN criteria, and applied the associated proportional
allocation to nutrition-sensitive CRS codes of validated projects. For the aggregate figure, it applied an annual
average market exchange rate for 2016 to report in US$.
EU: At the N4G Summit, the EU committed €3.5 billion for nutrition interventions for 2014–2020. EU: 1) for nutrition-
specific disbursements, identified all disbursements reported to the DAC linked to nutrition-specific commitments
made so far and applied the SUN methodology of 100% of the disbursement amount; 2) for nutrition-sensitive,
identified all disbursements reported to the DAC linked to nutrition-sensitive commitments made so far and
applied the SUN methodology of the proportional allocation of 100% or 25% of the disbursement amount
depending on whether the related commitment had been categorised as ‘nutrition-sensitive dominant’ or
‘nutrition-sensitive partial’. A commitment corresponds to a legally binding financial agreement between the EU
and a partner. The disbursement figures reported by the EU are the total amounts of commitments contracted
so far. Further disbursements of funds are made according to a schedule of disbursements outlined in individual
contracts, progress in implementation and rate of use of the funds by the partner.
France: reported US$4.7 million as nutrition-specific disbursements in 2015. The only difference between what
France reported through the OECD DAC system and to the Global Nutrition Report is the SUN contribution, which
was counted as a nutrition-specific disbursement for our reporting.
Germany: figures represent nutrition disbursements from the Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and
Development and the Federal Ministry of Food and Agriculture.
Switzerland: does not use the basic nutrition code and thus reports 0 for nutrition-specific spending.
UK: figures represent nutrition disbursements from the Department for International Development only; 2016
figure includes US$45 million of nutrition-specific matched funding; 2017 figure includes US$89 million of nutrition-
specific matched funding.
US: The nutrition-sensitive component is calculated differently from that of other countries. For nutrition-specific,
the US government uses the OECD DAC CRS purpose code 12240, which includes activities implemented through
the McGovern-Dole International Food for Education and Child Nutrition Program. It also includes the portion
of ‘emergency food aid’ (CRS code 72040) and ‘development food aid’ (CRS code 52010) under the Title II Food
for Peace Program identified as nutrition (programme element 3.1.9) in the US government’s Foreign Assistance
Framework. This programme element aims to reduce chronic malnutrition among children under 5 years of age. To
achieve this goal, development partners use a preventive approach during the first 1,000 days – from pregnancy
until the child is two. Programmes use a synergistic package of nutrition-specific and sensitive interventions that
help decrease chronic and acute malnutrition by improving preventive and curative health services, including:
growth monitoring and promotion; water, sanitation and hygiene; immunisation; deworming; reproductive health
and family planning; and malaria prevention and treatment.
33 This assessment considers only health sector spending on nutritional deficiencies. It is possible that some (or part)
of the 10 interventions could fall under other sectors. Percentages, therefore, are an estimate rather than a holistic
assessment of progress on financing for the investment framework.
34 While the exact overall gap in funding is unknown, the additional investments would definitely make a substantial
contribution to fill the gap
35 World Health Organization, 2018. Global nutrition policy review 2016–2017: country progress in creating enabling
policy environments for promoting healthy diets and nutrition. Geneva: WHO. Available at:
https://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/275990/9789241514873-eng.pdf?ua=1
36 Levin C., Masters W., Gelli A. et al., 2019. Economic evaluation of multisectoral actions for health and nutrition.
Agriculture, Nutrition and Health Academy Working Group of Economic Evaluations. Innovative Methods and
Metrics for Agriculture and Nutrition Actions programme, London.
38 See, for example: Brookings, 2016. Aid effectiveness in fragile states: how bad is it and how can it improve?
Available at: www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/global_121616_brookeshearer.pdf); Gisselquist R.,
2015. Good aid in hard places: learning from ‘successful’ interventions in fragile situations. Available at:
www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13533312.2015.1059732
39 UNICEF, 2017. Narrowing the gaps: the power of investing in the poorest children. Available at:
https://www.unicef.org/publications/files/UNICEF_The_power_of_investing_in_the_poorest_children.pdf
40 World Bank, 2018. Thinking about equity in health financing: a framework. Available at: http://pubdocs.worldbank.
org/en/870381524235352323/Health-financing-and-equity-framework-FINAL-20180417-1750.pdf
41 R4D, 2019. Tracking aid for the WHA nutrition targets: targeting countries most in need. Available at:
www.r4d.org/resources/tracking-aid-for-the-wha-nutrition-targets-targeting-countries-most-in-need/
42 Manuel M., Coppard D., Dodd A. et al., 2019. Subnational investment in human capital. ODI and Development
Initiatives. Available at: www.odi.org/sites/odi.org.uk/files/resource-documents/12663.pdf
43 Manuel M., Coppard D., Dodd A. et al., 2019. Subnational investment in human capital. ODI and Development
Initiatives. Available at: www.odi.org/sites/odi.org.uk/files/resource-documents/12663.pdf
44 UNICEF, 2018. Nutrition public expenditure review: mainland Tanzania and Zanzibar. Available at:
www.unicef.org/esaro/PER-of-Nutrition-in-Tanzania-and-Zanzibar-(2018).pdf
45 For more information, see the Nutrition Modeling Consortium resources, available at:
www.nyas.org/programs/nutrition-modeling-consortium/?tab=resources
46 Pearson R., Killedar M., Petravic J. et al., 2018. Optima Nutrition: an allocative efficiency tool to reduce childhood
stunting by better targeting of nutrition-related interventions. BMC Public Health, 18:384.
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-018-5294-z
47 Pearson R., Killedar M., Petravic J. et al., 2018. Optima Nutrition: an allocative efficiency tool to reduce childhood
stunting by better targeting of nutrition-related interventions. BMC Public Health, 18:384.
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-018-5294-z
48 Nutrition for Growth, 2020. Join The Power of Nutrition in transforming the way the world tackles undernutrition.
Available at: www.powerofnutrition.org/nutrition-for-growth-join-the-power-of-nutrition-in-transforming-the-
way-the-world-tackles-undernutrition/
50 Action Against Hunger, 2018. Innovative financing mechanisms in nutrition: what are the lessons learned
so far? Available at www.actioncontrelafaim.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/INNOVATIVE-FINANCING-
MECHANISMS-IN-NUTRITION_-WHAT-ARE-THE-LESSONS-LEARNT-SO-FAR-_-ACF-policy-brief_2018.pdf
51 At the time of writing, 73 countries have sugar-sweetened beverage taxes at national level, one area (non-WHO
member state) and two WHO member states have sugar-sweetened beverage taxes at subnational level.
52 For example, see: UNICEF, 2019. Implementing taxes on sugar sweetened beverages, an overview of the
current approaches and the potential benefits for children. Available at: https://scalingupnutrition.org/news/
implementing-taxes-on-sugar-sweetened-beverages-an-overview-of-current-approaches; World Health
Organization, 2017. Taxes on sugary drinks: why do it? Available at: https://apps.who.int/iris/handle/10665/260253
53 Under a DIB: investors provide funds to implement social interventions, service providers work to deliver outcomes,
and outcomes funders, primarily public sector agencies, repay investors their principal plus a financial return if
– and only if – independently verified evidence shows that outcomes have been achieved. Development Impact
Bond Working Group, 2013. Investing in social outcomes: development impact bonds. The Center for Global
Development. Available at: www.cgdev.org/publication/investing-social-outcomes-development-impact-bonds
NOTES 157
54 Global Financing Facility, 2019. First-of-its-kind development impact bond launched in Cameroon to save
newborn babies (press release). Available at:
www.globalfinancingfacility.org/first-its-kind-development-impact-bond-launched-cameroon-save-newborn-babies
56 Elmer P. and West E., 2018. Nutritious Food Financing Program: investment opportunities in nutritious foods value
chains in Kenya and Tanzania. Geneva: GAIN and iGravity.
Chapter 6
1 Willett W., Rockström J., Loken B. et al., 2019. Food in the Anthropocene: the EAT–Lancet Commission on healthy
diets from sustainable food systems. The Lancet, 393(10170), pp. 447–92, doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(18)31788-4
2 Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, 2019. The state of food security and nutrition in the
world: Safeguarding against economic slowdowns and downturns. Rome: FAO. Available at:
www.fao.org/3/ca5162en/ca5162en.pdf
3 UNICEF, 2019. The state of the world’s children 2019: children, food and nutrition. New York: UNICEF.
4 The Global Panel’s second Foresight Report, launching in summer 2020, will offer policy solutions to improve
the quality of diets using a food systems approach through promoting availability, accessibility, affordability,
desirability and sustainability of healthy diets for all. See www.glopan.org/foresight2 (accessed 4 March 2020).
5 See www.thelancet.com/series/double-burden-malnutrition.
6 United Nations, 2019. Political Declaration of the High-level Meeting on Universal Health Coverage: ‘Universal
health coverage: moving together to build a healthier world’. Available at: https://undocs.org/en/A/RES/74/2
7 Tokyo Nutrition for Growth Summit 2020. Vision and roadmap – August 2019. Available at:
https://nutritionforgrowth.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Nutrition-for-Growth-2020-Vision-and-Roadmap.pdf
Accessed 5 May 2020
8 Nutrition for Growth has published guides to making commitments. One is available at: https://
nutritionforgrowth.org/make-a-commitment (accessed 4 March 2020) and another was published in 2019, and
available at: https://nutritionforgrowth.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Nutrition-for-Growth-2020-DRAFT-
Commitment-Guide.pdf. The World Health Organization’s guide to making SMART commitments is available at:
www.who.int/nutrition/decade-of-action/smart_commitments (accessed 5 March 2020).
Appendix 2
1 For a detailed and thorough discussion of the methodology for monitoring progress towards the global maternal,
infant and young child nutrition targets for 2025, see: WHO and UNICEF, 2017. Methodology for monitoring
progress towards the global nutrition targets for 2025. WHO-UNICEF Technical Expert Advisory Group on
Nutrition Monitoring. Technical report. Geneva: WHO; New York: UNICEF.
2 WHO, 2019. World health statistics 2019. Global Health Observatory Data Repository. Available at:
https://apps.who.int/gho/data/node.imr.ANEMIAPW?lang=en
3 UNICEF and WHO, 2019. Low birthweight estimates, 2019 edition. Available at:
www.who.int/nutrition/publications/UNICEFWHO-lowbirthweight-estimates-2019/en/
5 UNICEF/WHO/World Bank, 2019. Joint Child Malnutrition 2019 edition. New York. Available at:
https://data.unicef.org/resources/dataset/malnutrition-data. Accessed 3 February 2020.
6 WHO and UNICEF, 2017. Methodology for monitoring progress towards the global nutrition targets for 2025.
WHO-UNICEF Technical Expert Advisory Group on Nutrition Monitoring. Technical report. Geneva: WHO;
New York: UNICEF.
8 Global Burden of Disease, the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, 2019.
NOTES 159
ACRONYMS AND
ABBREVIATIONS
ATNI Access to Nutrition Initiative MICS Multiple indicator cluster survey
Anaemia Anaemia is a medical condition in which a person’s red blood cell (or, more
precisely, haemoglobin) level is less than normal. Anaemia is a global public
health issue faced by people in both low- and high-income countries, and
is a particular concern for adolescent girls and women of reproductive age.
There are many forms of anaemia, with different causes and treatment.
The most common causes of anaemia include nutritional deficiencies, due to
inadequate (or insufficient) intake of minerals (particularly iron) and vitamins
from the diet.
Biodiversity Biodiversity refers to the variety and variability of living organisms on Earth,
including plants, animals and micro-organisms like fungi and bacteria.
Development ‘Development assistance’ (commonly known as aid) refers here to the resources
assistance transferred from development agencies, including private philanthropic
and official organisations, to low- and middle-income countries. Development assistance
development is therefore wider than the ‘official development assistance’ (ODA) which is
assistance (ODA) defined by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD) Development Assistance Committee (DAC) as foreign (government) aid
to developing countries and territories on the DAC list of ODA recipients and
to multilateral development institutions designed to promote their economic
development and welfare.
Diet-related Diet- (or nutrition)-related NCD targets are four of the ten global nutrition
non-communicable targets adopted at the World Health Assembly in 2013, to be attained by
disease (NCD) 2025, including for salt intake, raised blood pressure, adult obesity and adult
targets diabetes. For example, Target 4 is ‘Achieve a 30% relative reduction in mean
population intake of salt’.
Dietary diversity Dietary diversity (or dietary variety) refers to the variety in the number and
type of foods in a person’s diet over a reference period. There is a lack of
consensus on the optimal standardised measure for dietary diversity. It is
also used as a proxy measure for food security, adequacy of energy/nutrient
intake, and diet quality.
Equality and Inequality refers to differences, variations and disparities in health and
inequality living conditions among people (individuals and population groups) that
are the outcome (or consequence) of unjust systems and processes that
structure everyday conditions (see Equity and inequity). Nutrition inequalities
are differences in people’s nutritional outcomes, such as dietary intake,
nutritional status and related conditions/diseases, influenced for example by
location, age, gender, ethnicity and wealth.
Equity and Equity focuses on opportunities rather than outcomes and encompasses
inequity the idea of fairness or justice. Inequity adds a moral dimension, and can be
defined as ‘unfairness of opportunity’, or lack of equitable access to systems
and processes that structure everyday conditions, leading to inequalities
(or unequal outcomes/consequences). In other words, equality of opportunity,
or equity, influences equality of outcome. Nutrition equity here focuses on
opportunities and barriers within food systems and health systems that affect
access to healthy, affordable food, and quality nutrition care, thus leading to
unequal nutrition outcomes (or nutrition inequalities).
Food environment Food environments are the physical, economic, political and sociocultural
contexts that affect accessibility, availability, affordability and cultural/
sensory perceptions of food. This in turn influences people’s food choices,
such as in acquiring, preparing and eating food, and their nutritional status.
Food security and Food security means that all people, at all times, have access to enough safe
insecurity and nutritious food for normal growth and development, enabling them to
lead an active and healthy life. Food insecurity means the opposite, and can
be at the individual, household, national, regional or global level.
Food system A food system gathers all the elements (including environment, people,
inputs, processes, infrastructures and institutions) and activities that relate
to the production, processing, distribution, preparation and consumption
of food, and the outputs of these activities, including socioeconomic and
environmental outcomes.
Fragility Fragility refers to insufficient coping capacity of the state, system and/or
communities to manage, absorb or mitigate” the risks they face, leaving
people vulnerable to a range of shocks. Fragility can lead to negative
consequences such as violence, humanitarian crisis or other emergencies.
Geospatial data Geospatial data is information about events, objects or phenomena specific to
a particular geographical location. Examples include weather forecasts, satellite
navigation systems (satnavs), geotagged social media posts (or geotagging),
and malnutrition rates. Location is one way of disaggregating nutrition data,
alongside other dimensions such as wealth and sex. Using geospatial data
can help us pinpoint where malnourished people are located.
Global nutrition Global nutrition targets here collectively refer to the World Health Assembly
targets targets on both maternal, infant and young child nutrition (MIYCN), and on
diet-related NCDs. These were adopted in 2012 (MIYCN) and 2013 (NCDs) by the
World Health Assembly, to be reached by 2025. The 2025 global nutrition targets
include targets for six MIYCN indicators: low birth weight, stunting in children
under 5 years of age, wasting in children under 5 years of age, overweight in
children under 5 years of age, anaemia in women of reproductive age, and
exclusive breastfeeding. They also include targets for four diet-related NCD
indicators in adults: salt intake, raised blood pressure, diabetes and obesity.
Indigenous foods Indigenous food systems include all of the land, air, water, soil and culturally
important plant, animal and fungi species that have sustained Indigenous
peoples over thousands of years. Indigenous food systems are best described
in ecological rather than neoclassical economic terms. In this context, an
Indigenous food is one that has been primarily cultivated, taken care of,
harvested, prepared, preserved, shared, or traded within the boundaries of
specific territories based on values of interdependency, respect, reciprocity
and ecological sensibility.
GLOSSARY 163
Malnutrition Malnutrition, in all its forms, refers to both undernutrition (including stunting,
wasting, underweight and micronutrient deficiencies) and overweight, obesity
and other diet-related NCDs. It includes a range of diet-related conditions
caused by not having enough calories, nutrients or quality (healthy) food, or
having too much low-quality (or unhealthy) food.
Maternal, infant The maternal, infant and young child nutrition (MIYCN) targets are six global
and young child targets adopted at the World Health Assembly in 2012, to be attained by
nutrition targets 2025, for: low birth weight, stunting in children under 5 years of age, wasting
in children under 5 years of age, overweight in children under 5 years of
age, anaemia in women of reproductive age, and exclusive breastfeeding.
For example, Target 1 is ‘Achieve a 40% reduction in the number of children
under 5 who are stunted’.
Non-communicable NCDs are non-infectious chronic diseases that last a long time, progress
diseases (NCDs) slowly, and are caused by a combination of modifiable and non-modifiable
and diet-related risk factors, including lifestyle/behavioural, environmental, physiological and
NCDs genetic factors. There are four main types of NCDs: cardiovascular disease
(e.g., coronary heart disease, stroke), diabetes, cancer and chronic respiratory
disease. Obesity is both a chronic disease and a risk factor for other NCDs.
We refer to NCDs related to diet (or nutrition) as ‘diet-related NCDs’. These mainly
include obesity, cardiovascular disease, diabetes and specific cancer types.
Purpose code A purpose code is used by donors reporting to the Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development (OECD) Development Assistance Committee
(DAC) to capture more accurately where spending is going, in greater detail
than simply by sector. The ‘basic nutrition’ purpose code captures nutrition-
specific spending in the health sector. In 2017, an improved nutrition purpose
code was adopted that aligns with the Lancet definition of nutrition-specific
investments and WHO essential nutrition actions.
Staple foods and Staple foods are foods, either plant-based or animal-based, that are eaten
staple grains regularly and in such amounts that constitute the major part of a diet, and
generally supply a large fraction of caloric and nutrient needs. Although they
vary across geographic locations, the overwhelming majority of global staple
foods are grains, such as corn, rice and wheat.
GLOSSARY 165
Stunting Stunting refers to the impaired growth and development that children
experience from poor nutrition, repeated infection and inadequate
psychosocial stimulation. The World Health Organization (WHO) defines
childhood stunting (moderate and severe) as a length- or height-for-age
z-score more than two standard deviations below the median of the WHO
Child Growth Standards. Children who are stunted are also more likely to be
wasted. See Appendix 1 for the definition of stunting used in the present report.
Supermarkets A supermarket is a shop with most of its selling space dedicated to processed
and fresh food, serving an expanding income group. Supermarkets may also
form part of consolidated retail chains adhering to private standards for food
quality and safety.
Universal health Universal health coverage (UHC), also known as universal healthcare, is
coverage a healthcare system in which all people are assured access to essential
healthcare services without facing financial hardship. UHC is clearly
included in Sustainable Development Goal 3, which calls for all countries
to ensure that everyone has access to a minimum set of high-quality
healthcare interventions without facing financial hardship. The 2019 United
Nations General Assembly had for the first time a dedicated focus on UHC,
committing to achieve UHC by 2030. The underlying principle is that optimal
health and wellbeing is a human right, for everyone, and not the privilege of
only the better-off.
Wasting Children who are too thin because of undernutrition are ‘wasted’. The World
Health Organization (WHO) defines childhood wasting a weight-for-length or
-height z-score more than two standard deviations below the median of the
WHO Child Growth Standards. Children who are wasted are more likely to be
stunted. See Appendix 1 for the definition of wasting used in the present report.
globalnutritionreport.org/resources
Country Nutrition Profiles bring together the best available data on child, adolescent and adult
nutrition as well as information on intervention coverage, determinants, nutrition financing and
demography, and include:
• global overview
• 194 countries
Nutrition for Growth Commitment Tracking presents the latest data on commitments to end
malnutrition made by stakeholders at Nutrition for Growth summits, including:
• governments
• donors
• businesses
• UN agencies
Case Studies and Briefings showcase examples of where progress is being made to improve
nutrition outcomes and highlight what can be done to accelerate progress towards a world free
from malnutrition in all its forms.
About Malnutrition provides information on the different types of malnutrition and why
malnutrition matters, while also highlighting the role of advocacy in achieving a world free from
malnutrition.
You can read more about the important work of organisations and groups that are making progress
to improve nutrition outcomes around the world on the Global Nutrition Report blog at:
globalnutritionreport.org/blog
SPOTLIGHT 3.1: Addressing equity and social justice: India’s Transformation of Aspirational
Districts initiative
Alok Kumar, Rajan Sankar and Basanta Kumar Kar
SPOTLIGHT 4.1: Towards a more diverse agri-food system – beyond staple grains
Prabhu Pingali
SPOTLIGHT 4.3: Global trends and patterns in processed food and drink sales
Phillip Baker, Priscila Machado, Kate Sievert, Kathryn Backholer, Colin Bell
and Mark Lawrence
SPOTLIGHT 4.6: Food environments in the LMICs: identifying and filling the gaps
Bianca Carducci, Christina Oh and Zulfiqar A. Bhutta
SPOTLIGHT 5.4: Optima Nutrition to reduce childhood stunting through better targeting
Meera Shekar, Jonathan Kweku Akuoku and Jean Sebastien Kouassi
SPOTLIGHT 5.5: The Global Financing Facility for Women, Children and Adolescents (GFF)
Leslie Elder
BOX 1.2: Equity and the focus on justice, vulnerability and non-discrimination
BOX 4.1: Areas where the private sector can contribute to improved nutrition
FIGURES
FIGURE 1.1: Nutrition equity framework
FIGURE 2.1: Global progress towards the 2025 global nutrition targets
FIGURE 2.2: Global prevalence of infant and young child feeding indicators, child and
adolescent and adult nutrition indicators
FIGURE 2.3: Country-level progress towards the 2025 global nutrition targets
FIGURE 2.4: Map of countries with overlapping forms of stunting in children under 5,
anaemia among women of reproductive age, and overweight in adult women
FIGURE 2.5: Overlapping forms of stunting in children under 5, anaemia in adolescent girls
and women, and overweight in adult women, by fragility
FIGURE 2.6: Inequalities in infant and young child feeding indicators by urban–rural
location, sex, wealth and maternal education
FIGURE 2.8: Inequalities in stunting in children under 5 between urban–rural location and
wealth in Peru, 2017
FIGURE 2.9: Prevalence of stunting, wasting and overweight among children under 5 at the
5 × 5-km grid cell-level, 2017
FIGURE 2.11: Prevalence of stunting in children under 5 by wealth for select countries,
2000–2017
FIGURE 2.13: Global prevalence of underweight, overweight and obesity in children and
adolescents aged 5–19 years and adults, by country income, 2016
FIGURE 2.14: Global prevalence of underweight, overweight and obesity in adults by sex,
2000–2016
FIGURE 2.15: Global annualised change in sex inequality for adult obesity, by fragility,
2000 and 2016
FIGURE 2.16: Global prevalence of raised blood pressure and diabetes in adults by sex,
2000–2015
FIGURE 3.1: Framework for equitable integration of nutrition within health systems
FIGURE 3.2: Inclusion of goals, targets or indicators related to the global nutrition targets
in health sector plans across 94 countries by country income, 2016–2017
FIGURE 3.4: Delivery of Poshan Abhiyaan (National Nutrition Mission) interventions in the
aspirational districts: results from two rounds of household surveys
FIGURE 3.5: Population coverage of selected maternal, infant and young child
interventions delivered in healthcare settings
FIGURE 3.6: Population coverage of selected maternal, infant and young child
interventions delivered in healthcare settings, by population wealth
FIGURE 4.4: Heat map of RCPs of animal-sourced foods in 176 countries, 2011
FIGURE 4.5: Processed food sales by country-income level, 2003–2017 with projections to 2022
FIGURE 4.7: Supermarket users and non-users in Kenya: body mass index and overweight,
2012 and 2015
FIGURE 5.1: The Global Solidarity financing scenario: additional finacing needs to achieve
WHA nutrition targets
FIGURE 5.6: Allocation of 2017 basic nutrition ODA by recipient malnutrition burden
FIGURE 5.10: Projected and optimal scenarios for tax revenue in SUN countries to 2025
FIGURE 5.12: Optima Nutrition in Bangladesh: comparison of planned and optimised budget
TABLES
TABLE 1.1: Priority actions for nutrition equity
TABLE 3.1: Nutrition interventions included in the Essential Universal Health Coverage
(EUHC) developed by the World Bank in 2017
A multi-stakeholder initiative comprised of global institutions, the GNR is led by experts in the field
of nutrition. The GNR was established in 2014 following the first Nutrition for Growth summit, as an
accountability mechanism to track progress against global nutrition targets and the commitments
made to reach them.
Through a comprehensive report, interactive Country Nutrition Profiles and Nutrition for Growth
Commitment Tracking, the GNR sheds light on the burden of malnutrition and highlights progress
and working solutions to tackle malnutrition around the world.
We are a unifying voice, designed for and with the communities who can act. By informing the
nutrition debate, we inspire action to create a world free from malnutrition in all its forms.
27.02.2
Somalia Tanzania
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