Friday, April 11, 2008

[EQ] Hunger and Malnutrition - Copenhagen Consensus 2008 Challenge

Hunger and Malnutrition

 

Sue Horton, Vice-President Academic, Wilfrid Laurier University, Waterloo Canada

Harold Alderman, Social Protection Advisor – Africa Region World Bank, Washington DC, USA

Juan A. Rivera, Director, Center for Research in Nutrition and Health, National Institute Public Health, Mexico

Copenhagen Consensus 2008 Challenge Paper - March 6, 2008

 

Available online as PDF file [ 40p.] at: http://www.copenhagenconsensus.com/Admin/Public/DWSDownload.aspx?File=%2fFiles%2fFiler%2fCC08%2fPapers%2fOfficial+papers%2fCopenhagen_Consensus_2008_-_hunger_and_malnutrition.pdf

 

“……..Despite significant reductions in income poverty in recent years, undernutrition remains widespread. Recent estimates published in the Lancet (Black et al 2008) suggest that “maternal and child undernutrition is the underlying cause of 3.5 million deaths, 35% of the disease burden in children younger than 5 years, and 11% of total global DALY’s” (Disability-Adjusted Life Years). Undernutrition can be indicated both by anthropometric indices (underweight, stunting and wasting) and with missing micronutrients in poor quality diets.

 

Undernutrition in turn has negative effects on income and on economic growth. Undernutrition leads to increased mortality and morbidity which lead to loss of economic output and increased spending on health. Poor nutrition means that individuals are less productive (both due to physical and mental impairment), and that children benefit less from education. The previous 2004 Copenhagen Consensus paper on the topic discusses these mechanisms in detail (Behrman, Alderman and Hoddinott, 2004, hereafter BAH 2004).

 

Reducing undernutrition is one of the Millennium Goals (Goal 1 aims to eradicate extreme poverty and hunger), and is also a key factor underpinning several others. Achieving goals in primary education, reducing child mortality, improving maternal health, and combating HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases all depend crucially on nutrition.

 

There are cost-effective interventions for improving nutrition. Section I below discusses the challenge in more detail, section II describes four priority solutions, section III undertakes more detailed economic analysis of these solutions, and the fourth and final section discusses the implications of the analysis….”

 

Copenhagen Consensus 2008

The best solutions to 10 of the world's biggest challenges
Copenhagen, May, 2008

CCC's core project,Copenhagen Consensus 2008 (CC08), is funded by The Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Website: http://www.copenhagenconsensus.com/Default.aspx?ID=953

More than 55 international economists, including 5 Nobel Laureates, will assess more than 50 solutions and assemble a list of priorities for everyone involved in solving the world's biggest challenges.

The global challenges being adressed in the Copenhagen Consensus 2008 are: Air pollution, subsidies and trade barriers, malnutrition and hunger, conflicts, terrorism, global warming, diseases, water and sanitation, education and women and development

 

10 Challenges – Authors

 

Air Pollution

Bjorn Larsen, Consultant
Guy Hutton, Project Manager 
Neha Khanna, Associate Professor
 

Conflicts

Paul Collier, Professor and Director
Lisa Chauvat, Ph.D
Håvard Hegre, Research Professor

 

Diseases

Dean Jamison, Senior Fellow, Ph.D
Prabhat Jha, Professor
David Bloom, Professor
 

Education

Peter F. Orazem, Professor, Ph.D
Paul Glewwe, Professor
H. Anthony Patrinos, Lead Economist
 

Global Warming

Gary Yohe , M.Phil, Ph.D
Richard S.J. Tol, Adjunct professor 
Richard Richels, Director
 

Malnutrition and Hunger

Susan Horton, Professor, Ph.D
Juan Rivera, Professor, Director
Harold Alderman, Lead Economist
 

Sanitation and Water

 

Dale Whittington, Professor, Ph.D
W. Michael Hanemann, Chancellor’s Professor
Claudia Sadoff, Lead Economist
 

Subsidies and Trade Barriers

Kym Anderson, George Gollin Professor, Ph.D
L. Alan Winters, Professor



 

Terrorism

Todd Sandler, Vibhooti Shukla Professor, Ph.D
Daniel G. Arce, Robert D. McCallum Professor
Walter Enders, Bidgood Chair of Economics & Finance

 

Women and Development

Elizabeth King, Research manager, Ph.D
Stephan Klasen, Professor
Maria Porter, Post-doctoral fellow

 

 

 

 

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