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Presentation No' 3

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U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) ... E, folic acid, niacin, pantothenic acid, pryidoxine, riboflavin, thiamin, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Presentation No' 3


1
Presentation No. 3 February 23, 2004 Bruce
Cogill, Ph.D.
Food Aid Food Security
Adapted from Cogill, B. and T. Castleman. Food
Aid Issues and Applications. FANTA, Feb. 2003
2
Food Security Conceptual Framework

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Goals of the U.S. Food Assistance Program
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Title I (FY 2000 - 223 million)
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Title II (FY2003 gt 1 Billion)
  • U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID)
  • Emergency and Development programs implemented by
  • Cooperatives
  • Private Voluntary Organizations (PVOs)
  • international relief organizations, including the
    WFP
  • Development - Distributed in-kind and monetized
  • FY 2000 Emergency gt500 million
  • 35 million beneficiaries 60 programs, 33
    countries
  • Development gt400 million
  • 20 million beneficiaries, 103 programs, 39
    countries

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Title III (FY2000 - 5.4 million)
  • Government-to-government multi-year grant
    mechanism
  • identify key policy constraints to improved food
    security
  • e.g. land tenure, export constraints, budgetary
    policies
  • negotiate policy conditionalities
  • Section 416(b) (FY2000 gt500 million )
  • U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)
  • Surplus commodities, donated to PVOs. WFP and
    governments

8
Priorities for Title II Development Food Aid
Programs
  • Programmatic focus
  • improving household nutrition, especially for
    children and mothers
  • increasing agricultural productivity to alleviate
    one of the leading causes of hunger and
  • increasing incomes in rural and urban areas
    through economic and community development and by
    promoting sound environmental practices.
  • Geographic focus is South Asia and Sub-Saharan
    Africat

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The categories of food commodities
  • Whole Grains
  • Processed or Milled Grains
  • Blends (e.g. corn soy blend, wheat soy blend,
    corn soy milk)
  • Soy-fortified Cereals
  • Vegetable Oils
  • Pulses (e.g. beans, lentils, peas)
  • Other (e.g. sugar, salt, condiments)

14
Integration of food aid and other resources
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Maternal/Child Health and Nutrition
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Conceptual Framework of MCHN Programs
17
Uses of rations in MCHN programs
  • Recuperation Rehabilitate children suffering
    from malnutrition. Malnourished children (or
    their families) receive food as a dietary
    supplement to enable them to attain normal
    nutritional status
  • Prevention Food is provided to households that
    have vulnerable members at risk of malnutrition
    in order to prevent them from becoming
    malnourished
  • Incentive Food is used to motivate mothers to
    participate in educational activities aimed at
    improving maternal/child health and nutritional
    practices and at encouraging the use of health
    services. Food reduces barriers to participation
    in these activities, since it compensates for the
    time women spend attending the activities.

18
Uses of rations in MCHN programs
  • Many Title II commodities are fortified and can
    act as a vehicle for micronutrient
    supplementation
  • Processed cereals (corn and wheat soy blends,
    wheat flour, soy-fortified cereals) fortified
    with vitamin and mineral premixes (A, B-12, C, D,
    E, folic acid, niacin, pantothenic acid,
    pryidoxine, riboflavin, thiamin, calcium, iodine,
    iron, phosphorous, sodium, and zinc)
  • Vegetable oil fortified with vitamin A.

19
Improving the design of food components of MCHN
programs
  • Principal design recommendations include
    Universal targeting of children under two plus
    pregnant/lactating women
  • Ration size based on family calorie deficit

20
Other Development Activities
  • Water and Sanitation
  • Food for Education
  • Microenterprise
  • Agriculture and Natural resources
  • General Relief
  • Disaster Mitigation and Response

21
Potential Applications of Food Aid to Address
HIV/AIDS
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Potential Role of Food Assistance
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Responses to Household Food Shortages
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Food Secure Fragile Failing Failed
Designation of Country/region
Vulnerability Hazard (risk) - Coping ability
SOCIAL
  • Sources of Risk
  • Political
  • Economic
  • Social/Health
  • Natural/Production

ECONOMIC
POLITICAL
From Patrick Webb, FANTA/FFP 2003
26
Concerns about dependency
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Concerns about creating disincentives to local
production
  • Provide value-added, blended and fortified
    products that are not produced locally
  • But, ideally commodity should eventually be
    replaceable with local products for weaning
    recipes
  • Provide micronutrients usually deficient and not
    available through locally produced products
  • Commodity should represent a cash need of the
    households
  • Food for work activities seasonality of
    production into account
  • Also to avoid competing with local labor needs
  • Monitor prices in local markets
  • Increased number of emergencies competing for
    limited resources
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