Food as the basis for development and security: A strategy for Yemen

Yemen has been facing severe development challenges in recent years, but rapidly depleting oil and water resources combined with large population increases and a lack of job-creating growth are making a difficult situation even more complicated. In order to provide opportunities for Yemenis to escap...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Breisinger, Clemens, Ecker, Olivier, Funes, José, Yu, Bingxin
Formato: Artículo preliminar
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Food Policy Research Institute 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/154400
_version_ 1855527555400990720
author Breisinger, Clemens
Ecker, Olivier
Funes, José
Yu, Bingxin
author_browse Breisinger, Clemens
Ecker, Olivier
Funes, José
Yu, Bingxin
author_facet Breisinger, Clemens
Ecker, Olivier
Funes, José
Yu, Bingxin
author_sort Breisinger, Clemens
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Yemen has been facing severe development challenges in recent years, but rapidly depleting oil and water resources combined with large population increases and a lack of job-creating growth are making a difficult situation even more complicated. In order to provide opportunities for Yemenis to escape the current situation of widespread poverty and food insecurity, the Government of the Republic of Yemen, under the leadership of the Ministry of Planning and International Cooperation, has developed a strategy to help all Yemeni people gain access to sufficient and nutritious foods in order to live active, productive, and healthy lives. The main objectives of the National Food Security Strategy, developed with the support of the International Food Policy Research Institute, are to (1) cut food insecurity by one-third by 2015, (2) reach moderate food security levels—meaning 90 percent of people have enough to eat year-round—by 2020, and (3) reduce child malnutrition by at least one percentage point per year. As a contribution to this process, the authors of this paper identify seven priority actions to help achieve these goals. 1. Leverage the fuel-subsidy reform process to promote food security. 2. Improve the business climate to foster pro-food-secure private investments in promising sectors. 3. Use qat reduction policies to enhance agricultural development. 4. Strengthen food security risk-management practices. 5. Implement the water-sector strategy decisively. 6. Target public investment to the food insecure more accurately and improve service provision, especially in rural areas. 7. Launch high-level awareness campaigns for family planning, healthy nutrition, and women's empowerment. The government, civil society groups, and international partners need to quickly, decisively, and jointly implement these seven actions in order to fulfill the strategic goals. The implementation process is likely to be most effective if conducted in a transparent and inclusive manner with effective follow-up and appropriate monitoring and evaluation mechanisms.
format Artículo preliminar
id CGSpace154400
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2010
publishDateRange 2010
publishDateSort 2010
publisher International Food Policy Research Institute
publisherStr International Food Policy Research Institute
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1544002025-11-06T06:27:28Z Food as the basis for development and security: A strategy for Yemen Breisinger, Clemens Ecker, Olivier Funes, José Yu, Bingxin food security poverty economic development Yemen has been facing severe development challenges in recent years, but rapidly depleting oil and water resources combined with large population increases and a lack of job-creating growth are making a difficult situation even more complicated. In order to provide opportunities for Yemenis to escape the current situation of widespread poverty and food insecurity, the Government of the Republic of Yemen, under the leadership of the Ministry of Planning and International Cooperation, has developed a strategy to help all Yemeni people gain access to sufficient and nutritious foods in order to live active, productive, and healthy lives. The main objectives of the National Food Security Strategy, developed with the support of the International Food Policy Research Institute, are to (1) cut food insecurity by one-third by 2015, (2) reach moderate food security levels—meaning 90 percent of people have enough to eat year-round—by 2020, and (3) reduce child malnutrition by at least one percentage point per year. As a contribution to this process, the authors of this paper identify seven priority actions to help achieve these goals. 1. Leverage the fuel-subsidy reform process to promote food security. 2. Improve the business climate to foster pro-food-secure private investments in promising sectors. 3. Use qat reduction policies to enhance agricultural development. 4. Strengthen food security risk-management practices. 5. Implement the water-sector strategy decisively. 6. Target public investment to the food insecure more accurately and improve service provision, especially in rural areas. 7. Launch high-level awareness campaigns for family planning, healthy nutrition, and women's empowerment. The government, civil society groups, and international partners need to quickly, decisively, and jointly implement these seven actions in order to fulfill the strategic goals. The implementation process is likely to be most effective if conducted in a transparent and inclusive manner with effective follow-up and appropriate monitoring and evaluation mechanisms. 2010 2024-10-01T14:01:18Z 2024-10-01T14:01:18Z Working Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/154400 en Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Breisinger, Clemens; Ecker, Olivier; Funes, José; Yu, Bingxin. 2010. Food as the basis for development and security: A strategy for Yemen. IFPRI Discussion Paper 1036. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/154400
spellingShingle food security
poverty
economic development
Breisinger, Clemens
Ecker, Olivier
Funes, José
Yu, Bingxin
Food as the basis for development and security: A strategy for Yemen
title Food as the basis for development and security: A strategy for Yemen
title_full Food as the basis for development and security: A strategy for Yemen
title_fullStr Food as the basis for development and security: A strategy for Yemen
title_full_unstemmed Food as the basis for development and security: A strategy for Yemen
title_short Food as the basis for development and security: A strategy for Yemen
title_sort food as the basis for development and security a strategy for yemen
topic food security
poverty
economic development
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/154400
work_keys_str_mv AT breisingerclemens foodasthebasisfordevelopmentandsecurityastrategyforyemen
AT eckerolivier foodasthebasisfordevelopmentandsecurityastrategyforyemen
AT funesjose foodasthebasisfordevelopmentandsecurityastrategyforyemen
AT yubingxin foodasthebasisfordevelopmentandsecurityastrategyforyemen