A shock to the (food) system: Using new IFPRI tools to evaluate household food security outcomes

Recent crises and shocks have eroded food security in many countries. These crises take many forms. Some are global shocks, such as a sharp rise in food commodity prices in world markets. Some are local shocks—for instance, flooding from an extreme weather event, or another from the ever-increasing...

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Autores principales: Comstock, Andrew, Ecker, Olivier, Jones, Eleanor
Formato: Blog Post
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Food Policy Research Institute 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163675
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author Comstock, Andrew
Ecker, Olivier
Jones, Eleanor
author_browse Comstock, Andrew
Ecker, Olivier
Jones, Eleanor
author_facet Comstock, Andrew
Ecker, Olivier
Jones, Eleanor
author_sort Comstock, Andrew
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Recent crises and shocks have eroded food security in many countries. These crises take many forms. Some are global shocks, such as a sharp rise in food commodity prices in world markets. Some are local shocks—for instance, flooding from an extreme weather event, or another from the ever-increasing list of climate impacts. When a crisis hits unexpectedly, researchers, governments, and international organizations must quickly assess the impacts on household food security in order to devise appropriate responses to avert declines in diet quality and nutrition. However, with little time to develop bespoke models or implement intensive simulations, conducting research and designing informed policies can be challenging. In these scenarios, researchers and policymakers need access to rapid-response tools. IFPRI’s innovative Food Security Simulators (FSS) were developed to address this knowledge gap. The Food Security Simulator is an easy-to-use MS Excel-based tool based on representative household survey data and rigorous, sophisticated food demand models to capture consumer behavior. The tool, currently available for Kenya, Nigeria, and Ethiopia, allows users to enter positive and negative price or income changes, along with food preference changes (in the Ethiopia version) in percentage terms and provides simulated changes for a diverse set of food-consumption- and diet-quality-related indicators. These are presented in concise overview tables and visualized in graphs for easy export and use in reports.
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spelling CGSpace1636752025-02-28T21:58:23Z A shock to the (food) system: Using new IFPRI tools to evaluate household food security outcomes Comstock, Andrew Ecker, Olivier Jones, Eleanor shock food security food prices diet Recent crises and shocks have eroded food security in many countries. These crises take many forms. Some are global shocks, such as a sharp rise in food commodity prices in world markets. Some are local shocks—for instance, flooding from an extreme weather event, or another from the ever-increasing list of climate impacts. When a crisis hits unexpectedly, researchers, governments, and international organizations must quickly assess the impacts on household food security in order to devise appropriate responses to avert declines in diet quality and nutrition. However, with little time to develop bespoke models or implement intensive simulations, conducting research and designing informed policies can be challenging. In these scenarios, researchers and policymakers need access to rapid-response tools. IFPRI’s innovative Food Security Simulators (FSS) were developed to address this knowledge gap. The Food Security Simulator is an easy-to-use MS Excel-based tool based on representative household survey data and rigorous, sophisticated food demand models to capture consumer behavior. The tool, currently available for Kenya, Nigeria, and Ethiopia, allows users to enter positive and negative price or income changes, along with food preference changes (in the Ethiopia version) in percentage terms and provides simulated changes for a diverse set of food-consumption- and diet-quality-related indicators. These are presented in concise overview tables and visualized in graphs for easy export and use in reports. 2024-12-10 2024-12-17T17:53:24Z 2024-12-17T17:53:24Z Blog Post https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163675 en https://www.ifpri.org/landing/conflict-shocks-food-systems-blog/ https://www.cgiar.org/news-events/news/a-shock-to-the-food-system-using-new-ifpri-tools-to-evaluate-household-food-security-outcomes/ Open Access International Food Policy Research Institute Comstock, Andrew; Ecker, Olivier; and Jones, Eleanor. 2024. A shock to the (food) system: Using new IFPRI tools to evaluate household food security outcomes. IFPRI Blog. https://www.ifpri.org/blog/a-shock-to-the-food-system-using-new-ifpri-tools-to-evaluate-household-food-security-outcomes/
spellingShingle shock
food security
food prices
diet
Comstock, Andrew
Ecker, Olivier
Jones, Eleanor
A shock to the (food) system: Using new IFPRI tools to evaluate household food security outcomes
title A shock to the (food) system: Using new IFPRI tools to evaluate household food security outcomes
title_full A shock to the (food) system: Using new IFPRI tools to evaluate household food security outcomes
title_fullStr A shock to the (food) system: Using new IFPRI tools to evaluate household food security outcomes
title_full_unstemmed A shock to the (food) system: Using new IFPRI tools to evaluate household food security outcomes
title_short A shock to the (food) system: Using new IFPRI tools to evaluate household food security outcomes
title_sort shock to the food system using new ifpri tools to evaluate household food security outcomes
topic shock
food security
food prices
diet
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163675
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