Most of the world’s
hungry live in developing countries. According to the latest Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO) statistics from 2013, there are
842 million hungry people in the world and 98 percent of them are in
developing countries. They are distributed like this:
Rural risk
Three-quarters of all hungry people live in rural areas, mainly in
the villages of Asia and Africa. Overwhelmingly dependent on agriculture
for their food, these populations have no alternative source of income
or employment. As a result, they are vulnerable to crises. Many migrate
to cities in their search for employment, swelling the ever-expanding
populations of shanty towns in developing countries.
Hungry farmers
FAO calculates that around half of the world's hungry people are from
smallholder farming communities, surviving off marginal lands prone to
natural disasters like drought or flood. Another 20 percent belong to
landless families dependent on farming and about 10 percent live in
communities whose livelihoods depend on herding, fishing or forest
resources.The remaining 20 percent live in shanty towns on the periphery of the biggest cities in developing countries. The numbers of poor and hungry city dwellers are rising rapidly along with the world's total urban population.
Children
An estimated 146 million children in developing countries are underweight - the result of acute or chronic hunger (Source: The State of the World's Children,
UNICEF, 2009). All too often, child hunger is inherited: up to 17
million children are born underweight annually, the result of inadequate
nutrition before and during pregnancy.
Women
Women are the world's primary food producers, yet cultural traditions
and social structures often mean women are much more affected by hunger
and poverty than men. A mother who is stunted or underweight due to an
inadequate diet often give birth to low birthweight children.Around 50 per cent of pregnant women in developing countries are iron deficient (source: Unicef). Lack of iron means 315,000 women die annually from hemorrhage at childbirth. As a result, women, and in particular expectant and nursing mothers, often need special or increased intake of food.
http://www.wfp.org/hunger/who-are
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