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Global food crises 2008 vs 2022: Report finds disparities in hunger, funding 

 
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A new study, Knowing Better, Responding Worse: How Mistakes from 2008 Led to the Food Crisis of Today, released by Care, reported that 112.2 million more people around the world were driven to hunger after 2020, compared to the previous major global food crisis (2008-2009). Despite this significant increase in hunger (116 per cent), the organisation found that the international community is not responding with the same funding urgency now as it did nearly 15 years prior. Moreover, the report also looked at how the global response starting in 2008 may have missed an opportunity to address future food crises.

The 2008 crisis drove 97 million more people into hunger, while the current context has seen those numbers go up to 209.6 million (through 2022). And while the crisis peaked after two years in 2009 and returned to baseline the year after, there has been a steep and steady increase in hunger between 2019 and 2022, and projections of food insecurity in 2023 are further escalating. Yet humanitarian funding in 2022 only met approximately 56 per cent of funding needs, as compared to a 72.5 per cent fulfilment of appeals in 2008.

"While decision-makers responded to the 2008 crisis with then unprecedented funding and systemic reforms, the 2022 crisis is not seeing similar urgency in the scale-up --and the crisis is twice as bad today," said Emily Janoch, Senior Director, Thought Leadership and Knowledge Management, CARE USA.

The report examined the last two major food crises by comparing hunger statistics and funding patterns. 2008 and 2022 were years in which a confluence of diverse drivers caused spikes in the cost of living, food insecurity and humanitarian needs, disrupting the lives and livelihoods of many around the world. The global economic and financial meltdown of 2008 sparked astronomical increases in food prices and hunger. Today, Covid-19, conflict-induced fuel and food price shocks, and climate crises have set countries back decades in development indicators, and humanitarian needs have vastly increased.

In addition to increased hunger and a drop in funding as a percentage of the appeals, the report also underscored how the international response following the 2008 crisis – which helped slow down hunger – missed an opportunity to build food system resiliency to address future shocks. Funding was allocated unevenly, with key sectors such as agriculture and early recovery underfunded by 47 per cent and 49 per cent, respectively, in 2009.

"The scale-up and funding towards meeting immediate needs did not plan enough for medium and long-term food security that would prevent the magnitude of today's crisis. We do not need new solutions, we need stronger systems," said Janoch.

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