Josette Sheeran: Ending hunger now
Summary
TLDRThe speaker, with a background in trade and economics, shares her journey to the front lines of global hunger, highlighting the plight of a billion people who struggle daily to find food. She emphasizes the urgency and solvable nature of this crisis, discussing the importance of breastfeeding, accessible nutritious food, and innovative solutions like digital food aid. The talk calls for a global commitment to end hunger, leveraging technology, education, and the potential of small farmers to create sustainable change.
Takeaways
- 🌏 The scale of global hunger is immense, with one out of every seven people not knowing how to fill their next meal.
- 💪 The importance of addressing hunger transcends compassion; it affects world peace, security, and stability, as evidenced by food riots in 2008.
- 👶 The first thousand days of a child's life are critical for nutrition; inadequate nutrition during this period can cause irreversible damage to a child's physical and mental development.
- 🍼 Breastfeeding is a powerful, yet underutilized, nutritional method that can save a child's life every 22 seconds if practiced correctly.
- 🌾 The issue of hunger is not just about food production; even with enough food globally, access to it remains a challenge for many.
- 📈 The economic impact of malnutrition is significant, with the cost to society averaging 6% to 11% of GDP annually in some countries.
- 🏫 School feeding programs are a crucial safety net, particularly in areas without food security, and can transform the lives of children and their communities.
- 🛒 Digital food initiatives, such as providing cards for purchasing nutritious food items, stimulate local economies and improve access to nutrition.
- 🌱 Enabling small farmers to be part of the solution by creating a market for their produce can significantly increase their yields and transform their lives.
- 🏛 Brazil's 'Zero Hunger' program demonstrates that large-scale initiatives can effectively combat hunger and poverty, showing the way for other nations.
- 🔑 Leadership and collective action are essential in addressing hunger; when leaders commit to ending hunger, significant changes can occur.
Q & A
What significant change did the speaker experience in their career that led them to work on human vulnerability?
-The speaker transitioned from working in trade and economics to working on the front lines of human vulnerability, where they witnessed people struggling daily for survival and basic needs like food.
What is the symbolic significance of the red cup from Rwanda mentioned in the script?
-The red cup symbolizes the challenge of hunger and also the hope for change. It represents the life of Fabian, a child from Rwanda, and how a single cup of food a day can significantly improve his life.
According to the speaker, what proportion of the world's population struggles with not knowing how to fill their cup with food each morning?
-The speaker states that about a billion people, or one out of every seven individuals on Earth, wake up uncertain about how to fill their cup with food.
Why should we care about the issue of hunger as presented in the script?
-We should care about hunger because it touches on compassion, human dignity, peace and security, global stability, and the potential for economic growth and opportunity. It's also a solvable problem with known solutions.
What historical event influenced the speaker's personal commitment to addressing hunger?
-The speaker was deeply affected by the image of a famine in Ethiopia in 1987, especially the sight of a woman unable to nurse her baby due to lack of milk, which occurred when the speaker was a new mother.
What is the current rate at which children die from hunger globally?
-The script reveals that every 10 seconds, a child dies from hunger, which is more frequent than the combined deaths from HIV/AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis.
What does the speaker suggest is the issue with global food production in relation to hunger?
-The issue is not the production of food itself, as there was enough food produced globally during the 2008 crisis to provide 2,700 kilocalories per person, but rather the access to food that is the problem.
What is the impact of inadequate nutrition during the first thousand days of a child's life, as mentioned in the script?
-Inadequate nutrition during the first thousand days, from conception to two years old, results in irreversible damage to a child's brain and body, leading to stunted growth and reduced brain volumes, affecting their future earning potential.
How does the speaker propose to address the issue of malnutrition in remote areas where traditional crops are grown?
-The speaker suggests transforming technologies available in the food industry to be used for traditional crops, creating nutrient-dense foods like the one made from chickpeas, dried milk, and vitamins, which can be produced affordably and effectively combat malnutrition.
What role does school feeding play in combating hunger and poverty, as described in the script?
-School feeding serves as a safety net for the poor, especially in the absence of other social institutions. It not only helps keep children in school but also has a transformative effect on girls' education and health, breaking the cycle of malnutrition across generations.
How does the speaker describe the transformation of food aid in northern Cameroon to combat hunger?
-In northern Cameroon, the traditional model of food aid was replaced with food banks managed by the villages. During lean seasons, food is distributed, and during harvests, the food is repaid with an additional percentage, creating a self-sufficient system and reducing reliance on external aid.
What is the concept of 'digital food' as introduced in the script, and how does it work?
-'Digital food' refers to the use of technology to deliver food assistance via cell phones. Recipients receive a card that allows them to access a certain number of nutritious, locally produced food items, stimulating the local economy and providing targeted nutrition support.
How does the speaker view the potential of viewing the hungry as part of the solution rather than victims?
-The speaker proposes that by providing an enabling environment for small farmers, who are often the hungry themselves, to produce and sell food, their yields can increase significantly, transforming their lives and contributing to the fight against hunger on a larger scale.
What is the 'Purchasing for Progress' initiative mentioned in the script, and what are its outcomes?
-'Purchasing for Progress' is an initiative in 21 countries that guarantees a market for poor farmers' produce. It has led to increased yields and improved livelihoods for farmers, demonstrating that with the right support, the hungry can be part of the solution to hunger.
What is the economic rationale for investing in addressing malnutrition and hunger, as presented in the script?
-The economic rationale is that the cost of malnutrition and hunger to society is significant, with an average burden of 6% of GDP, up to 11% in some countries. Investing in nutrition can lead to a more productive economy and is a cost-effective solution compared to the losses incurred due to malnutrition.
How has Brazil been successful in combating hunger, and what role did leadership play in this success?
-Brazil has been successful by investing in a school feeding program that sources a third of its food from the smallest farmers. Leadership, particularly from President Lula, played a crucial role in declaring the goal of ensuring three meals a day for everyone and implementing the 'zero hunger' program, which has significantly reduced hunger and poverty.
Outlines
🌏 Global Hunger and Its Impact
The speaker begins by sharing her transition from trade and economics to witnessing the harsh reality of global hunger. She uses a red cup from Rwanda as a symbol of the struggle for survival and the hope that small interventions can make a difference. The paragraph highlights the shocking statistic that one out of every seven people on Earth faces hunger daily. The speaker challenges the audience to consider why they should care about this issue, touching on personal experiences, compassion, global stability, and the potential for future food crises. She also reflects on her personal motivation stemming from a mother's empathy and the historical context of our ability to combat hunger.
🍼 The Critical First Thousand Days of Life
This paragraph delves into the irreversible damage caused by malnutrition during a child's first thousand days, from conception to two years old. The speaker presents evidence from the Lancet that inadequate nutrition during this period can stunt both brain and body development, reducing brain volumes by up to 40 percent. The impact of this stunting is not only on the child's health but also on their future earning potential and the economy at large. The speaker emphasizes the importance of knowledge in addressing this issue and shares her experiences from the front lines of hunger, including the transformative power of breastfeeding and the challenges faced by parents in remote areas to access nutritious food for their children.
🌾 Innovative Solutions to Combat Hunger
The speaker discusses various innovative approaches to addressing hunger and malnutrition. She talks about the potential of using technology from the food industry to enrich traditional crops, creating affordable and nutritious food products like a power bar made from chickpeas and dried milk. She also highlights the importance of school feeding programs as a safety net for the poor and a means to keep children, especially girls, in school. The paragraph also touches on the success of food banks in Cameroon, which have helped villages become self-sufficient and start their own feeding programs. Additionally, the speaker introduces the concept of 'digital food,' where technology is used to provide people with access to nutritious food, stimulating local economies and improving food security.
🌱 Empowering Farmers and Transforming Hunger at Scale
In this paragraph, the speaker shares success stories and large-scale solutions to hunger. She discusses Brazil's zero hunger program, which invests in school feeding and supports small farmers, lifting millions out of poverty. The speaker argues that addressing malnutrition is not only a moral imperative but also an economic one, with the cost of inaction being significantly high. She calls for a global effort to solve hunger, highlighting the role of leaders in driving change and the potential of viewing the hungry as part of the solution rather than just victims. The speaker concludes with a challenge to the audience to join in the fight against hunger and to envision a future where no child goes hungry.
Mindmap
Keywords
💡Hunger
💡Human Vulnerability
💡Food Security
💡Malthusian Nightmares
💡Nutrition
💡Breastfeeding
💡Food Technology
💡School Feeding
💡Food Banks
💡Digital Food
💡Purchasing for Progress
Highlights
The speaker has transitioned from trade and economics to working on the front lines of human vulnerability, witnessing the struggle for daily survival and the importance of basic sustenance.
The red cup from Rwanda symbolizes the challenge of hunger and the transformative power of a single meal in changing a child's life.
Approximately one billion people, or one in seven, are uncertain about their next meal, emphasizing the scale of global hunger.
The speaker urges the audience to consider the personal and societal impacts of hunger, including its destabilizing effects on peace and security.
Hunger is presented as a solvable problem with existing technology and systems, contrasting with historical challenges.
The emotional impact of hunger is conveyed through the speaker's personal experience as a mother, witnessing the suffering of a malnourished child.
Every 10 seconds, a child dies due to hunger, a statistic that surpasses the combined mortality rates of HIV/AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis.
Despite sufficient global food production, a billion people still face food scarcity, highlighting issues of distribution and access over production.
The importance of the first thousand days of a child's life for adequate nutrition is underscored, with lasting impacts on brain development and future earning potential.
Breastfeeding as a simple yet powerful method to save children's lives, with shockingly low rates in some countries.
The transformative potential of food technologies, such as a nutrient-rich food bar made from traditional crops, to combat malnutrition.
School feeding programs as an effective safety net, especially for girls, with profound effects on attendance, education, and future generations' health.
The innovative approach of food banks in Cameroon, enabling communities to manage food security and reduce dependence on food aid.
Digital food solutions, such as providing cards for purchasing nutritious local food, stimulating local economies and improving food security.
The concept of viewing the hungry as part of the solution, empowering small farmers through guaranteed markets to increase yields and fight hunger.
The success of Brazil's zero hunger program, which combines school feeding with local agriculture, demonstrating the effectiveness of large-scale anti-hunger initiatives.
The economic imperative for addressing malnutrition, with the cost to society outweighing the investment needed to ensure adequate nutrition for all.
The speaker calls for a collective effort to end hunger, viewing it as an unacceptable condition in modern human history and an opportunity for transformation.
Transcripts
Well after many years working in trade and economics,
four years ago,
I found myself working on the front lines
of human vulnerability.
And I found myself in the places
where people are fighting every day to survive
and can't even obtain a meal.
This red cup comes from Rwanda
from a child named Fabian.
And I carry this around
as a symbol, really, of the challenge
and also the hope.
Because one cup of food a day
changes Fabian's life completely.
But what I'd like to talk about today
is the fact that this morning,
about a billion people on Earth --
or one out of every seven --
woke up and didn't even know
how to fill this cup.
One out of every seven people.
First, I'll ask you: Why should you care?
Why should we care?
For most people,
if they think about hunger,
they don't have to go far back on their own family history --
maybe in their own lives, or their parents' lives,
or their grandparents' lives --
to remember an experience of hunger.
I rarely find an audience
where people can go back very far without that experience.
Some are driven by compassion,
feel it's perhaps
one of the fundamental acts of humanity.
As Gandhi said,
"To a hungry man, a piece of bread is the face of God."
Others worry about peace and security,
stability in the world.
We saw the food riots in 2008,
after what I call the silent tsunami of hunger
swept the globe when food prices doubled overnight.
The destabilizing effects of hunger
are known throughout human history.
One of the most fundamental acts of civilization
is to ensure people can get enough food.
Others think about Malthusian nightmares.
Will we be able to feed a population
that will be nine billion in just a few decades?
This is not a negotiable thing, hunger.
People have to eat.
There's going to be a lot of people.
This is jobs and opportunity all the way up and down the value chain.
But I actually came to this issue
in a different way.
This is a picture of me and my three children.
In 1987, I was a new mother
with my first child
and was holding her and feeding her
when an image very similar to this
came on the television.
And this was yet another famine in Ethiopia.
One two years earlier
had killed more than a million people.
But it never struck me as it did that moment,
because on that image
was a woman trying to nurse her baby,
and she had no milk to nurse.
And the baby's cry really penetrated me,
as a mother.
And I thought, there's nothing more haunting
than the cry of a child
that cannot be returned with food --
the most fundamental expectation of every human being.
And it was at that moment
that I just was filled
with the challenge and the outrage
that actually we know how to fix this problem.
This isn't one of those rare diseases
that we don't have the solution for.
We know how to fix hunger.
A hundred years ago, we didn't.
We actually have the technology and systems.
And I was just struck
that this is out of place.
At our time in history, these images are out of place.
Well guess what?
This is last week in northern Kenya.
Yet again,
the face of starvation
at large scale
with more than nine million people
wondering if they can make it to the next day.
In fact,
what we know now
is that every 10 seconds
we lose a child to hunger.
This is more
than HIV/AIDS,
malaria and tuberculosis combined.
And we know that the issue
is not just production of food.
One of my mentors in life
was Norman Borlaug, my hero.
But today I'm going to talk about access to food,
because actually this year and last year
and during the 2008 food crisis,
there was enough food on Earth
for everyone to have 2,700 kilocalories.
So why is it
that we have a billion people
who can't find food?
And I also want to talk about
what I call our new burden of knowledge.
In 2008,
Lancet compiled all the research
and put forward the compelling evidence
that if a child in its first thousand days --
from conception to two years old --
does not have adequate nutrition,
the damage is irreversible.
Their brains and bodies will be stunted.
And here you see a brain scan of two children --
one who had adequate nutrition,
another, neglected
and who was deeply malnourished.
And we can see brain volumes
up to 40 percent less
in these children.
And in this slide
you see the neurons and the synapses of the brain
don't form.
And what we know now is this has huge impact on economies,
which I'll talk about later.
But also the earning potential of these children
is cut in half in their lifetime
due to the stunting
that happens in early years.
So this burden of knowledge drives me.
Because actually we know how to fix it
very simply.
And yet, in many places,
a third of the children,
by the time they're three
already are facing a life of hardship
due to this.
I'd like to talk about
some of the things I've seen on the front lines of hunger,
some of the things I've learned
in bringing my economic and trade knowledge
and my experience in the private sector.
I'd like to talk about where the gap of knowledge is.
Well first, I'd like to talk about the oldest nutritional method on Earth,
breastfeeding.
You may be surprised to know
that a child could be saved every 22 seconds
if there was breastfeeding in the first six months of life.
But in Niger, for example,
less than seven percent of the children
are breastfed
for the first six months of life, exclusively.
In Mauritania, less than three percent.
This is something that can be transformed with knowledge.
This message, this word, can come out
that this is not an old-fashioned way of doing business;
it's a brilliant way
of saving your child's life.
And so today we focus on not just passing out food,
but making sure the mothers have enough enrichment,
and teaching them about breastfeeding.
The second thing I'd like to talk about:
If you were living in a remote village somewhere,
your child was limp,
and you were in a drought, or you were in floods,
or you were in a situation where there wasn't adequate diversity of diet,
what would you do?
Do you think you could go to the store
and get a choice of power bars, like we can,
and pick the right one to match?
Well I find parents out on the front lines
very aware their children are going down for the count.
And I go to those shops, if there are any,
or out to the fields to see what they can get,
and they cannot obtain the nutrition.
Even if they know what they need to do, it's not available.
And I'm very excited about this,
because one thing we're working on
is transforming the technologies
that are very available
in the food industry
to be available for traditional crops.
And this is made with chickpeas, dried milk
and a host of vitamins,
matched to exactly what the brain needs.
It costs 17 cents for us to produce this
as, what I call, food for humanity.
We did this with food technologists
in India and Pakistan --
really about three of them.
But this is transforming
99 percent of the kids who get this.
One package, 17 cents a day --
their malnutrition is overcome.
So I am convinced
that if we can unlock the technologies
that are commonplace in the richer world
to be able to transform foods.
And this is climate-proof.
It doesn't need to be refrigerated, it doesn't need water,
which is often lacking.
And these types of technologies,
I see, have the potential
to transform the face of hunger and nutrition, malnutrition
out on the front lines.
The next thing I want to talk about is school feeding.
Eighty percent of the people in the world
have no food safety net.
When disaster strikes --
the economy gets blown, people lose a job,
floods, war, conflict,
bad governance, all of those things --
there is nothing to fall back on.
And usually the institutions --
churches, temples, other things --
do not have the resources
to provide a safety net.
What we have found working with the World Bank
is that the poor man's safety net,
the best investment, is school feeding.
And if you fill the cup
with local agriculture from small farmers,
you have a transformative effect.
Many kids in the world can't go to school
because they have to go beg and find a meal.
But when that food is there,
it's transformative.
It costs less than 25 cents a day to change a kid's life.
But what is most amazing is the effect on girls.
In countries where girls don't go to school
and you offer a meal to girls in school,
we see enrollment rates
about 50 percent girls and boys.
We see a transformation in attendance by girls.
And there was no argument,
because it's incentive.
Families need the help.
And we find that if we keep girls in school later,
they'll stay in school until they're 16,
and won't get married if there's food in school.
Or if they get an extra ration of food
at the end of the week --
it costs about 50 cents --
will keep a girl in school,
and they'll give birth to a healthier child,
because the malnutrition is sent
generation to generation.
We know that there's boom and bust cycles of hunger.
We know this.
Right now on the Horn of Africa, we've been through this before.
So is this a hopeless cause?
Absolutely not.
I'd like to talk about what I call our warehouses for hope.
Cameroon, northern Cameroon, boom and bust cycles of hunger
every year for decades.
Food aid coming in every year
when people are starving during the lean seasons.
Well two years ago,
we decided, let's transform the model of fighting hunger,
and instead of giving out the food aid, we put it into food banks.
And we said, listen,
during the lean season, take the food out.
You manage, the village manages these warehouses.
And during harvest, put it back with interest,
food interest.
So add in five percent, 10 percent more food.
For the past two years,
500 of these villages where these are
have not needed any food aid -- they're self-sufficient.
And the food banks are growing.
And they're starting school feeding programs for their children
by the people in the village.
But they've never had the ability
to build even the basic infrastructure
or the resources.
I love this idea that came from the village level:
three keys to unlock that warehouse.
Food is gold there.
And simple ideas can transform the face,
not of small areas,
of big areas of the world.
I'd like to talk about what I call digital food.
Technology is transforming
the face of food vulnerability
in places where you see classic famine.
Amartya Sen won his Nobel Prize
for saying, "Guess what, famines happen in the presence of food
because people have no ability to buy it."
We certainly saw that in 2008.
We're seeing that now in the Horn of Africa
where food prices are up 240 percent in some areas
over last year.
Food can be there and people can't buy it.
Well this picture -- I was in Hebron in a small shop, this shop,
where instead of bringing in food,
we provide digital food, a card.
It says "bon appetit" in Arabic.
And the women can go in and swipe
and get nine food items.
They have to be nutritious,
and they have to be locally produced.
And what's happened in the past year alone
is the dairy industry --
where this card's used for milk and yogurt
and eggs and hummus --
the dairy industry has gone up 30 percent.
The shopkeepers are hiring more people.
It is a win-win-win situation
that starts the food economy moving.
We now deliver food in over 30 countries
over cell phones,
transforming even the presence of refugees in countries,
and other ways.
Perhaps most exciting to me
is an idea that Bill Gates, Howard Buffett and others
have supported boldly,
which is to ask the question:
What if, instead of looking at the hungry as victims --
and most of them are small farmers
who cannot raise enough food or sell food
to even support their own families --
what if we view them as the solution,
as the value chain to fight hunger?
What if from the women in Africa
who cannot sell any food --
there's no roads, there's no warehouses,
there's not even a tarp to pick the food up with --
what if we give the enabling environment
for them to provide the food
to feed the hungry children elsewhere?
And Purchasing for Progress today is in 21 countries.
And guess what?
In virtually every case,
when poor farmers are given a guaranteed market --
if you say, "We will buy 300 metric tons of this.
We'll pick it up. We'll make sure it's stored properly." --
their yields have gone up two-, three-, fourfold
and they figure it out,
because it's the first guaranteed opportunity they've had in their life.
And we're seeing people transform their lives.
Today, food aid, our food aid --
huge engine --
80 percent of it is bought in the developing world.
Total transformation
that can actually transform the very lives that need the food.
Now you'd ask, can this be done at scale?
These are great ideas, village-level ideas.
Well I'd like to talk about Brazil,
because I've taken a journey to Brazil over the past couple of years,
when I read that Brazil was defeating hunger
faster than any nation on Earth right now.
And what I've found is,
rather than investing their money in food subsidies
and other things,
they invested in a school feeding program.
And they require that a third of that food
come from the smallest farmers who would have no opportunity.
And they're doing this at huge scale
after President Lula declared his goal
of ensuring everyone had three meals a day.
And this zero hunger program
costs .5 percent of GDP
and has lifted many millions of people
out of hunger and poverty.
It is transforming the face of hunger in Brazil,
and it's at scale, and it's creating opportunities.
I've gone out there; I've met with the small farmers
who have built their livelihoods
on the opportunity and platform
provided by this.
Now if we look at the economic imperative here,
this isn't just about compassion.
The fact is studies show
that the cost of malnutrition and hunger --
the cost to society,
the burden it has to bear --
is on average six percent,
and in some countries up to 11 percent,
of GDP a year.
And if you look at the 36 countries
with the highest burden of malnutrition,
that's 260 billion lost from a productive economy
every year.
Well, the World Bank estimates
it would take about 10 billion dollars --
10.3 --
to address malnutrition in those countries.
You look at the cost-benefit analysis,
and my dream is to take this issue,
not just from the compassion argument,
but to the finance ministers of the world,
and say we cannot afford
to not invest
in the access to adequate, affordable nutrition
for all of humanity.
The amazing thing I've found
is nothing can change on a big scale
without the determination of a leader.
When a leader says, "Not under my watch,"
everything begins to change.
And the world can come in
with enabling environments and opportunities to do this.
And the fact that France
has put food at the center of the G20
is really important.
Because food is one issue
that cannot be solved person by person, nation by nation.
We have to stand together.
And we're seeing nations in Africa.
WFP's been able to leave 30 nations
because they have transformed
the face of hunger in their nations.
What I would like to offer here is a challenge.
I believe we're living at a time in human history
where it's just simply unacceptable
that children wake up
and don't know where to find a cup of food.
Not only that,
transforming hunger
is an opportunity,
but I think we have to change our mindsets.
I am so honored to be here
with some of the world's top innovators and thinkers.
And I would like you to join with all of humanity
to draw a line in the sand
and say, "No more.
No more are we going to accept this."
And we want to tell our grandchildren
that there was a terrible time in history
where up to a third of the children
had brains and bodies that were stunted,
but that exists no more.
Thank you.
(Applause)
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