While it is generally agreed that growth is a necessary precondition for reducing poverty, relatively little is known about the relationship between economic growth and nutrition and, hence, how economic policies can be leveraged to improve nutrition. This brief argues that growth is good, but is not enough to improve nutrition. During the early stages of development, growth helps reduce the prevalence of calorie deficiency, and, in most countries, agricultural growth plays a key role. But malnutrition becomes less responsive to growth as its prevalence rate declines, so economic diversification into the manufacturing and service sectors becomes necessary to leverage further reductions in malnutrition, especially as people migrate into urba...
2020 Conference on "Leveraging Agriculture for Improving Nutrition and Health" February 12, 2011 Cre...
There are strong conceptual linkages between agricultural development and nutrition improvements whi...
Progress towards the objective of the World Food Conference of 197 4 that "no child should go t...
While it is generally agreed that growth is a necessary precondition for reducing poverty, relativel...
There is a growing consensus that reducing childhood malnutrition is a critically important goal, bu...
Recent research from IFPRI and its partners shows the potential for income growth to improve nutriti...
As we move into the post-2015 era of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), the world faces many ...
To achieve real nutrition gains from economic growth, policymakers have to tackle nutrition on all f...
While economic growth is generally acknowledged as a necessary precondition for reducing poverty, re...
FEW SECTORS HAVE clearer links to nutrition than agriculture. Most simply, of course, agriculture is...
While famines and other episodes of severe hunger receive significant press coverage and attract muc...
Sebastian Vollmer and colleagues (April, 2014)1 conclude that “the contribution of economic growth t...
Abstract: Malnutrition is widespread in the developing world. 12 or more million low-birth-weight b...
2 This paper considers the impact of the nutritional status on the growth rate of real GDP per capit...
The extent and depth of poverty in the developing world is a disgrace. Over 1.1 billion people — 30 ...
2020 Conference on "Leveraging Agriculture for Improving Nutrition and Health" February 12, 2011 Cre...
There are strong conceptual linkages between agricultural development and nutrition improvements whi...
Progress towards the objective of the World Food Conference of 197 4 that "no child should go t...
While it is generally agreed that growth is a necessary precondition for reducing poverty, relativel...
There is a growing consensus that reducing childhood malnutrition is a critically important goal, bu...
Recent research from IFPRI and its partners shows the potential for income growth to improve nutriti...
As we move into the post-2015 era of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), the world faces many ...
To achieve real nutrition gains from economic growth, policymakers have to tackle nutrition on all f...
While economic growth is generally acknowledged as a necessary precondition for reducing poverty, re...
FEW SECTORS HAVE clearer links to nutrition than agriculture. Most simply, of course, agriculture is...
While famines and other episodes of severe hunger receive significant press coverage and attract muc...
Sebastian Vollmer and colleagues (April, 2014)1 conclude that “the contribution of economic growth t...
Abstract: Malnutrition is widespread in the developing world. 12 or more million low-birth-weight b...
2 This paper considers the impact of the nutritional status on the growth rate of real GDP per capit...
The extent and depth of poverty in the developing world is a disgrace. Over 1.1 billion people — 30 ...
2020 Conference on "Leveraging Agriculture for Improving Nutrition and Health" February 12, 2011 Cre...
There are strong conceptual linkages between agricultural development and nutrition improvements whi...
Progress towards the objective of the World Food Conference of 197 4 that "no child should go t...