After years of progress, the latest Global Hunger Index shows that the world has largely stagnated in terms of hunger reduction since 2015. Despite many political assurances and international conferences, there has been no success in reversing this trend. The report assesses the nutritional situation in 136 countries, 43 of which continue to record serious or alarming levels of hunger. In 18 countries, hunger has grown since 2015. Fifty-eight countries will not succeed in achieving a low level of hunger by 2030. Africa South of the Sahara and South Asia are once again the regions with the highest rates of hunger. Overlapping crises – like climate change, the economic effects of the coronavirus pandemic, growing numbers of armed conflicts, and the rise in food prices, which was intensified by the Russian war of aggression against Ukraine – are forcing around three-quarters of a billion people to go to bed hungry every day. This hits young people, especially women, particularly hard.
Bangladesh improves on Global Hunger Index
By Fatema Nasrin Jahan|2024-03-18T03:58:01+00:00March 18, 2024|Agricultural Knowledge, Bangladesh, Recent News|Comments Off on Bangladesh improves on Global Hunger Index