ABSTRACT
Globally, one person in three is malnourished. The coexistence of undernutrition with overweight and obesity, and micronutrient deficiencies clearly indicates that current food systems are failing people’s health. More than half of the world’s malnourished children live in Asia and the...
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INTRODUCTION
Current agricultural development policy is heavily focused on rice, despite the fact that consumer demand is shifting toward high value and nutrition-rich foodS. In 2010, urban consumers in Indonesia spent 16% of their food budget on rice, 15% on fruit and vegetables, and 22%...
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Song Soo Lim
songsoo@korea.ac.kr
Dept. of Food and Resource Economics, Korea University, Seoul, Korea
Abstract
ASEAN member countries have an abundant resource including land and mineral deposits. As the region has embraced globalization and market openness, it is realizing its...
Introduced by Kun-Chan Tsai, FFTC
e-mail: kctsai@fftc.org.tw
In the past decades, the global agriculture has experienced siginificant innovation and advancement for better production output and higher yield efficiency, moving closer toward the ultimate target of global food security. Through the distinct progress in economic growth, urbanization, and food technology, the pattern of global food systam is transformed of which four main food groups (animal source & sugar, vagetable, starchy root & fruit, seafood & oil crops) are thus obtained from 18 food groups data sourced from FAO, analyzed by Bentham et al. (2020)
The pattern of global food supply is significantly affected by natural factors such as climate change, and artificial factors of malnutrition or regulatory policy, explained by Friel et al. (2020) Although liberalization of international food trade through reducing technicial and non-technical barriers at country level can be helpful to balance global diet nutrition, the conflicts between people and country, country and regional area, country and global economic partners contribute to the discordance in practical nutritional demand and food import. To alleviate such tensions, countries develop various ways jointly and strategic partnership to maximize stakeholders' benefits and take people's welfare into consideration, thus evolving out diverse systems such as Free Trade Agreement (FTA) or ASEAN. In Friel et al. (2020), we can learn from a systematic view about how food system is closely interweaved into governmental policy and regional stakeholders as a basis to extend further to more complicated issues such as climate change, malnutrition, and food waste.
Reference:
1. Bentham et al. Nature Food 1:70-75 (2020)
2. Friel et al. Nature Food 1:51-58 (2020)