Dutch beat French and Swiss to top Oxfam’s new global food table
The Netherlands is No. 1 in the world for having the most plentiful,
nutritious, healthy and affordable diet, beating France and Switzerland
into second place. Chad is last in 125th spot behind Ethiopia and
Angola, according to a new food database by worldwide development
organization Oxfam.
European countries occupy the entire top 20 bar one – Australia ties
in 8th place – while the US, Japan, New Zealand, Brazil and Canada all
fall outside. African countries occupy the bottom 30 places in the table
except for four – Laos, Bangladesh, Pakistan and India are there too.
Oxfam’s “Good Enough to Eat” index compares 125 countries where full
data is available to create a snapshot of the different challenges
people face in getting food. Oxfam’s GROW
campaign is calling for urgent reform to the way food is produced and
distributed around the world to end the scandal of one in eight people
going hungry despite there being enough to feed everyone. The new index
looks at whether people have enough to eat, food quality, affordability,
and dietary health.
4 concerns around food
On affordability, the UK is among the worst performers in Western
Europe, sharing 20th position with Cyprus. Food in Guinea, The Gambia,
Chad and Iran costs people two-and-a-half times more than other consumer
goods, making those the most expensive countries for citizens to buy
food. The price of food in the US is relatively the cheapest and most
stable in the world. Angola and Zimbabwe suffer from the most volatile
food prices, researchers found.
The countries whose citizens struggle for enough food, with the worst
rates of malnourishment and underweight children, are Burundi, Yemen,
Madagascar and India. On the other side of the table, Cambodia and
Burundi are countries that score better by having among the lowest
levels of obesity and diabetes in the world, while US, Mexico, Fiji,
Jordan, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia score most poorly with high rates of
obesity and diabetes.
Iceland scores a perfect mark for the quality of its food, in terms
of nutritional diversity and safe water. Iceland’s obesity and diabetes
levels push it down the table, to 13th spot. Similarly, unhealthy eating
pushes the US down to 21st place.
The real drivers of hunger
Oxfam International Executive Director Winnie Byanyima said: “This
index lays bare the common concerns that people have with food
regardless of where they come from. It reveals how the world is failing
to ensure that everyone is able to eat healthily, despite there being
enough to go around.”
“Poverty and inequality are the real drivers of hunger. Hunger
happens where governance is poor, distribution weak, when markets fail,
and when people don’t have enough money and resources to buy all the
goods and services they need,” she said. “Having sufficient healthy and
affordable food is not something that much of the world enjoys.”
Oxfam is working worldwide to provide long-term solutions that will
help people grow enough food to eat and make a living. In Chad, Oxfam is
helping farmers grow and diversify more crops, providing veterinary
training to help ensure cattle are stronger and helping to build more
food storage, so that people are better prepared with the next drought
conditions.
Oxfam’s GROW campaign is calling for more investment in small-holder
agriculture and better infrastructure to boost crop production, prevent
waste and improve access to markets. It wants an end to biofuels
targets, which are diverting food from hungry people to fuel tanks,
action to tackle climate change, better regulation of food commodities
markets to prevent food price hikes and improved land rights so people
do not lose the land they rely upon to grow food.
Notes to Editors
The index looks at four core concerns for consumers around the world, using two measures to help assess the challenges:
Do people have enough to eat? – Measured by levels of undernourishment and underweight children
Can people afford to eat? – Measured by food price levels compared to other goods and services and food price volatility
Is food of good quality? – Measured by diet diversification and access to clean and safe water
What are the health outcomes of people’s diet? – Measured by diabetes and obesity.
Eight established global data sources were identified that capture
aspects of the food market relevant for this index. All figures are the
most recently available global data sources from internationally
recognized organizations – The Food and Agriculture Organization, The
World Health Organization and the International Labour Organization. To
create a globally comparable index, the sources have global coverage,
scoring between 134 and 200 countries and territories.
Each of the sources used different scales in measuring the countries,
requiring a process to standardize them so that they could be compared.
The standard MIN / MAX rescaling method was used, generating re-scaled
values of 0-100 where 0 points is the minimum score (best) and 100
points is the maximum score (worst). The process is based on identifying
the countries with the minimum and maximum scores in the original data,
scoring them 0 and 100 respectively and then measuring how far every
other country is from these maximum and minimum values.
All countries with data for each measure were included in the
re-scaling process to ensure that the final result was a globally
comparable one. However, only the countries that had data for all eight
measures were included in the final index, with one exception. For most
developed countries, there is no data available for the underweight
children measure. For those countries that achieved the minimum score
for the undernourishment measure they were assumed to also be amongst
the best in the world for measures for underweight children. The Good
Enough To Eat database therefore includes 125 countries. That some of
the measures do not include minimum or maximum scores illustrates that
there are countries that are better or worse but are not included in the
index because they do not have data available for the other measures.
The data is available in full at: http://www.oxfam.org.uk/what-we-do/good-enough-to-eat. Raw data of all countries is available.
Sources used
Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)
World Health Organization
International Labour Organization (ILO)
World Health Organization
International Labour Organization (ILO)
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