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Hunger Quiz

Hunger Quiz. GLOBAL HUNGER 1.02 billion people do not have enough to eat more than the populations of USA, Canada and the European Union; The number of undernourished people in the world increased by 75 million in 2007 and 40 million in 2008, largely due to higher food prices;

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Hunger Quiz

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  1. Hunger Quiz

  2. GLOBAL HUNGER • 1.02 billion people do not have enough to eat more than the populations of USA, Canada and the European Union; • The number of undernourished people in the world increased by 75 million in 2007 and 40 million in 2008, largely due to higher food prices; • 907 million people in developing countries alone are hungry; • Asia and the Pacific region is home to over half the world’s population and nearly two thirds of the world’s hungry people; • 65 percent of the world's hungry live in only seven countries: India, China, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Pakistan and Ethiopia. • More than 60 percent of chronically hungry people are women

  3. MALNUTRITION • It is estimated that 684,000 child deaths worldwide could be prevented by increasing access to vitamin A and zinc • Lack of Vitamin A kills a million infants a year (sweet potatos, carrots, mangoes, spinach, milk, egg yolks, mozzarella cheese) • Iron deficiency is the most prevalent form of malnutrition worldwide, affecting an estimated 2 billion people. • Eradicating iron deficiency can improve national productivity levels by as much as 20 percent.(liver, lean red meats, including beef, pork, lamb・seafood, such as oysters, clams, tuna, salmon, and shrimp, etc.・beans, including kidney, lima, navy, black, soy beans, and lentils・iron fortified whole grains, including cereals, breads, rice, and pasta・greens, including collard greens, kale, mustard greens, spinach, and turnip greens・tofu・vegetables, including broccoli, swiss chard,)

  4. CHILD HUNGER • Every six seconds a child dies because of hunger and related causes • One out of four children - roughly 146 million - in developing countries are underweight; • More than 70 percent of the world's 146 million underweight children under age five years live in just 10 countries Food and Aids • In the countries most heavily affected, HIV has reduced life expectancy by more than 20 years, slowed economic growth, and deepened household poverty. • WFP and UNAIDS project that it will cost on average US $0.70 cents per day to nutritionally support an AIDS patient and his/her family. • Assistance for orphans and vulnerable children is estimated at US$0.31 per day.

  5. Aid Spending • In a 1970 UN Resolution, most industrialised nations committed themselves to tackling global poverty by spending 0.7 percent of their national incomes on international aid by 1975. Only Norway, Sweden, Luxembourg, the Netherlands and Denmark regularly meet his target • The 22 member countries of the OECD Development Assistance Committee, the world's major donors, provided USD 103.9 billion in aid in 2006 - down by 5.1 percent from 2005
(Source: Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, 2007) • The largest donors were the United States (US$24 billion), Japan (US$18 billion), the United Kingdom (US$13 billion), Germany and France (US$12 billion each), the Netherlands (nearly US$6 billion), Spain and Italy (just over US$4 billion each) representing 80 percent of the total

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