ROME, CMC – An analysis by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has found that Latin America and the Caribbean have the highest healthy diet cost compared to other regions.
The FAO said in a statement on Wednesday that it had analyzed how many people can afford a healthy diet, one that offers a diversity of nutrient-rich food, aligned with dietary guidance, and found that billions of people in the world cannot afford a healthy diet.
A release from the FAO said that indicators developed by FAO with critical inputs from researchers at Tufts University and the World Bank show that Latin America and the Caribbean have the highest cost of a healthy diet compared to other regions, at US$3.89 per person per day in 2020, followed by Asia (US$3.72), Africa (US$3.46), Northern America and Europe (US$3.19) and Oceania (US$3.07).
Between 2019 and 2020, Asia witnessed the highest surge in the cost of a healthy diet (4.0 percent), followed by Oceania (3.6 percent), Latin America and the Caribbean (3.4 percent), Northern America and Europe (3.2 percent), and Africa (2.5 percent).
“Putting an end to hunger, food insecurity and malnutrition in all its forms (including undernutrition, micronutrient deficiencies, overweight and obesity) is about more than securing enough food to survive: What people eat must also be nutritious,” said David Laborde, Director of FAO’s Agrifood Economics Division.
“Yet a key obstacle is the high cost of nutritious foods and the low affordability of healthy diets for many people worldwide.”
FAO’s Director of Food and Nutrition, Lynnette Neufeld, added that tracking the cost and affordability of healthy diets is a step-change towards recognizing the need to nourish and not just feed the world.
“This new methodology also provides us with the starting point to generate locally relevant evidence to guide policy and programs to make healthy diets affordable for all people at all times,” she said.
The UN agency said that the computing, monitoring, and reporting of the global, regional, and country-level indicators on the cost and affordability of a healthy diet (CoAHD) is now standardized and will be regularly updated by FAO. It said this provides a robust new benchmark for tracking global progress toward making healthy diets affordable.
The indicators rely on an integrated suite of data, computed based on variables including the retail prices of locally available foods and food-based dietary guidelines to, country household income distribution patterns, and the formulas required to establish purchasing power parities.
The CoAHD initiative is part of a more extensive set of activities that will contribute to achieving one of four of FAO’s objectives within its 2022-31 Strategic Framework – Better Nutrition.