Monitoring Food Insecurity and Employment in Yemen

This report highlights the lived experience of Yemeni households when it comes to livelihoods and food insecurity. As Yemen has been grappling with multiple crises and the repercussions of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, multiple challenges - including shrinking access to income, disruptions in imports, and further currency depreciation, have exacerbated the precarious living conditions of Yemenis. This report briefly describes the results of a phone survey completed in August and September of 2022, showing the precarity of living conditions and livelihood options across the country, but highlighting worse conditions amongst parts of the population. Employment conditions and food security are worse off in rural areas, amongst the displaced and in the areas under Houthi control. Those working in elementary occupations and in the construction, manufacturing or agriculture sectors are also worse off. Amid a devastating and protracted conflict, with limited information on the living conditions in Yemen, a phone survey was carried out to monitor food insecurity and livelihoods. The survey, implemented in August and September 2022, seeks to provide a snapshot of the situation for Yemeni households. The survey draws on a probability sample of 1,297 respondents, 623 of whom are based in rural areas, while 480 and 193 are living in urban and semi-urban areas respectively. Most of the respondents are male (1,045 men vs. 252 women). The results suggest that almost one-quarter (23 percent) of Yemeni households are currently displaced due to the conflict, with differences by area of residence. For example, relatively more displaced households are based in semi-urban and urban areas compared to rural areas. Some (16 percent) of the households that were once displaced have returned to their pre-conflict places of residence. But the prevalence of return from displacement differs depending on area of residence and area of control.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2023-08-24
Subjects:FOOD INSECURITY, EMPLOYMENT, FOOD ASSISTANCE, HOUSEHOLD INCOME SOURCES,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099082223171029962/P179194042dc4400709c080a81b92fd61b8
https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/40265
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spelling dig-okr-10986402652023-08-27T02:26:05Z Monitoring Food Insecurity and Employment in Yemen Results from the Yemen Mobile Phone Survey Monitoring - Round I World Bank FOOD INSECURITY EMPLOYMENT FOOD ASSISTANCE HOUSEHOLD INCOME SOURCES This report highlights the lived experience of Yemeni households when it comes to livelihoods and food insecurity. As Yemen has been grappling with multiple crises and the repercussions of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, multiple challenges - including shrinking access to income, disruptions in imports, and further currency depreciation, have exacerbated the precarious living conditions of Yemenis. This report briefly describes the results of a phone survey completed in August and September of 2022, showing the precarity of living conditions and livelihood options across the country, but highlighting worse conditions amongst parts of the population. Employment conditions and food security are worse off in rural areas, amongst the displaced and in the areas under Houthi control. Those working in elementary occupations and in the construction, manufacturing or agriculture sectors are also worse off. Amid a devastating and protracted conflict, with limited information on the living conditions in Yemen, a phone survey was carried out to monitor food insecurity and livelihoods. The survey, implemented in August and September 2022, seeks to provide a snapshot of the situation for Yemeni households. The survey draws on a probability sample of 1,297 respondents, 623 of whom are based in rural areas, while 480 and 193 are living in urban and semi-urban areas respectively. Most of the respondents are male (1,045 men vs. 252 women). The results suggest that almost one-quarter (23 percent) of Yemeni households are currently displaced due to the conflict, with differences by area of residence. For example, relatively more displaced households are based in semi-urban and urban areas compared to rural areas. Some (16 percent) of the households that were once displaced have returned to their pre-conflict places of residence. But the prevalence of return from displacement differs depending on area of residence and area of control. 2023-08-24T16:46:14Z 2023-08-24T16:46:14Z 2023-08-24 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099082223171029962/P179194042dc4400709c080a81b92fd61b8 https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/40265 English en_US CC BY-NC 3.0 IGO World Bank https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/igo application/pdf text/plain Washington, DC: World Bank
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
en_US
topic FOOD INSECURITY
EMPLOYMENT
FOOD ASSISTANCE
HOUSEHOLD INCOME SOURCES
FOOD INSECURITY
EMPLOYMENT
FOOD ASSISTANCE
HOUSEHOLD INCOME SOURCES
spellingShingle FOOD INSECURITY
EMPLOYMENT
FOOD ASSISTANCE
HOUSEHOLD INCOME SOURCES
FOOD INSECURITY
EMPLOYMENT
FOOD ASSISTANCE
HOUSEHOLD INCOME SOURCES
World Bank
Monitoring Food Insecurity and Employment in Yemen
description This report highlights the lived experience of Yemeni households when it comes to livelihoods and food insecurity. As Yemen has been grappling with multiple crises and the repercussions of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, multiple challenges - including shrinking access to income, disruptions in imports, and further currency depreciation, have exacerbated the precarious living conditions of Yemenis. This report briefly describes the results of a phone survey completed in August and September of 2022, showing the precarity of living conditions and livelihood options across the country, but highlighting worse conditions amongst parts of the population. Employment conditions and food security are worse off in rural areas, amongst the displaced and in the areas under Houthi control. Those working in elementary occupations and in the construction, manufacturing or agriculture sectors are also worse off. Amid a devastating and protracted conflict, with limited information on the living conditions in Yemen, a phone survey was carried out to monitor food insecurity and livelihoods. The survey, implemented in August and September 2022, seeks to provide a snapshot of the situation for Yemeni households. The survey draws on a probability sample of 1,297 respondents, 623 of whom are based in rural areas, while 480 and 193 are living in urban and semi-urban areas respectively. Most of the respondents are male (1,045 men vs. 252 women). The results suggest that almost one-quarter (23 percent) of Yemeni households are currently displaced due to the conflict, with differences by area of residence. For example, relatively more displaced households are based in semi-urban and urban areas compared to rural areas. Some (16 percent) of the households that were once displaced have returned to their pre-conflict places of residence. But the prevalence of return from displacement differs depending on area of residence and area of control.
format Report
topic_facet FOOD INSECURITY
EMPLOYMENT
FOOD ASSISTANCE
HOUSEHOLD INCOME SOURCES
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Monitoring Food Insecurity and Employment in Yemen
title_short Monitoring Food Insecurity and Employment in Yemen
title_full Monitoring Food Insecurity and Employment in Yemen
title_fullStr Monitoring Food Insecurity and Employment in Yemen
title_full_unstemmed Monitoring Food Insecurity and Employment in Yemen
title_sort monitoring food insecurity and employment in yemen
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2023-08-24
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099082223171029962/P179194042dc4400709c080a81b92fd61b8
https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/40265
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