Maize - Global alliance for improving food security and the livelihoods of the resource-poor in the developing world: executive summary

Recurrent food price crises-combined with the global financial meltdown, volatile energy prices, natural resource depletion, and climate change-threaten the livelihoods of millions of poor people. Together with rice and Wheat, maize provides a least 30% of the food calories of more than 4.5 billion people in 94 developing countries. They include 900 million poor consumers for whom maize is the preferred staple, 120-140 million poor farm families, and about one-third of hall malnourished children. Between now and 2050, the demand for maize in the developing world will double, and by 2025 maize will have become the crop with the greatest production globally and in the developing world. But harvests at current levels of productivity growth will still fall short of demand and millions of farm families will remain in poverty. Unless vigorous measures are taken to stabilize food prices, accelerate yield growth, increase incomes from more productive, sustainable, and resilient maize-based systems, and give greater opportunities to women and young adults, the outcome will be less affordable food for millions of poor maize consumers, continuing poverty and childhood malnutrition, deforestation, soil degradation, reduce biodiversity, and accelerated depletion of water and fertilizer reserves.

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Bibliographic Details
Format: Brochure biblioteca
Language:English
Published: CIMMYT [2017?]
Subjects:AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY, FOOD SECURITY, RESEARCH INSTITUTIONS, WORK PLANNING,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10883/19473
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Description
Summary:Recurrent food price crises-combined with the global financial meltdown, volatile energy prices, natural resource depletion, and climate change-threaten the livelihoods of millions of poor people. Together with rice and Wheat, maize provides a least 30% of the food calories of more than 4.5 billion people in 94 developing countries. They include 900 million poor consumers for whom maize is the preferred staple, 120-140 million poor farm families, and about one-third of hall malnourished children. Between now and 2050, the demand for maize in the developing world will double, and by 2025 maize will have become the crop with the greatest production globally and in the developing world. But harvests at current levels of productivity growth will still fall short of demand and millions of farm families will remain in poverty. Unless vigorous measures are taken to stabilize food prices, accelerate yield growth, increase incomes from more productive, sustainable, and resilient maize-based systems, and give greater opportunities to women and young adults, the outcome will be less affordable food for millions of poor maize consumers, continuing poverty and childhood malnutrition, deforestation, soil degradation, reduce biodiversity, and accelerated depletion of water and fertilizer reserves.