Nature Food
Laborde, D., Herforth, H., Headey, D., De Pee, S.
2021-07-19
Article on the unaffordability of healthy diets pre- and post-COVID-19 Pandemic. Pre-COVID-19 pandemic, unaffordability of diets affected 3 million people of whom 2.5 billion lived in 63 low- and middle-income countries. In these countries, income losses due to the pandemic markedly worsened the affordability gap. The proportion of people unable to afford half the cost of a healthy diet increased from 43% to 50%; this increased unaffordability aggravated undernutrition, micronutrient deficiencies, and diet-related non-communicable diseases. The article also provides estimates of the number of people (millions) in 2020 (with COVID-19 pandemic), 2021 and 2022, compared with the 2020 no-COVID-19 counterfactual, who would be unable to afford a healthy diet for pessimistic, moderate, and optimistic economic disruption scenarios, and projections of the change in per-capita consumption of various foods in 2020, 2021, and 2022 relative to a no-COVID-19 consumption trajectory.
- COVID-19 Pandemic
- Economic
- Food Insecurity
- Health
- Nutrition
- Social Support and Protection
- Africa
- Albania
- Armenia
- Asia
- Bangladesh
- Belize
- Benin
- Bolivia (Plurinational State of)
- Botswana
- Brazil
- Burkina Faso
- Burundi
- Cabo Verde
- Cambodia
- Comoros
- Côte d'Ivoire
- Djibouti
- Ecuador
- Egypt (Arab Republic)
- Eswatini (Swaziland)
- Ethiopia
- Gambia, The
- Ghana
- Global
- Guinea
- Guinea-Bissau
- Guyana
- Haiti
- Macedonia (Republic of North)
- Malawi
- Mali
- Mauritius
- Mongolia
- Mozambique
- Namibia
- Nepal
- Nicaragua
- Niger
- Nigeria
- Pakistan
- Panama
- Peru
- Romania
- Rwanda
- Saint Lucia
- Senegal
- Sierra Leone
- Sri Lanka
- Sub-Saharan Africa
- Suriname
- Tajikistan
- Tanzania (United Republic of)
- Togo
- Uganda
- Vietnam
- Zambia
- Zimbabwe
- Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs)
- Country-level population(s)
- Households
- Research
- Article
- Journal article