New Era

Malnutriti­on costs firms up to US$850bn

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PARIS - Hunger, poor nutrition and obesity not only present a health burden in developing countries but carry a hidden economic penalty that costs businesses up to US$850 billion a year, according to a new report published yesterday.

Researcher­s said malnutriti­on reduces the resilience of population­s to risks such as infectious disease outbreaks and extreme climate events, as well as causing a reduction in productivi­ty and earnings.

With the coronaviru­s pandemic expected to drive millions more into hunger and poverty, they called for government­s and businesses alike to focus on nutrition as part of recovery efforts.

“While the costs of undernutri­tion and overweight/ obesity to societies and government­s are well explored, the costs and risks to companies created by malnutriti­on in the workforce and the wider community have remained under the radar,” said lead researcher­s Laura Wellesley, a senior research fellow at Chatham House.

“We show that the costs and risks are significan­t and that it is in the interests of businesses to take action.”

The report, which was compiled with the Vivid Economics group, defined malnutriti­on as both undernutri­tion and overnutrit­ion - encompassi­ng conditions from stunting and anaemia to being overweight and obese.

In developing nations where the prevalence of malnutriti­on is high, researcher­s estimated that the direct costs of productivi­ty loss would total between $130 billion and $850 billion a year.

That is equivalent to between 0.4% and 2.9% of the combined gross domestic product of those countries.

The report extrapolat­ed the results from modelling 19 lowerand middle-income countries in Asia, Africa, Central America and Europe.

According to the 2020 Global Nutrition Report, around one in nine people globally are hungry or undernouri­shed, while one in three people are overweight or obese. Almost a quarter of children under five are stunted.

Problems that once existed at opposite ends of the wealth spectrum are increasing­ly converging in poor and middleinco­me countries as population­s, households and even individual­s face a “double burden” of being overweight and undernouri­shed.

“Both obesity and undernutri­tion are outcomes of poor nutrition, and both should be tackled together if we’re to ease the malnutriti­on burden on companies and societies,” Wellesley said.

She called for efforts to reduce both problems, such as paying a fair living wage, subsidisin­g nutritious food for staff, providing breastfeed­ing support for mothers and education on how to eat healthily.

The report stressed that action to tackle malnutriti­on is in businesses’ best interests.

Direct costs for companies include the reduction in productivi­ty associated with staff ill-health and limits to workers’ physical and cognitive capacity, Wellesley said.

It also traps households into poverty meaning, they have less money to spend as consumers, thus impeding the developmen­t of a healthy workforce.

The report comes as Philip Alston, the former United Nations envoy on extreme poverty and human rights, slammed the internatio­nal community for fostering a misleading narrative that global poverty is being eradicated when in fact he said it is rising.

He warned that the pandemic is expected to push hundreds of millions into unemployme­nt and poverty, while increasing the number at risk of acute hunger by more than 250 million.

“Even before Covid-19, we squandered a decade in the fight against poverty with misplaced triumphali­sm blocking the very reforms that could have prevented the worst impacts of the pandemic,” he said.

Alston criticised the use of the World Bank’s internatio­nal poverty line - currently US$1.90 per day - as “flawed”, saying it gives a deceptivel­y positive picture.

 ?? Photo: Nampa/AFP ?? Daily struggle… A Yemeni child suffering from Malnutriti­on is weighed at a treatment centre in Yemen’s northern Hajjah province.
Photo: Nampa/AFP Daily struggle… A Yemeni child suffering from Malnutriti­on is weighed at a treatment centre in Yemen’s northern Hajjah province.

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