Waikato Herald

Demand on foodbanks drasticall­y increasing

Rising cost of living the main driver

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Abiannual survey of food support agencies found the demand for food has drasticall­y increased since the start of the pandemic in New Zealand, with the rising cost of living stated as the top driver.

The New Zealand Food Network (NZFN), Aotearoa’s largest food support and distributi­on organisati­on, surveyed 51 of its registered food hubs about the current state of food support and found that since Covid hit, there has been a 165 per cent increase in the number of people receiving food support.

Over two-thirds (69 per cent) of the food hubs surveyed are feeding more people than they were in 2020.

Asked to rate their own ability to meet the current level of demand, the food hubs indicate there’s significan­t room for improvemen­t and many more mouths to feed.

The cost of living crisis was reported to be the number-one reason for recipients seeking kai relief (88 per cent), closely followed by low individual/household income (70 per cent) and unemployme­nt (65 per cent).

Other top reasons were disability or sickness/injury, senior citizens living on a low fixed income and Covid19 isolation. NZFN’S previous survey reported both Covid-19 isolation and lost employment due to Covid-19 as being among the top reasons for recipients seeking relief.

These findings show the realworld impact of the 12 per cent spike in food prices (from Statistics NZ’S recent Food Price Index), the highest in over 30 years.

Since 2020, funding and support from the Ministry of Social Developmen­t (MSD) have been instrument­al in enabling NZFN to bulk purchase food and boost food hubs’ capability to process it through investment­s in community food distributi­on infrastruc­ture.

However, this has coincided with a rapidly changing socioecono­mic environmen­t which is driving more Kiwis to seek kai relief, including those who haven’t required support in the past.

This skyrocketi­ng demand is impacting NZFN’S ability to supply sufficient stock to these reliant foodbanks. Findings revealed NZFN is providing food support to nearly half a million people (480,104) every month through its partner food hubs, and on average, provides 40 per cent of the overall food volumes that their foodbanks receive.

For some charities, NZFN is providing 80 to 100 per cent of their food stocks.

Marina Hagevoort, manager of Halo Charitable Trust, talks about how inflation has impacted the South Waikato region.

“There is more desperatio­n for food now as the cost of living has put a lot of pressure on our already vulnerable families here in South Waikato.

“The organisati­ons working with us are receiving even more requests for support with food.”

NZFN chief executive Gavin Findlay says the current economic conditions have created the perfect storm when it comes to food insecurity.

“We launched NZFN during the pandemic when more Kiwis were needing food support. Since then, we’ve been working to bridge the gap between surplus stock and the communitie­s that need uplifting, but these findings show that demand has not slowed down and foodbanks are struggling to keep up.

“We’re seeing people having to cut their food budgets in order to pay for housing and rental hikes, increasing fuel costs and power bills.

“Our purpose is to relieve some of this burden, and that’s only possible when we have food to give.

“There is definitely more work to be done and food businesses can do their part by donating surplus food so we can distribute it on their behalf.”

 ?? ?? Food businesses can do their part by donating surplus food to be distribute­d to those in need.
Food businesses can do their part by donating surplus food to be distribute­d to those in need.
 ?? Photos / New Zealand Food Network ?? NZFN chief executive Gavin Findlay.
Photos / New Zealand Food Network NZFN chief executive Gavin Findlay.

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