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The State of Food Systems Worldwide: Counting Down to 2030

Authors :
Schneider, Kate
Fanzo, Jessica
Haddad, Lawrence
Herrero, Mario
Moncayo, Jose Rosero
Herforth, Anna
Reman, Roseline
Guarin, Alejandro
Resnick, Danielle
Covic, Namukolo
Béné, Christophe
Cattaneo, Andrea
Aburto, Nancy
Ambikapathi, Ramya
Aytekin, Destan
Barquera, Simon
Battersby-Lennard, Jane
Beal, Ty
Molina, Paulina Bizzoto
Cafiero, Carlo
Campeau, Christine
Caron, Patrick
Conforti, Piero
Damerau, Kerstin
DiGirolamo, Michael
DeClerck, Fabrice
Dewi, Deviana
Elouafi, Ismahane
Fabi, Carola
Foley, Pat
Frazier, Ty
Gephart, Jessica
Golden, Christopher
Fischer, Carlos Gonzalez
Hendriks, Sheryl
Honorati, Maddalena
Huang, Jikun
Kennedy, Gina
Laar, Amos
Lal, Rattan
Lidder, Preetmoninder
Loken, Brent
Marshall, Quinn
Masuda, Yuta
McLaren, Rebecca
Miachon, Lais
Muñoz, Hernán
Nordhagen, Stella
Qayyum, Naina
Saisana, Michaela
Suhardiman, Diana
Sumaila, Rashid
Cullen, Maximo Torrero
Tubiello, Francesco
Vivero-Pol, Jose-Luis
Webb, Patrick
Wiebe, Keith
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Transforming food systems is essential to bring about a healthier, equitable, sustainable, and resilient future, including achieving global development and sustainability goals. To date, no comprehensive framework exists to track food systems transformation and their contributions to global goals. In 2021, the Food Systems Countdown to 2030 Initiative (FSCI) articulated an architecture to monitor food systems across five themes: 1 diets, nutrition, and health; 2 environment, natural resources, and production; 3 livelihoods, poverty, and equity; 4 governance; and 5 resilience and sustainability. Each theme comprises three-to-five indicator domains. This paper builds on that architecture, presenting the inclusive, consultative process used to select indicators and an application of the indicator framework using the latest available data, constructing the first global food systems baseline to track transformation. While data are available to cover most themes and domains, critical indicator gaps exist such as off-farm livelihoods, food loss and waste, and governance. Baseline results demonstrate every region or country can claim positive outcomes in some parts of food systems, but none are optimal across all domains, and some indicators are independent of national income. These results underscore the need for dedicated monitoring and transformation agendas specific to food systems. Tracking these indicators to 2030 and beyond will allow for data-driven food systems governance at all scales and increase accountability for urgently needed progress toward achieving global goals.

Subjects

Subjects :
Economics - General Economics

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2303.13669
Document Type :
Working Paper