Page added on May 26, 2020
Most Americans do not regard hunger as a problem, let alone understand the magnitude of its scope. If you really want to know about the severity of the global hunger – and if you are willing to do something about it, read on.According to World Hunger Day.org and Mercy Corps:
More than 820 million people do not have enough of the food they need to live an active, healthy life. That’s more than twice the entire population of the United States (328 million) and Canada (37.5 million) combined.These crises stem primarily from poverty, but they are exacerbated by military conflict, weather conditions, locust plagues, and other natural disasters. At the very minimum, this problem raises two questions, both of which need to be answered.
If someone is starving now, they can’t wait several months for a new harvest. If we only feed them now, we are likely only delaying their ultimate demise. Numerous NGOs are trying to address one or both of those questions. In fact, one or the other is nearly always a component of faith-based organizations.
The problem is not a shortage of food. There are enough resources and plenty of food available to feed the entire global population. The long-term solution requires helping the hungry gain access to sustainable food sources and successfully eliminating the aforementioned causes of hunger.
Access may be provided in the form of agricultural innovation and implementation, supply-chain infrastructure and management, or both.
As individual followers of Christ, our responsibility is to supply a need when we see it and as the Lord provides. So, the question boils down to, “How will you help.”
“The world is hungry, but the emptiness goes far beyond the table. The need is physical and spiritual. People hunger for opportunity, starve for resources, and have been stripped of value. These injustices keep us up at night.” – Food for the Hungry
World Hunger Day is an initiative of The Hunger Project, a nonprofit organization established in 1997 by members of the European Union. It’s objective is to reach a sustainable end of world hunger. The Hunger Project does not distribute food.
To drill deeper and learn more about the global hunger crisis, we encourage you to read the special report, “The Scandal of Starvation in a World of Plenty,” published by Gospel for Asia and released in advance of World Hunger Day, May 28th. You will gain additional insight into not only the crisis but also the ways Gospel for Asia and its partners are working to address the problem in South Asia.
2 Comments on "The Severity of Global Hunger 2020"
anonymous on Thu, 28th May 2020 4:48 am
in a few more years, this will be a pressing problem for almost everyone, day to day. nobody is going to care about ‘those starving kids’ far away when one’s own kids are hungry.
Davy on Thu, 28th May 2020 5:10 am
Writing on the wall. If you have ever farmed you can see the writing. If you are honest about the science of climate and watch how the weather has been altered then you see the writing. If you understand business and global economics you see the writing. Longer term soil health and water resources are more writing. 80MIL new mouths to feed a year seals the deal.