The new government must seize the opportunity right now to change this.
Malnutrition leaves children more vulnerable to disease, stunts their mental and physical development and leads to lifelong learning and memory deficiencies, lower IQ, and poorer achievement at school.
They will not be able to work as hard or earn as much as their healthy peers — earning up to 46 per cent less in adulthood. This means a less productive and innovative workforce, which hurts national productivity and, in turn, hampers Pakistan’s economic growth.
The costs are huge. Malnutrition is estimated to decrease Pakistan’s GDP by two to three per cent and equates to billions of lost rupees every year. This is similar to the lost GDP caused by the energy crisis.
If action is taken now, the newly elected government can reverse this. Pakistan’s population is expected to increase by 50 per cent in less than 40 years. If healthy and well educated, this youth offers a vast mine of talent and productivity. If properly nourished, they will learn more, work harder, be more innovative, and increase productivity, unlocking Pakistan’s economic potential on the global stage.
The first 1,000 days, from the start of a woman’s pregnancy to the child’s second birthday, is the vital window which will shape a child’s entire life. The damage caused by malnutrition in this window is long-term and permanent. Good nutrition for these first 1,000 days is a prerequisite for success in school and in life. Properly nourished children are more likely to take up skilled jobs and boost their wages — enabling them to lift themselves, their family, and ultimately their community out of poverty. Nutrition must be prioritised and tackled — as both a moral and economic necessity.
Tackling global malnutrition is a priority for the UK government and the World Bank. The World Bank is chairing a group of international partners in Pakistan, including the UK’s Department for International Development (DFID), AusAid, UN agencies, NGOs, and others, focused on helping federal and provincial governments prioritise ending under-nutrition. The group has provided technical and financial support and the World Bank has set up a multimillion dollar trust fund to support scaling-up of approaches that have been proven to work to address malnutrition.
On June 8, the UK announced hundreds of millions of pounds to tackle malnutrition globally, leveraging funding from others amounting to more than $4 billion at the Nutrition for Growth summit, co-hosted by British Prime Minister David Cameron. At the summit, a radical new approach was agreed with governments, business and science to transform millions of lives and prevent stunting in 20 million children globally by 2020, with the ultimate aim of eradicating malnutrition.
The UK government and the World Bank are significantly increasing their development financing for nutrition, including in Pakistan. The World Bank and the UK via DFID are already working with the provincial governments to help them provide micronutrient supplements to prevent anaemia and other micronutrient deficiencies in pregnancy and early childhood, to improve treatment of diarrhoea in young children, to promote exclusive breastfeeding up to six months and appropriate feeding for young children and to improve treatment for severe acute childhood malnutrition.
The UK is exploring how we can improve nutrition for hundreds of thousands of the poorest women and children through our support to the Income Support Programme. We are also exploring ways to help improve fortification of staple foods with iron, folic acid and other micronutrients.
And we help in emergencies. Back in 2010, the UK provided high-energy food supplements to half a million malnourished children and pregnant women affected by the devastating floods, and again provided seeds and animals in 2011 and 2012 so people could feed themselves. The World Bank financed emergency cash transfers to flood-affected households, which allowed families to meet their nutritional needs during those difficult times.
When it comes to the challenges for the new government in Pakistan, there has been good progress. In April, Pakistan signed up to the global Scaling Up Nutrition (SUN) movement. This is a major step forward, as it commits Pakistan to improve the life chances of children by ensuring they have good quality nutrition in the crucial 1,000-day window of opportunity from pregnancy to age two. It is now a challenge for the new government to take this forward, not just through the health sector, but also through initiatives in education, agriculture, water and sanitation, support for the poorest and other interventions.
Devolution of the relevant ministries to the provinces following the Eighteenth Constitutional Amendment presents an opportunity for provinces to take forward their own approaches on nutrition. The provinces, with technical support from development partners, have since developed strategies which clearly outline what actions need to be taken to address maternal and child malnutrition. Financing is currently being secured to implement these, from the provinces’ own budgets, as well as from development partners like AusAid, DFID and the World Bank.
So after decades of stagnation on nutrition, we are starting to see serious action being taken globally and here in Pakistan.
By taking action now, the new Government of Pakistan can change hundreds of thousands of children’s lives, as well as lay the foundations for a healthy, well-educated, and productive workforce, which will boost growth, lift millions out of poverty and help Pakistan compete globally.
The time is now to map out a better blueprint for Pakistan’s future.
Published in The Express Tribune, June 15th, 2013.
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COMMENTS (12)
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The report is extremely worrying for Pakistan. The new govt of Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaf has just announced the budget for the year 2013-14 in the province of KPK and have spelled out their priorities i.e health and education. It is high time that the govt and the partners sit together and develop a strategy for addressing this very serious issue besides other health problems
Hats off to our so called "Sons of The Soil" and "Maoun K Sajeelay Jawans" for the forced, shameful and overwhelming defense spending which has resulted in the conquest of Islamabad every now and then , while, very small amounts of budgets are left to be spent on health, nutrition and education etc.
Pakistan is one of the few countries outside of N Korea where the population is actually getting shorter because of chronic malnutrition. Says it all.
Bravo: If only we speak about those who cannot speak for themselves, thus school lunch and breakfast is most important.
Nutrition isn't important. Rocking back and forth and memorizing the Qur'an by rote is.
The malnutritioned kids should be proud that their hunger makes Pakistan into a nuclear power so the Generals can look over enemies in the EYE!
Sir I think that modern medicine has done more harm to Pakistan. We were living in the middle ages sixty years ago. We lived and died like in the middle ages. Life may have been short but our lifestyle was adapted to the middle ages. We have taken the fruits of modern science which we did nothing to create and did not not deserve. We did not invent Penicillin; Smallpox vacine; miracle rice; Haber-Bosch process and thousand other things. As a consequence our population exploded but our minds remained in the middle ages. Now brother is now fighting brother and we seem to be on the brink of collapse. We should have refused modern medicine and miracle rice. We should have waited till we were ready to enter the age of rationalism before accepting the gifts of science..
Wishful thinking that this issue will ever be prioritized by any Govt in the Land of Pure, as Allah is suppose to be taking care of them !
The efforts of the UK’s Department for International Development and the World Bank to eradicate malnutrition in children are certainly very noble and highly commendable. However, in my opinion, your approach to tackle this issue in Pakistan is flawed, and won't produce desired results any time soon because it does not fully take in to consideration the people's cultural habits and local realities. The main reason of malnutrition in children in Pakistan is comparatively greater number of children per family, though poorness and lack of education also contribute in various ways to the problem. Simply distributing cash or nutritional products wont work in the long run, and there is a good chance that it will rather encourage the unappreciative recipients to produce even more children. Unless and until you don't also take solid measures to control the family size, through creating better appreciation for small family using media campaigns, providing free family planning tools, and through legislation imposing limits on family size and punitive action on violations, the real chances of success are very slim.
And we increase defence expenditure by 15%. Shame on us !
Well people can always take a ride on bullet train which new govt is making if they dont v food.