What do we know about the future of food assistance?
Steven Were Omamo
Chapter 16 in What do we know about the future of food systems?, 2025-07-21, pp p. 91-96 from International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI)
Abstract:
Food assistance has evolved to address both immediate needs and long-term resilience, reflecting the broader scope of interventions beyond traditional food aid. Localized and cash-based assistance is growing in importance, but externally sourced, in-kind assistance remains crucial in areas where markets and food systems are disrupted and thus unable to ensure timely and stable access to nutritious food. Future food assistance needs will increasingly reflect changing geographies, growing urban food insecurity, and heightened market volatility, requiring adaptive, anticipatory, and multilayered strategies. Significant gaps remain in understanding how to sustainably transition from international food assistance to locally driven, resilient food systems that address long-term nutritional adequacy and adapt to compounding crises. Foresight research can help highlight the intersection of climate change, conflict, and economic volatility as key drivers of future food assistance needs, and the nature of innovations to boost efficiency and impact. Expanded use of digital tools and integration of food assistance into social protection systems offer promising pathways toward enhanced efficiency and impact. Further research is needed to ensure that innovations reach the most vulnerable in low-resource settings and that integrated systems are sustainable.
Keywords: food assistance; social protection; food aid; nutrition; markets; food security; WFP; cash transfers; digital technology (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025-07-21
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:fpr:ifpric:175409
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