By Tricitynews
Chandigarh 07th
June:- Cargill
along with Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) released a report titled ‘Food for Thought’, as part of a
five-part research series. This report highlights two sides of Asia’s
nutritional arc through examining dietary changes across the region and
summarizing it in six megatrends - Quality
not Quantity, Urbanisation and Income, Obesity & Micro Nutrients, Diverging
Outcomes, Low Nutrional Awareness and Advertising and Social Media, that
are driving these trends.
Quality
not Quantity: The need to switch from ‘more’ food to ‘better’
food will be the tenet for the coming years. Increase in the per
capita income and calorie intake graph shows a significant growth in the
quantity of food consumed, with most
countries consuming more than 2,500 calories per capita daily. As a
result, growth in calorie intake is moderating, composition of diets is
changing quickly with a growing consumption of protein, especially meat and
fish. Asia’s packaged food sector
has experienced 4% growth in 2017,highlighting the increase in
consumption of processed food as it is more convenient for the consumers and
does not bereave nutritional requirement.
Urbanization
and income rise lead to a significant nutritional shift: The
rapid increase in people moving to urban areas with Delhi and Mumbai pegged to be in the top
populated cities by 2030 with population of 36.1 million and 27.8
million respectively. This along with rise in income amongst consumers has
resulted in growing consumer
spending, especially on food. economies, driving fast food
outlets and supermarkets to build chains. It is also believed to encourage less
active lifestyles and greater consumption of convenience food. scale change
creating sufficient nutritive fuel the to together work Urbanisation and income
growth
Obesity
and Micronutrients - Increase in energy density and lower
quality of diets: Urbanisation has a direct correlation with obesity. Diets deteriorate during migration to cities,
thereby, confirming that nutritional changes occur as people move to urban
areas. People in less-developed countries with lower Gross National Income (GNI)
per capita are more vulnerable to the negative health consequences of
urbanisation. This puts India in a tough spot as despite being the 6th largest economy, it still has a
lower GNI per capita as compared to other countries in Asia.
However, India has the 4th least
obese people in Asia taking BMI as the index for the study
with obesity affecting women more
than men. Whilst the calorie intake is increasing, the quality of the
diet is not. This leads to micronutrient deficiency or “hidden hunger” – people are both
overweight or appear healthy but are missing vital nutrients, creating one of
the more worrying trends in the region.
Diverging
Nutritional Outcomes - Unequal nutritional outcomes stems from Asia’s growing
inequality: growth across the region, significant
GDP Despite key concern in Asia, even
as obesity grows a still is undernutrition. India is the most egregious example of a fast-growing economy with highly
unequal nutritional outcome. Structural gender inequality also shapes
divergent nutritional outcomes – Female
children are more malnourished than male children here. In this context,
Cargill’s oils business in India has a corporate responsibility program –
Gemini Badhte Kadam, which works with school children to raise nutrional
awareness amongst the girl child and works towards bringing nutrional equality
between genders. Lower levels of education and literacy among mothers also
affect nutritional outcomes. The
nutrition–inequality nexus does not only express itself in under nutrition.
Poor are also vulnerable to over-nutrition, with overweight and obesity
increasing among segments of the urban-dwelling poor.
Low
Nutritional Awareness – Awareness about both under nutrition
and over-nutrition, varies greatly by country and income level and is
especially low in the region. There is a need for greater consumer education across the board. Awareness is especially important among mothers as
mothers are the first source of nutrition for a child for “first thousand days”
of life. Adults also need
to be better educated about the dangers of obesogenic foods and importance of
physical exercise.
Social
Media & Advertising shaping food trends: The intensity of food advertising in
Asia is growing however regulators
are increasingly stepping in. Governments
including Taiwan, Singapore and South Korea have stepped in to restrict and
restrain some types of advertising. By country, Singapore and the Philippines have seen the
largest increases in GDA labelling adoption since 2012, with Malaysia and Thailand in the top four for
total adoption rates.
Social media will undoubtedly become
a key form of communication between consumers and stakeholders in the food
industry. Beyond driving trends, it is also likely to become a key channel for
advertising and consumer engagement. Growing social media prominence will provide opportunities for companies
in the food industry, but it is also likely to spur efforts to closely monitor and regulate
this space.
However, there are opportunities for
stakeholders to address the above trends. Food fortification and reformulation will remain powerful tools for
tackling under nutrition as the former is an efficient and cost-effective way
to reduce obesogenic ingredients. More focus is needed on affordable and quality food in urban environments.
Good nutrition needs to be driven by enabling food systems and single-target
policies will not be sufficient. Policies
on health and nutrition will vary from prescription to advocacy and concerted
action has more impact than relying on the trickle-down effects of
economic growth. Clearly there are no
simple solutions, hence the need for policies and programs to help tackle this effectively. In
conclusion, efforts that promote the most fundamental aspects of human health,
nutrition and hygiene, should undoubtedly be a priority.
Commenting on the EIU report Mr. Piyush Patnaik, Managing Director,
Cargill’s oils business in India said that with growing income and
urbanisation, nutrional inequalities are also on the rise. In order to tackle
this effectively, companies, governments, NGOs and other world organizations
should look at working with each other – the goal being to make health a key
priority. Being pioneers in the initiative of fortification and working in line
with the organisational goal of nourishing the world, it is our responsibility
to work towards supporting the food industry and ensuring good health for
everyone, across the region.
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