Briefing Papers Number 22, September 2013 | Page 6

and non-renewable resources such as fertilizer and energy are used to produce, process, handle, and transport food that no one consumes. In most low-income countries, particularly in Africa, post-harvest losses in cereal quantity and quality lead to lower earnings at the market and less nutritious family meals. The annual cost of grain losses to African countries is estimated at $4 billion. This is far more than the continent receives in food aid—in fact, $4 billion is a significant percentage of the food aid sub-Saharan Africa received in the entire decade 1998-2008 (an estimated $6.1 billion). Its cost is in the same range as the annual value of sub-Saharan Africa’s total cereal imports (which ranged between $3 billion and $7 billion over the period 2000-2007). Perhaps most importantly, $4 billion would provide sufficient food every day for a year for at least 48 million people.18 Building capacity to support the food supply chain will help reduce grain losses as well as improve food quality and safety, generate more income, and contribute to food and nutritional security.19 As the amounts of traditional development assistance decline relative to other financial flows, international finance institutions and the private sector should join donor countries in assisting countries in strengthening their capacity to prevent post-harvest losses. Women: The Missing Link in Ending Hunger UN Photo/Martine Perret Around the world, socially disadvantaged populations bear the brunt of low agricultural productivity. One of these groups is at the nexus of agriculture and nutrition: women. In many developing countries, women not only prepare food but are also the main agricultural producers. In Southeast Asia, women supply up to 90 percent of the labor required for rice cultivation. In sub-Saharan Africa, women produce up to 70 percent of the food for their households and the Economic growth in urban sectors will not help the majority of poor people, who live in rural households such as this farm in Timor Leste. 6  Briefing Paper, September 2013 market.20 Evidence shows that reducing gender inequality increases agricultural productivity. Greater gender equality leads to improved crop yields, higher economic productivity, faster growth, and improvements in the quality of life— including less malnutrition and fewer infant deaths. Startling research findings show that, in fact, almost 55 percent of the reduction in hunger from 1970 to 1995 can be attributed to improvements in women’s status in society—more than agricultural or technological advances contributed. The specific indicators of gender equality include: both women and men are able to participate fully as economic actors, they are motivated by sharing in the benefits of their work, they have equal input into decision-making, and the back-breaking repetitive ta ͭ́