Briefing Papers Number 7, October 2009 | Page 3

A comprehensive approach to preventing and treating malnutrition means expanding programs to the scale needed and linking current U.S. nutrition activities with broader investments in related sectors, including agriculture, food security, and rural infrastructure. Focusing on nutrition is one of the best investments the United States and the international community can make to reduce hunger and poverty and promote development. The first two years of life are a critical window of opportunity to make sure children live healthy, productive lives. A long-term study in Guatemala following individuals from infancy into adulthood provides some of the best evidence yet of the economic benefits of good nutrition.9 In 1969, young Guatemalan children in two communities were chosen to participate in a nutrition supplementation program that provided them with a nutritious drink twice a day. One group of children received a drink called Fresco, the other a drink called Atole, which contained more calories and protein than Fresco. The nutrition intervention had a profound impact. Those who received Atole grew on average an additional 2.4 centimeters taller than those who received Fresco. This small difference resulted in a 20 percent reduction in severe stunting in the Atole group. Virtually no reduction in stunting was found for children who received Fresco.10 Followup monitoring of the children in these two communities 25 years later showed that individuals who received Atole had a greater likelihood of completing primary and some secondary school, higher scores on reading comprehension and cognitive tests, and, among women, completion of more grades in school.11 The impact of greater height and more schooling in the Atole group has economic consequences as well. As adults, children who received Atole during the first two years of life earned an average of $870 more annually than individuals who received Fresco. In a country where annual per capita income is just $2,440, this represents a significant gain for adults who were properly nourished in childhood.12 In Guatemala and other countries where malnutrition persists, the economic loss can be as high as 2 to 3 percent of GDP.13 These direct costs are compounded by indirect costs—for example, from increased healthcare expenses and lost labor hours resulting from increased susceptibility to illness. Malnutrition Remains Pervasive The dual crises of high food prices and a deep economic recession in the last few years have reversed progress against hunger. In many countries, child malnutrition rates are www.bread.org Todd Post Nutrition is Critical for Development steadily rising. For children suffering malnutrition, the effects will be long-term, even intergenerational. A woman who has been malnourished in childhood is likely to deliver a smaller baby with poor fetal growth and a greater likelihood of suffering stunting.14 A number of factors, including poverty, contribute to malnutrition. During the first six months of life, breast milk contains all of the nutrients a growing infant needs to maintain health, but exclusive breastfeeding rates remain very low. In a survey of 82 developing countries, less than 50 percent of mothers exclusively breastfed their children. Suboptimal breastfeeding results in the death of 1.4 million young children each year.15 Healthy children become malnourished if they do not get enough to eat or if they eat food of limited nutritional value, as often happens when diets consist mainly of a staple grain such as corn or rice. Poor diets are themselves often the result of poverty or lack of availability of food. Save the Children found that at average wages, a rural family of five in Ethiopia would have to work for four months simply to be able to afford one month’s worth of healthy food.16 In Niger and other countries, severe malnutrition increases during the so-called hunger season before crops are harvested.17 (See Fig. 1 on next page) Even if food availability is not a barrier, mothers may not have good information about what, how much or how often Bread for the World Institute  3