06 March 2014

The Double Burden of Malnutrition in SE Asia and Pacific: An Opportunity for Australian Leadership

I was in Australia last week, reporting on a review IDS and Monash University did for the Government on the Double Burden of Nutrition in the region (summary powerpoints here). Here is my report out, which is also featured in the terrific Development Policy Blog run by Stephen Howes' Development Policy Centre at the Australian National University.  


The saying goes “when tomorrow’s burden is added to the burden of today, the weight becomes more than anyone can bear”.  This is precisely the situation the countries of South East Asia and the Pacific are facing today.  They already have some of the highest undernutrition rates in the world and now they are having to deal with premature death, diabetes, hypertension and heart disease due to another variant of malnutrition—diets high in fat, sugar and salt—often associated with the consumption of highly processed foods--and physical inactivity.`  


Welcome to the Double Burden of Malnutrition.  It is a world where stunted infants can, within the space of a couple of years, become overweight children. Where obese adults and stunted infants are part of the same nuclear family. Where money for expensive treatments for diseases like diabetes is being diverted away from inexpensive measures to prevent stunting, such as breastfeeding promotion and micronutrient supplementation.  


Unchecked Malnutrition will thwart Economic Ambitions.  The countries of South East Asia and the Pacific have had the least time to deal with this problem. Most other countries have had more time to deal with undernutrition before its twin, overnutrition, emerges.  Not in this region.  Indonesia, the regional power, is particularly worrying.  Good economic growth, some successes in poverty reduction, yet stunting rates that are flatlining at very high levels, with high and increasing rates of overweight at the adult, and most worryingly, childhood levels.   How on earth will Indonesia and the other countries in the region fulfil their economic aspirations?  High quality longitudinal evidence confirms that the adult wage rates of young infants who were not stunted at 3 years of age was nearly 50% higher than those who were stunted.  And these individuals were 33% less likely to live in poverty.  That is just for undernutrition.  Overnutrition costs are a time bomb waiting to happen.  In the USA 1 in 5 health dollars is spent in treating diabetes.  The USA has 22 million people suffering from diabetes, Indonesia has 7 million—imagine what the treatment costs would do to the Indonesian public health budget and the livelihoods of low income Indonesians.


Regional Leadership for the Global Good.  The double burden – one sandbag filling up fast while the other is emptying at a trickle—has hit South East Asia and the Pacific fast.  Like a slow moving never ending typhoon it will wreck human infrastructure.  Here is a clear opportunity for Australia to be a leader of a regional effort to combat this juggernaut of a problem.  Everyone else is hoping it will go away.  Well, it won’t.  But while the double burden may have landed in this region most rapidly, it will not stop here—other regions such as South Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa will feel its full force in 5-15 years.  Leadership by the region will be a massive contribution to other parts of the global community.  The world will beat a path to the region’s door for strategies and solutions. 


A New Age of International Development and Cooperation.  A regional initiative to tackle the double burden would herald the new age of international development that we have all talked about for so long.  Gone would be the “us and them” mentality—you have the problems—we have the solutions.  This is a burden carried by Australia too—diabetes, hypertension and heart disease are massive problems in the region’s richest nation.  Dealing with it would be a collective effort—one of mutual self-interest.  Gone would be the “just spend aid money on it” mentality—this is an issue that requires the full range of public policy instruments are brought to bear.   We are talking about tweaking policies, not spending lots of new money: plant breeders focusing on raising yields of fruits and vegetables; social safety nets that promote healthy eating; schools that teach students about healthy growth and the importance of physical activity; community health workers that know about over as well as undernutrition and how they are linked; incentives for the private sector to further develop markets for inexpensive healthy foods; food labels that help rather than hinder consumers to exercise personal responsibility and protectionism that leaves healthy foods out of the trade wars.


Nutrition—the bridge between economic and human development.  Australia is the chair of the G20 in 2014.  As such it has a platform to inspire the world.  The recent announcement of the goal of an extra 2% economic growth over current projections is a good start.  What about Foreign Minister Julie Bishop’s (pictured) other priority, human development?  Well, dealing with malnutrition in its various forms provides the perfect bridge between economic growth and human development.  A bridge that shows, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that Australian political leaders care about people as well as economies, about human development as well as economic development, and about child growth as well as economic growth. 


Leaders in Hope.  Australia has a real opportunity to be the leader of a collective movement that deals with the region’s burdens of today and tomorrow.  It will have developed the innovative policies, together with the accompanying evidence base, that everyone outside the region will look to emulate.  Most importantly, it will have given the rest of the world hope. Hope that there are answers to the double burden. Hope for a healthier workforce.  Hope for a world in which countries can come together and solve problems that affect them all.  Hope that that burdens of today and tomorrow can be borne. Together. 

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