Bangladesh ranks 84th in Hunger Index 2022

The Report Desk

Published: October 13, 2022, 05:03 PM

Bangladesh ranks 84th in Hunger Index 2022

Bangladesh has been ranked 84th in the Global Hunger Index 2022 among 121 countries, says a report jointly published by Irish aid agency Concern Worldwide and German organisation Welt Hunger Hilfe. 

The country has also slipped eight notches down from last year's 76th position with a score of 19.6 which means "serious". 

However, the country fared better than its South Asian neighbours --Pakistan (99th), India (107th), and Afghanistan (109th) while it lagged 20 places behind crisis-torn Sri Lanka (64th). 

The global hunger index is a means of monitoring whether countries are achieving hunger-related SDGs, according to World Health Organization. The index captures three dimensions of hunger: insufficient availability of food, shortfalls in the nutritional status of children and child mortality (which is, to a large extent, attributable to undernutrition).

Out of 100 points, 0 is the best score (no hunger) and 100 is the worst. In practice, neither of these extremes is reached.

GHI Severity Scale:

  GHI ≥ 50: extremely alarming 35-49.9: alarming 20-34.9: serious 10-19.9: moderate ≤9.9: low

 

For the 2022 GHI report, data of 136 countries were assessed. Out of these, there were sufficient data to rank 121 countries.

Seventeen countries, including China, Belarus and Kuwait, shared the top rank with a GHI score of less than five, according to the report that tracks hunger and malnutrition.

Hunger is at alarming levels in five countries -- Central African Republic, Chad, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Madagascar, and Yemen. Hunger is provisionally considered alarming in four additional countries -- Burundi, Somalia, South Sudan, and Syria. 

In a further 35 countries, hunger is considered serious, based on 2022 GHI scores and provisional designations.

The 2022 Global Hunger Index (GHI) brings us face to face with a grim reality. The toxic cocktail of conflict, climate change, and the Covid-19 pandemic had already left millions exposed to food price shocks and vulnerable to further crises. Now the conflict in Ukraine -- with its knock-on effects on global supplies of and prices for food, fertiliser, and fuel -- is turning a crisis into a catastrophe.

 

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