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With research staff from more than 60 countries, and offices across the globe, IFPRI provides research-based policy solutions to sustainably reduce poverty and end hunger and malnutrition in developing countries.

Erick Boy

Erick Boy

Erick Boy is the Chief Nutritionist in the HarvestPlus section of the Innovation Policy and Scaling Unit. As head of nutrition for the HarvestPlus Program since 2008, he has led research that has generated scientific evidence on biofortified staple crops as efficacious and effective interventions to help address iron, vitamin A, and zinc deficiency in sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America, and South Asia.

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Since 1975, IFPRI’s research has been informing policies and development programs to improve food security, nutrition, and livelihoods around the world.

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IFPRI currently has more than 600 employees working in over 80 countries with a wide range of local, national, and international partners.

Food in the Future

Open Access | CC-BY-4.0

Food in the Future

As the global economic environment changes, so too will diets and the demand for food. To understand the long-term impact of biofortification, researchers must assess how diets and reliance on staples foods will change in the future under a variety of scenarios.

To do this, IFPRI economists Msangi and colleagues used a global agricultural market model to simulate demands for food and micronutrients into the future. Such methods have the advantage of being able to focus on the food sector and to evaluate different country-specific scenarios over time.

In their working paper (Integrated Economic Modeling of Global and Regional Micronutrient Security) the authors find that despite urbanization and income growth associated with globalization, diets of the rural poor —who are the focus of interventions to reduce micronutrient malnutrition—will continue to be heavily based on staple foods like cereals and tuber crops in many regions. Richer and more urban populations, by contrast, will increase their intake of higher-value proteins, oils, fruits and vegetables more quickly over the next 10-20 years, and enjoy higher intakes of important micronutrients like zinc, iron and vitamin A – and lower incidences of deficiency over time.

Thus, biofortification will remain relevant to decreasing the micronutrient deficiency prevalence among poor rural populations in the years to come, as their incomes will still be far too low to afford a more diversified diet. The paper suggests that biofortification should be targeted to cereal grains in south Asia, and roots and tubers in Sub-Saharan Africa.

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