来源:京港台:2023-7-2 10:24| 来源:玖奌杂货铺
西方发达国家,终于要面临吃不饱饭这个严重问题了。
By James Davey
Summary
11.3 mln Britons faced hunger in 2022
3 mln food parcels provided by Trussell Trust in 2022/23 year
Ineffective social security system blamed
LONDON, June 28 (Reuters) - One in seven people in the United Kingdom faced hunger last year because they did not have enough money, according to a report published on Wednesday by food bank charity the Trussell Trust.
It said this equates to 11.3 million people, more than double the population of Scotland, and blamed a dysfunctional social security system, as well as a cost of living crisis that is showing little sign of easing.
Britain is the world's sixth-biggest economy but its citizens have been pressured for more than a year by high inflation which has outstripped pay growth for almost all workers.
Government forecasters estimate UK households are in the midst of the biggest two-year squeeze in living standards since comparable records started in the 1950s.
The Trussell Trust's network of 1,300 food bank centres across the UK provided a record 3 million food parcels in the year to March, up 37% and more than double the amount provided five years ago.
"This consistent upward trajectory exposes that it is weaknesses in the social security system that are driving food bank need, rather than just the pandemic or cost of living crisis," it said.
The charity said that 7% of the UK population was supported by charitable food support, including food banks, yet 71% of people facing hunger had not yet accessed any form of charitable food support.
It also noted that one in five people forced to turn to food banks in its network are in a working household and called on the UK government to ensure the benefits system covers essential costs.
“We know people are struggling, which is why we’re providing record financial support worth an average 3,300 pounds ($4,206) per household," said a spokesperson for the Department for Work and Pensions in response to the report.
The government has also raised benefits and the state pension in line with inflation, increased the minimum wage and supported families with food, energy and other essential costs, said the spokesperson.
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak's key economic pledge to halve overall inflation in 2023 before a probable 2024 election has been undermined by persistently high food inflation, outpacing the broader inflation rate across the whole economy and adding strain to household budgets already stretched by higher taxes and mortgage rates.
Food and drink inflation was running at 18.3% in May according to the most recent official data, and 14.6% in June according to the most recent industry data.
On Tuesday, British supermarket executives rejected allegations they were profiteering at the expense of consumers through the cost of living crisis.
Soaring food prices have contributed to the biggest squeeze on living standards in Britain since records began in the 1950s, and prompted questions about who is responsible. Trade unions and politicians have accused the supermarkets of "greedflation", saying they've been too slow in passing on lower producer prices to consumers.
($1 = 0.7846 pounds)
Reporting by James Davey; Editing by Aurora Ellis
https://newsinfrance.com/16-of-french-people-do-not-have-enough-to-eat-according-to-credoc/
By Emma Confrere May 17, 2023
In 2016, half of consumers still bought all the food they wanted, they are now only a third today. stock.adobe.com
This figure even climbs to 24% for those under 40. In question, prices that continue to increase on the shelves of supermarkets.
If thefood inflation continues to climb, to 15.9% over one year in March, some French people can no longer eat properly. This is the alarming finding drawn by the Research Center for the Study and Observation of Living Conditions (Credoc) in its latest study. At the end of last year, 16% of French people said they could not eat enough. In just five months, this share has jumped by four points.
The French no longer have enough to eat, and are restricting themselves more and more. In 2016, half of consumers still bought all the food they wanted, they are now only a third today. For the Credoc, there is no secret, “high inflation, particularly for food products, explains at least in part the increase in this form of precariousness. Three quarters of the people concerned cite the lack of money as the reason for their situation.“. The increase in other expenditure items, such as fuel, also led to a restriction in the food item.
Read alsoHave the prices of the anti-inflation basket really fallen by 13%, as the government claims?
A statement shared by distributors, such as Michel-Edouard Leclerc, president of the Leclerc centers, on May 10 on BFM TV: “Good meat today is not sold, it is considered too expensive, fish too.In addition to food insecurity, there are also other forms of fragility: 52% of people lacking food also impose restrictions on medical care. The Crédoc also highlights that it is the French under 40 who are the most affected, at 24%, against 7% of 60-69 year olds.
More Than One in Five US Adults Experienced Food Insecurity in the Early Weeks of the Pandemic
New data from a nationally representative survey of nonelderly adults conducted between March 25 and April 10 show the COVID-19 pandemic has already taken a significant toll on families’ abilities to meet basic needs, especially their ability to afford an adequate diet.
Even in better times, food insecurity disproportionately affects low-income Hispanic and black adults, and these disparities are pronounced in the survey results.
Adults in households reporting income below the federal poverty level (FPL) and those with incomes between 100 and 250 percent of the FPL report food insecurity rates at 57.5 percent and 31.0 percent, respectively. Non-Hispanic black and Hispanic adults were more than twice as likely to report food insecurity in the past 30 days as white adults (33.9 percent and 33.3 percent, versus 16.3 percent).
Although survey data are not available for American Indian/Native American households, many in these communities already struggle with food insecurity. Emerging evidence suggests some are also at high risk of being hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic.
These data are particularly concerning in light of increasing evidence that the pandemic is disproportionately affecting the health of communities of color.
Federal and state policymakers have taken action to ramp up the federal nutrition program response to the pandemic. But the extent of material hardship suggests a very robust response will be needed for a very long time—well beyond the official end of the public health emergency.
Potential policy solutions include:
These new data show levels of food insecurity among nonelderly adults were already high early in the pandemic response, especially among those who reported losing jobs or income.
As people are encouraged to stock up on food and limit trips to grocery stores, food insecurity is a critical aspect of the current public health crisis. If more families are unable to afford enough food and meet other basic needs during the pandemic, they and their communities may face adverse health consequences in both the short and long term.
New Food Banks Canada Research Shows 7 Million Canadians Report Going Hungry
BY Food Banks Canada 06 Jun, 2022
23% of Canadians Report Eating "Less than They Should" Due to Rising Inflation
61% Believe the Cost of Housing is Now the Biggest Contributor to Food Insecurity in Canada
TORONTO, June 6, 2022 /CNW/ - More Canadians report they are facing hunger and food insecurity due to rising inflation and housing costs, according to newly released data from Food Banks Canada.
The nation's leading charitable organization that's focused on relieving hunger today and preventing hunger tomorrow, Food Banks Canada's data shows that one-in-five (an estimated 7 million) Canadians now report going hungry — with 23% reporting that they are eating less "than they think they should" because there isn't enough money for food.
"This summer will be the toughest Canada's food banks have ever experienced in our 41 year history," explains Food Banks Canada's newly-appointed CEO Kirstin Beardsley, "The majority of food banks in every region of Canada are already stretched to their limits, with demand expected to remain high throughout the summer months as more and more Canadians struggle to cope with rising inflation," says Beardsley. According to Beardsley, 61% of Canadians now believe that rising housing costs are the biggest barrier that is preventing Canadians from being able to afford food, a sentiment that has doubled in the past year alone.
Typically, food banks across Canada see an easing of demand during the summer months, but according to Beardsley, food bankers on the frontlines are reporting no signs of slow-downs.
"Food banks in most regions of Canada are experiencing an influx of Canadians visiting food banks for the first time — a number that's increased by up to 25% in some regions, which we haven't seen since the first few months of the pandemic," explains Beardsley, adding that food banks are also reporting that they are seeing former food bank clients forced to return, after 5 or more years of not having to rely on food banks to get by.
"The biggest sign that inflation is seriously impacting hunger and food insecurity in Canada, is that the reasons why people say they are coming to food banks is changing," says Beardsley. "In the past, people would turn to food banks during times of job loss, or due to lower wages — but over the past six months, Canadians are telling us that they are running out of money for food because of rising housing, gas, energy and food costs. That's an indication that we need to find new longer-term solutions to fight hunger and food insecurity."
"Canada's outdated social reforms are failing to keep pace with the new pressures of inflation and dramatically rising housing costs that are affecting every region of the country. Food Banks Canada research shows that Canadians believe hunger and food insecurity is unacceptable in Canada. It's time to tackle hunger at its root causes by improving access to affordable housing and piloting innovative, long-term income supports," says Beardsley, adding that Food Banks Canada encourages concerned Canadians to support their local food banks who are stretched to the limit.
About 5.6 Million People in Absolute Poverty in Italy
Poverty has increased more in the north of the country, where the cost of living is higher
ISTAT said Wednesday that 5.6 million people in Italy were living in conditions of absolute poverty in 2021, adding that this meant the scale of the problem remained at the record level registered the previous year.
The national statistics agency said 9.4% of the population was in absolute poverty, the same level as in 2020. It said 1.4 million minors, 14.2% of the population under 18, were living in conditions of poverty. It said 1.9 million households in Italy were in absolute poverty.
Although the number of poor families have grown, according to Istat, the measures introduced by the government to counter the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic – benefits, emergency income, layoffs – have helped limit the crisis’ impact on them.
Poverty has increased more in the north of the country, where the cost of living is higher, although in absolute terms the south remains more affected.
According to Maurizio Landini, the secretary of Italy’s main trade union, the left-wing CGIL, “poverty increases because one is poor even when working.” In Italy “there is too much precarious work,” he added.
饥饿的滋味,我是尝过的。小时候,还曾经饿晕过一次,把家里人吓的够呛,以为得了啥大病。碰巧有一邻居是学医的,说这是饿的,给喂点米汤后醒过来了。
英国、法国总人口均超过6千万,美国总人口超过3亿。无论是七分之一还是六分之一,或者25%的成年人,这吃不饱饭的人,都不是一个小数字。
看到上面的这些数字,我有些吃惊。没想到啊,这些西方发达国家,如今都窘迫到这种地步了。
有哪些国家会挨饿呢,网上有人是这样说的:“谁惹我们,谁就吃不饱饭。”
英国、法国、美国有很多人吃不饱饭,其他发达国家也好不到哪里去,意大利有约560万国民生活在绝对贫困条件下,五分之一的瑞士家庭处于贫困。
瑞士的贫困线标准线是年收入3.8万瑞郎,约合人民币(专题)26万元。
三年前,知乎上有个话题,假如美帝崩溃了,中国普通人如何才能最大获益?
当时我还写过一篇文章,劝这些网友不要这么心急,好好过自己的日子,别急不可耐地想着美国崩溃的事。现在看来,是我肤浅了。照媒体报道的这个情况,美国25%的成年人连饭都吃不饱,崩溃看来是指日可待的事了。
数千年来,老百姓吃得饱都是一种奢望,“人类的历史就是饥饿者寻觅食物的历史”(房龙《人类的故事》)。
饥饿是一件很可怕的事情,“衣食足而知荣辱,仓廪足则知礼节”,饥饿的年代,很容易使人性丧失。在清朝人撰写的《晋灾泪尽图》中,有讲述一个“客居新丧,噤不敢哭”的恐怖故事:
一位商人因为妻子死了而哭泣,这时有路人过来劝说:不要哭了,别人听到会过来抢着吃掉的。商人不相信,第二天将妻子的坟墓挖开后,果然只剩下了一堆骨头。
中国人能敞开了肚皮的吃饱饭,也就是这近几十年的事。在上世纪八十年代以前,实行粮食统购统销政策,吃饭要粮票,买糖得有糖票,每家每户冬天能买多少煤,也都是定量供给的。
随着改革开放,发展市场经济,物资慢慢丰富起来。到1993年取消粮食票供应,粮油不再是“紧俏”商品,实现敞开供应,只要你用钱去买,想吃多少就吃多少。
从1993年到今天,也才30年。现在的好日子来之不易。有一些人没有尝过苦日子,不愿意好好珍惜。
以前我一直以为金灿荣胡锡进胡鞍刚陈平这些名人满嘴跑火车,现在看来,我小看了他们,他们其实才是聪明人,或者说,满嘴跑火车又岂止他们。