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Recipe for Hope: Responding to the Hunger Crisis
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Recipe for Hope

Recipe for Hope: Week 5

Ingredient for Despair: The mixed blessing of increased consumption

Another key cause of increasing food prices is growing demand for food around the world, including some parts of the developing world. Hundreds of millions of poor people in China and India have escaped poverty in recent years—an accomplishment to be celebrated.

But it comes with a new challenge. With higher incomes, people are, for the first time, enjoying more diverse diets. In addition to higher demand for food staples, there is rising demand for meat, which in turn increases the demand for grain to feed livestock. And supply hasn't caught up to demand yet. Helping to boost the productivity of farmers in developing countries would go a long way to increasing the food supply.

National Public Radio’s recent series about soaring world food prices featured an excellent piece about this situation in China. Read or listen online.

Ingredients for Hope:

Our Recipe for Hope has two components—something you can do; and something you can say to our nation’s leaders.
  1. took the Solidarity ChallengeTake the Five-Day Solidarity Challenge: For five days, eat as half the world’s population does, with meals of oatmeal, rice, beans and vegetables. Set aside the money you would have spent on additional groceries to redirect those dollars to help alleviate hunger by making a donation to Bread for the World or your denominational hunger program.

    See how one church did an excellent job of educating its congregation and rallying support for the Five-Day Solidarity Challenge.

  2. Write to Congress:

    Urge your members of Congress to ensure that food aid and agricultural assistance are available immediately, rather than 2009, to address this hunger crisis.
    Send an email to Congress.

Return to the Recipe for Hope campaign headquarters. An announcement for your church bulletin is available.

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Tel. 202-639-9400 · 800-82-BREAD · Fax 202-639-9401
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