Health August 17, 2024 | 10:57 am

Abinader says the country reduced malnourishment by 45%

Santo Domingo, DR – President Luis Abinader said today that the Dominican Republic has reduced malnourishment by 45% in terms of food, according to data from the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO).

The president assured that the country has managed to reduce the percentage of the undernourished population from 8.3% in the 2018-2020 period to 4.6% in the 2021-2023 period.

After highlighting other advances, Abinader pointed out that employment today registers a record number of active workers in the labor market and that unemployment has been reduced to 5% during the last three years.

The president said that the average minimum wage has grown 14% above inflation, thus improving the purchasing power of Dominican workers.

“It is no coincidence, therefore, that the Dominican Republic is today in the category of High Human Development in the United Nations index, and that in recent years we are one of the few countries in the world that have climbed positions,” he said when he was sworn in for a new presidential term.

He said that in 3, the Dominican Republic’s GDP per capita reached US$11,200, “consolidating us as a middle-income economy.”

AGRICULTURE WILL BE A PRIORITY

Regarding agriculture, the president stressed that the goal is full development and support and that strengthening the agricultural sector will continue to be a priority of the government.

He indicated that the agricultural policy he has implemented has been fundamental to guaranteeing the country’s food security and maintaining producers’ profitability.

He pointed out that according to the United States Department of Agriculture, for the first time, in the current year 2024, the country will exceed US$1,800 million in exports of agricultural goods to that country, including beef, whose market has been reopened after being closed for more than 20 years.

However, he specified: “I am aware that the impact of extreme atmospheric phenomena on our agriculture as a result of Climate Change, forces us to dedicate more and more resources to the development of infrastructures and technologies that contribute to strengthening the resilience that our agricultural sector has shown to have and increase the efficiency and productivity of the resources we dedicate to it.”

He maintained that financing has been a critical piece of agricultural policy in his administration.

He added that the credit program with rates and conditions adapted to agriculture has made it possible to position agriculture as one of the economic activities that attracts the most investment and development in the country and that this new government will continue to strengthen credit and channel the resources required to guarantee the profitability and sustainability of agriculture.

5 1 vote
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of

5 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Peter Harris
August 17, 2024 4:16 pm

if this is the situation, they why are so many people hungry and living in poverty ? Unemployment 5% ? No way. I like Pres Abinadar but I do not believe these stats. There is a huge segment of the population still without ID cards. How can they work ? I invite the reps from U.N. to visit communities and talk to the people. People cannot afford medication and do not eat good dietary foods.

Ryan
August 18, 2024 1:20 am
Reply to  Peter Harris

4.6% of the population is still over 550,000 people. The trend is positive, but yes, there is still work to do.

Platano Frito
August 17, 2024 4:51 pm

More convienant stats from the corrupt ruling class. Let me guess, you only count the people who are recognized as citizens?. Not the hundreds of thousands that can’t get a birth certificate or cedula because of law adopted in 2013 ,168/13. Applied retroactively from 1920-2010. 90 yrs and 4 generations of statelessness. no jobs no schooling no rights. imagine your entire family lineage in the only country you’ve ever known refusing to acknowledge the validity of your personal identity. This level of ignorance and arrogance is shocking

John Gracefield
August 18, 2024 8:04 am
Reply to  Platano Frito

Your info is very interesting background. The media should be talking about it. People line up at 5 in the morning in San Pedro to tackle the ID card process. Many need to get an abogado but cannot afford one. As you say, everyone in community knows who is Dominican or not – for generations. Why not give the local junta electoral more authority? Assign a local Minister, teacher, and the head of the junta electoral to verify that the applicant is Dominican and give the applicant the card so they can get a legitimate job. Amnesty International recommended similar action years ago .

Paul Tierney
August 19, 2024 10:51 am

Reduced malnourishment is questionable when people’s resources cannot keep up with rising costs of food staples. The foods the poor are able to receive are not of sufficient quantity or quality to provide healthy diets. A daily diet of rice and beans may be ok, not a complete diet. Chicken prices are awful. Too many people are hungry.

Reduced malnourishment by 45% is unrealistic.