Briefing Papers Number 19, July 2012

Number 19,  July 2012 briefing paper Scaling Up Global Nutrition: Bolstering U.S. Government Capacity Bread for the World Institute provides policy analysis on hunger and strategies to end it. The Institute educates its network, opinion leaders, policy makers and the public about hunger in the United States and abroad. www.bread.org White House, Office of the Press Secretary Abstract Key Points • U.S. leadership has helped build a global movement to scale up nutrition, and U.S. health and food security investments have increased nutrition programming. • Now is a good time for the U.S. government to assess its resources and capacity to support country-led efforts to scale up nutrition and to adopt systems to sustain momentum and progress on nutrition. • A well-articulated “whole of government” approach to nutrition—with a supporting strategy and budget, implementation plan, and harmonized technical and operational guidance—would help systematize and strengthen U.S. nutrition investments. • Strengthened leadership and capacity—a high-level nutrition focal point at USAID, supported by additional nutrition-related technical, operational, and managerial staff in relevant agencies, bureaus, offices, and field—will ensure coordination and accountability for results. • An interagency monitoring, evaluation, and reporting system for nutrition will help track investments across multiple agencies, bureaus, and offices— contributing to results-based programming. The United States, recognizing malnutrition’s devastating impacts, especially on children between pregnancy and age 2, is a global leader in scaling up nutrition. Reducing maternal/child undernutrition is a priority for Feed the Future (FTF) and the Global Health Initiative (GHI). Additional resources are creating opportunities to build nutrition programs and technical capacity. The growing Scaling Up Nutrition (SUN) movement1 includes 27 developing countries. FTF and GHI support many SUN national nutrition strategies. Now is the time to strengthen U.S. leadership by systematizing nutrition within development assistance. The existing operational structure is fragmented and complex, while funding to scale up nutrition remains inadequate. Action on five fronts is needed: an overarching nutrition strategy with a transparent budget; a high-level nutrition focal point; increased capacity in Washington and the field; harmonized nutrition guidance; and strengthened monitoring.