Hunger in the United Kingdom

Chronic hunger has affected a sizable proportion of the UK's population throughout its history. Following improved economic conditions that followed World War II, hunger became a less pressing issue. Yet since the lasting global inflation in the price of food that began in late 2006 and especially since the financial crisis of 2009, long term hunger began to return as a prominent social problem. Albeit only affecting a small minority of the UK's population, by December 2013, according to a group of doctors and academics writing in the British Medical Journal, hunger in the UK had reached the level of a "public health emergency".[1]

In the run-up to the 2015 general election, the issue of hunger in the UK became somewhat politicised, with right wing commentators expressing scepticism about figures presented by church groups and left-leaning activists. An All-Party MP group focusing on hunger in the UK has called for activists to be cautious in how they discuss the problem of domestic hunger, as exaggerated claims and political point scoring risk reducing public support for tackling the issue. In a 2016 report, the All-Party group stated it is not possible to accurately quantify the number of people suffering from hunger in the UK, and called for better collection of data. The UK government began the official measurement of food insecurity in 2019, The first report was published on 16 December 2021.[2]

Hunger in the UK was worsened by the COVID-19 pandemic with some food banks reporting that demand had more than doubled. August 2020 saw the United Nations agency UNICEF begin funding charities helping to feed hungry UK children for the first time in its history.[3]

  1. ^ Taylor-Robinson, D.; Rougeaux, E.; Harrison, D.; Whitehead, M.; Barr, B.; Pearce, A. (3 December 2013). "The rise of food poverty in the UK". BMJ. 347 (dec03 2): f7157. doi:10.1136/bmj.f7157. PMID 24301384. S2CID 111218.
  2. ^ "United Kingdom Food Security Report 2021". GOV.UK. 22 December 2021. Retrieved 25 December 2022.
  3. ^ Andersson, Jasmine (16 December 2020). "Unicef to help feed children in the UK for the first time". inews.co.uk. Retrieved 5 April 2023.

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