Cuba
- 70-80%
- of food requirements are imported
- 31.6%
- of children aged 2 suffer from anaemia
- 11.38 million
- population
The largest island in the Caribbean, Cuba ranks 72th out of 189 countries in the 2019 Human Development Index and is one of the most successful in achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
Over the last 50 years, comprehensive social protection programmes have largely eradicated poverty and hunger. Food-based social safety nets include a monthly food basket for the entire population, school feeding programmes, and mother-and-child health care programmes. Although effective, these programmes mostly rely on food imports and strain the national budget. In 2011, in the context of efforts to make the economy more efficient, the government announced plans to make social protection more sustainable and streamlined, with an emphasis on the most vulnerable groups along “no one left behind” lines.
What the World Food Programme is doing in Cuba
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Nutrition
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WFP supports national food-related safety programmes targeted at schoolchildren, pregnant and nursing women and elderly people, including through iron supplementation, food fortification and diversification for children under 2 and pregnant or nursing women. WFP is also strengthening capacities for nutritional education and interventions, including through adequate dissemination and use of data collected via the national Food Security and Nutrition Monitoring System.
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Strengthening food value chains
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WFP works to strengthen local agricultural value chains – mostly bean production and processing – to ensure national quality food supplies for social protection programmes and reduce food imports. In target provinces, we work with all stakeholders to identify and remove the main bottlenecks in the bean value chain, and carry out training on business planning, cooperative farming, gender equality and environmentally friendly production techniques.
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Resilience and disaster risk management
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WFP is supporting the Government’s response to climate-related hazards. We contribute to the integration of food security analysis into national early-warning systems for drought and hurricanes, and help disseminate this information to national and local decision makers. Separately, an emergency contingency stock was established, enabling WFP, in case of a natural disaster, to provide assistance to nearly 275,000 people for one month.
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South-South cooperation
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WFP supports South-South Cooperation between Cuba, the Dominican Republic and Haiti, as well as Central America, in areas such as early-warning systems for disaster preparedness. We also promote exchange visits between Cuba and other Latin American countries to research food security management models and sustainable food-based safety nets.
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Find out more about the state of food security in Cuba
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P.M.A., Calle 36 No. 724 entre 7ma y 17, Playa
Cuba