Policymakers are increasingly seeking to use food systems to help reduce rates of chronic undernutrition and to use markets to deliver nutrient-rich foods to vulnerable populations. This article examines how this might be achieved, drawing lessons from three intervention types: ready-to-use therapeutic foods (RUTFs), mandatory fortification and voluntarily fortified products. We find that a common set of constraints tends to inhibit markets from delivering nutrition and makes it difficult to reach populations at the 'bottom of the pyramid'. Overcoming these constraints requires a shift from working at the level of individual businesses to that of market and food systems. It also suggests a need for renewed focus on the effectiveness of products in reaching key groups, on the informal markets that serve the poor and on the inherent complexity of market systems. These findings suggest that food and nutrition policies and partnerships should be based on principles of experimentation and adaptive learning.
IDS work on markets, business and nutrition 2 Context for food markets and nutrition in Tanzania 3 Methods 4 IDS research presentation 4.1 What's the problem? Why are we all here today? 4.2 Major challenges facing markets and nutrition 4.3 Lessons from real-world examples 4.4 Factors not discussed today 4.5 Key questions for market-based initiatives 5 Tanzania case studies 5.
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