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Haiti: Food Assistance Fact Sheet - August 7, 2017

Countries
Haiti
Sources
USAID
Publication date

SITUATION

  • Haiti remains the only low-income country in the Americas. Three quarters of the population lives on less than $2 per day, making Haiti extremely vulnerable to price spikes in the global food market.

  • In addition to experiencing its third consecutive year of drought, Haiti was hit by Hurricane Matthew—the strongest registered hurricane in a decade—in October 2016. More than six months later, the storm’s impact continues to drive elevated levels of food insecurity in the worst-affected communities.

  • In localized areas of the Sud, Nippes, Nord, and Nord-Est departments, sudden environmental shocks—including flooding and dry spells—have delayed or destroyed maize and bean crops.

  • According to the Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET), spring harvests have lowered staple food prices and increased the availability of work, resulting in improved food security levels across the country. Most populations in Haiti are expected to experience Minimal (IPC 1) levels of food insecurity through January 2018.* Some populations still recovering from prior shocks—notably Hurricane Matthew—are expected to experience Stressed (IPC 2) levels of food insecurity during this period, according to FEWS NET

RESPONSE

  • In response to Hurricane Matthew, the Office of Food for Peace (FFP) partnered with non-governmental organizations and the UN World Food Program (WFP) to provide life-saving emergency food assistance to hurricane-affected communities across the country. This assistance—including U.S. in-kind food aid, locally procured food aid, cash transfers for food, cash-for-work activities, and agricultural inputs—has reached more than one million people in Haiti.

  • FFP partners with CARE and the Government of Haiti to support the establishment of a social safety net program that improves vulnerable household access to locally produced, nutritious foods. Aimed at both boosting food security and reducing malnutrition, this multi-year development program provides 18,150 households with monthly food vouchers and 205,000 households with maternal and child health and nutrition services.