Pakistan's Food System Fails to Nourish, UN Warns of Health Crisis

A United Nations assessment reveals that while Pakistan produces sufficient calories, its food system fails to provide balanced nutrition due to deep distortions in what is grown and consumed. The national diet is skewed towards an overabundance of cereals, sugars, and oils, while crucial foods like fruits, vegetables, and pulses remain in short supply. This imbalance is accelerating the spread of non-communicable diseases like diabetes and heart conditions, which now account for over half of nationwide deaths. Experts urge policy shifts, including revised subsidies and taxes on unhealthy products, to make nutritious foods more accessible and affordable.

Key Points: UN Report: Pakistan's Food System Has Major Nutritional Gaps

  • Calorie supply adequate but diet quality poor
  • Fruits, vegetables, and pulses in short supply
  • Overabundance of cereals, sugars, and oils
  • Rising consumption of ultra-processed foods
  • Imbalance accelerating non-communicable diseases
2 min read

UN report highlights nutritional gaps in Pakistan's food system

A UN assessment reveals Pakistan's food system provides calories but lacks fruits, vegetables, and pulses, fueling malnutrition and chronic disease.

"Pakistan may be producing enough food to fill stomachs, yet it is failing to nourish its people. - UN Assessment"

Islamabad, February 11

Pakistan may be producing enough food to fill stomachs, yet it is failing to nourish its people, according to a United Nations assessment.

The findings expose deep distortions in what is grown, supplied, and ultimately eaten, raising alarms for public health planners, as reported by Dawn.

According to Dawn, the review was spearheaded by UN agencies under the leadership of the FAO and presented at a national workshop on transforming food systems.

Researchers concluded that while overall calorie availability is adequate, the basket of foods reaching households does not meet the standards required for balanced and healthy diets.

The report stresses that crucial categories such as fruits, vegetables, pulses, and legumes remain in short supply.

This inadequacy directly hampers attempts to reduce malnutrition, micronutrient shortages, and illnesses linked to poor diets.

Conversely, there is an overwhelming abundance of cereals, sugars, and edible oils.

Such dominance keeps consumption patterns heavily skewed toward starch-rich meals, leaving limited room for dietary diversity.

Analysts warn that this imbalance is accelerating the spread of non-communicable diseases.

According to the figures, grains form the core of meals in both rural and urban Pakistan, with dairy products following behind.

Vegetable intake is moderate, but fruit consumption is worryingly low, particularly in villages.

Meat, poultry, and eggs remain beyond the regular reach of many families, and pulses are not compensating for the lack of animal protein.

The study also flags rising reliance on sweets, snacks, and ultra-processed items.

Market data indicate that packaged food sales have surged dramatically in recent years, signalling a rapid nutrition transition with long-term consequences, as highlighted by Dawn.

Health statistics paint a grim backdrop: millions live with diabetes, and more than half of nationwide deaths are now attributed to chronic diseases, including heart conditions.

Experts argue that unless policies shift toward making nutritious foods cheaper and more accessible, the burden on hospitals and the economy will intensify.

Recommendations include revisiting subsidies, encouraging the production of healthier crops, and considering stronger taxation on sugar-laden products, with revenues redirected into national nutrition efforts, as reported by Dawn.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
The surge in packaged food is alarming. Same thing is happening here. Kids are eating more chips and biscuits than fruits. We need stronger awareness campaigns in schools about healthy eating. 🍎
A
Aman W
It's all about economics. When a packet of chips is cheaper than an apple, what do you expect people to buy? Subsidies need to be redirected towards nutritious food, not just wheat and rice. The tax on sugary drinks is a good start, should be implemented more widely.
S
Sarah B
While the report is about Pakistan, we should look at our own backyard. India's National Family Health Survey shows similar issues with micronutrient deficiencies, especially among women and children. Public health is a universal challenge.
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Vikram M
The part about pulses not compensating for lack of animal protein is key. As a vegetarian-majority country, India relies heavily on dal. We need to ensure quality protein reaches everyone, especially growing children. Our mid-day meal schemes must be nutrition-focused, not just calorie-focused.
K
Karthik V
I respectfully disagree with the notion that policy shift is the only solution. A lot of this is also about changing mindsets and food habits at home. My grandmother's generation ate far more diversely with local, seasonal produce. We need to revive that knowledge.
N
Nisha Z

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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