Key Points

The Asian Development Bank has approved a $400 million loan to tackle food insecurity in the Philippines. The funds will expand the government's Zero Hunger Food Stamp Program through electronic vouchers for 750,000 households. ADB officials emphasized the urgency as nearly half the population struggles to afford nutritious meals. This follows another ADB loan signed earlier for Bangladesh's vocational training sector.

Key Points: ADB Approves $400M Loan to Boost Philippines Food Security

  • ADB funds Philippines' Zero Hunger Food Stamp Program
  • Supports 750,000 households with e-vouchers
  • Aims to counter rising climate risks
  • Part of broader ADB regional aid efforts
2 min read

ADB approves $400 million loan to boost Philippines' food security

ADB allocates $400M to fight hunger in the Philippines via electronic food vouchers for 750,000 vulnerable households.

"Food vouchers are essential to help poor households meet nutritional needs – Pavit Ramachandran, ADB"

Manila, Aug 13

The Asian Development Bank (ADB) on Wednesday said it has approved a loan of 400 million US dollar to help the Philippines reduce hunger, food insecurity, and poor nutrition amid escalating climate and disaster risks.

The Reducing Food Insecurity and Undernutrition with Electronic Vouchers Project will support the government in expanding its new flagship social assistance initiative, the Zero Hunger Food Stamp Program, the ADB said in its press release, Xinhua News Agency reported.

The project will help finance the delivery of monthly electronic food vouchers to 750,000 food-insecure households nationwide, the bank said.

"With nearly half the Philippine population unable to afford a healthy and nutritious diet, food vouchers are essential to help poor and vulnerable households meet their nutritional needs," said ADB Deputy Director General for Southeast Asia and concurrent Country Director for the Philippines, Pavit Ramachandran.

Earlier, on August 3, the ADB and the Bangladeshi government signed a 150 million US dollar loan agreement to improve technical and vocational education and training (TVET), aiming to enhance access to decent employment and boost the country's global market competitiveness.

Md Shahriar Kader Siddiky, secretary of Bangladesh's Economic Relations Division, and Hoe Yun Jeong, country director of ADB in Bangladesh, signed the loan agreement.

"Aligned with the country's economic diversification priorities, the program targets five key technology clusters: mechanical, electronics and electrical, information and communication technology, civil, and food and agriculture," said Jeong.

According to the ADB, the results-based assistance for the TVET Teachers for the Future Program will expand access to modern teacher training, especially in underserved regions outside Dhaka; improve the pedagogical and technical skills of educators in emerging technologies; and strengthen systems for teacher development, management, and reporting.

It said that at least 10,000 new and existing TVET teachers will enhance their capacities, positively impacting over 250,000 students.

The program will also establish a nationwide system for continuous professional development to ensure the sustained quality and relevance of TVET in Bangladesh, it added.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
While the intention is good, I wonder how they'll prevent corruption in voucher distribution. In India we've seen how such schemes sometimes don't reach the intended beneficiaries. Proper monitoring is key!
A
Arjun K
Interesting to see ADB focusing on both food security and vocational training. The Bangladesh project for TVET teachers is equally important - skill development is the need of the hour for all developing economies.
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Sarah B
As someone who's worked in development sector, I appreciate how this combines immediate relief (food vouchers) with long-term solutions (vocational training). Hope they include climate-smart agriculture training too!
V
Vikram M
The electronic voucher system sounds promising. India's PDS could learn from this model - maybe Aadhaar-linked digital solutions can make our food distribution more efficient? What do others think?
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Kavya N
While applauding ADB's efforts, I wish they would focus more on women beneficiaries. In India, we've seen that when women control food budgets, nutrition outcomes improve dramatically for entire families.

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