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The Food Systems Dashboard Is Remarkable

Phil Lempert is a television and radio news reporter, newspaper columnist, author, consumerologist, and food marketing expert. For more than 25 years, Lempert, an expert analyst on consumer behavior, marketing trends, new products, and the changing retail landscape, has identified and explained impending trends to consumers and some of the most prestigious companies worldwide. Known as The Supermarket Guru®, Lempert is a distinguished author and speaker who alerts customers and business leaders to impending corporate and consumer trends, and empowers them to make educated purchasing and marketing decisions.

 Published in Partnership with Phil Lempert Supermarket Guru

TRANSCRIPT:

Created by the Johns Hopkins’ Alliance for a Healthier World, the Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN), and the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), the Dashboard compiles food systems data from over 35 sources and it displays a complete picture of over 230 countries food systems and enables government officials, policy makers, non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and others to see what is and is not working across the supply chain.

It is exactly what we need as the frailties of the world’s food supply chain has been exposed to retailers, farmers, transporters, processors and yes, even consumers.

The Dashboard has three main objectives–describe, diagnose, and decide. It presents data to describe a country’s food system, help decision makers diagnose the problem areas in their systems, and suggest policies, programs, and interventions to address identified issues. The Dashboard’s indicators, which comprise of over 180 data points,  range from agriculture production factors to diet-related disease rates, are broken down into five broad categories: food supply chains, food environments, individual factors, consumer behavior, and outcomes.

Dr. Jessica Fanzo of Johns Hopkins University and Dr. Rebecca McLaren, global coordinator for the Dashboard, tells Food Tank “We hope that the Dashboard not only draws attention to the importance of food systems in shaping development priorities, but that it also can be used as a data-driven problem solving tool for more difficult food system challenges that countries may face.”

“The Dashboard is open to all and will foster much needed cooperation in transforming our food systems,” says FAO Director-General, QU Dongyu, “With the threats and opportunities presented by COVID-19, we need more collaboration between stakeholders who care about hunger, nutrition, livelihoods, climate, biodiversity, and sustainable natural resource use.”