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Healthy public food procurement and service policies

report reveals the heavy global burden of hunger and malnutrition in all its forms. The lingering effects of the COVID-19 pandemic — along with disruption
to the food supply caused by intensified conflict and extreme climate events — continue to impede progress towards achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) targets. Globally, more than 3 billion people cannot afford a healthy
diet. Unhealthy diets cause millions of deaths per year through, for example, inadequate consumption of whole grains, legumes, vegetables and fruit, and high consumption of sodium/salt, sugars and harmful fats1.

A key message of the report is that current government support to the food and agricultural sectors is often not aligned with the promotion of . This report shows how re-aligning food and agriculture policies can increase access to nutritious foods and make food systems more healthy, equitable and sustainable. Existing public budgets need to
be allocated in different ways, to stimulate production of more nutritious foods, increase their availability and reduce their costs so that healthy diets can be affordable. At the same time, other food system policies need to complement these efforts
to increase their impact by creating incentives and supportive environments for healthy diets.

WHO supports countries’ efforts to improve food systems with a including taxing unhealthy foods and subsidising healthy options, protecting children from harmful marketing, ensuring clear nutrition labels, reducing the salt, sugars and harmful fats in processed foods, fortifying staple foods, improving meals
in schools and hospitals, and strengthening national food control systems.

Healthy public food procurement and service policies, for example, have untapped potential. Healthy public food procurement and service policies involve governments setting criteria for food served or sold in public settings or food purchased with government
funds. Public settings, such as government offices, schools, childcare facilities, nursing homes, hospitals and all other canteens of public institutions, can play a key role in ensuring people are provided with nutritious, safe and healthy food.
Often, meals and snacks in these settings do not align with .

The full potential of healthy public food procurement and service policies is not yet being realized — although 93 countries are implementing food procurement policies in schools, there is little action in other settings2. To support
countries in these efforts, WHO provides guidance in the .

There are three main ways in which healthy public food procurement and service policies can complement the repurposing agenda:

  • Stimulating the supply of nutritious food by creating large-scale predictable demand and making production more economically viable

    The scale of institutional buying and the structured nature of public sector purchasing
    processes, can create large-scale, predictable demand for nutritious foods, especially perishable foods. Millions of meals and snacks are served or sold in public settings every day, and public procurement is big business. A significant proportion
    of funds used for government buying — between 12 and 20% of countries’ GDP3 — are spent on food and could be redirected towards delivery of healthy diets. This can in turn increase the economic viability of producing
    such foods, reducing the risk for smallholder farmers and creating an accessible, guaranteed market. Implemented broadly, healthy public procurement policies have the potential to stimulate the production of fruits, vegetables and other nutritious
    foods. Public food procurement policies can also encourage a shift towards more sustainable food production methods.

    In Brazil, the requires, among other components, 30% of the budget to be used to purchase food from family farms. The predictable and guaranteed market created by the programme has prompted many farmers to shift from producing single crop — such as corn or soy — to more diverse production, including growing more fruits and vegetables4, and the availability of fruits and vegetables in school meals has increased5.

    In the cities Copenhagen and Vienna, implementation, over the last 20 years, of procurement policies requiring a given percentage of food to be organic has stimulated increased supply of organic fruits, vegetables and other nutritious foods6,7. Moreover, by specifying sustainability criteria the Municipality of Copenhagen has reduced several negative environmental impacts.

  • Shaping eating habits and shifting demand and consumption patterns towards healthier food

    Through their wide reach, healthy food procurement and service policies have enormous potential to shape eating habits
    and shift demand towards healthier diets.This in turn can stimulate increased production of nutritious foods at lower costs. The policies can be implemented at national, regional or municipal level depending on the division of responsibilities
    for public procurement.

    In the Philippines, in 2021, the “” introduced mandatory nutrition standards for all food and food supplies in city-run hospitals, offices, departments, and institutions. The policy also supports urban agriculture and locaIl sourcing of healthy food and ingredients. By ensuring that healthy meals and snacks are served in the places where people work, live or receive care, the policy can potentially shape eating habits in this city of 2.7 million people.

    In 2017 the
    government of Singapore introduced a “” policy which requires all Government Procuring Entities to provide employees and members of the public with healthy food and drink choices at government-organised functions and events where catered food is provided. Hospitals are encouraged to join. By requiring, for example, water to be offered as the default beverage use of whole grains, lower-sodium ingredients and healthier oils, the policy can help foster healthy dietary preferences.

  • Improving the access of at-risk groups to healthy diets and supporting vulnerable food system actors

    The changes as a result of repurposing of food and agricultural support policies can have unintended consequences.
    For example, they can lead to short-term livelihood insecurity and loss of income during the transition. Healthy public procurement policies can help mitigate these effects. This can be done by improving the access of at-risk groups to healthy
    diets, protecting vulnerable food system actors, supporting businesses that meet decent employment criteria and contributing to equity. An expansion of social protection programmes that involve public food procurement — such as school feeding
    programmes or food assistance — may be needed to protect vulnerable groups during the transition phase. It is important that the foods provided through these forms of social protection contribute to healthy diets.

    In Kenya, for example, repurposing is supported by a policy requiring 30% of public food procurement contracts to be reserved for women-led farms. In Ghana it is required for caterers with government contracts to use at least one-third of the budget to purchase food from smallholders8.

    In India, for example, 118 million schoolchildren are covered by a government scheme providing a daily hot cooked meal in schools9. In Lebanon, during 2021 one in three people needed assistance to put food on the table in a time of severe economic crisis, and over 300,000 of the most vulnerable received in-kind food assistance10.

Healthy public food procurement and service policies are part of the WHO promoted package of game changing . These actions focus on improving the nutritional quality of food along the food supply chain and creating healthier food environments.


1 GBD 2019 Risk Factors Collaborators.. Lancet, 2020. 396: 1223-49.

2 WHO. .
2022.

3 Washington DC: International Bank for Reconstruction and Development/World Bank; 2015.

4 Valencia V, Wittman H, Blesh J. . Agronomy for Sustainable Development. 2019;39(25):
1–14.

5 Sidaner E, Balaban D, Burlandy L. .
Public Health Nutr. 2013;16:989–94.

6 Mikkelsen BE, Madsen BB. Sustainable and healthy sourcing of food for the public plate: Lessons learned in Denmark. In: Volume 2. Rome: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations/Alliance of Biodiversity International/CIAT/Editora da UFRGS; 2021.

7 ,
Issue No 99. Brussels: European Commission; 2020.

8 Hintz J, d’Addario F, Defranceschi P. EI/One
Planet Network; 2021.

9 New Delhi: Ministry of Education, Government of India

10 : Highlights. Rome: World
Food Programme; 2022.

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