WFP Regional Bureau for Asia and the Pacific - 2016 SPRs RBB 2016 SPRs by country | Page 678
Standard Project Report 2016
In terms of nutrition, PNG ranks among the countries with the highest prevalence of stunting in the world, with
approximately 50 percent or more of children aged 24-59 months suffering from stunting. Predictably, the
prevalence of stunting is higher in rural areas (50 percent) than in urban centres (35 percent). Overall, 16 percent of
the population suffers from moderate or acute malnutrition, with children aged 24-59 months more likely than other
age groups to be malnourished [5].
PNG ranks very low on all indicators of social and economic development and missed the targets for all Millennium
Development Goals. According to the latest Human Development Report, PNG ranked 158 out of 188 countries and
territories in terms of Human Development Index (HDI). Gender inequality and gender-based violence remain
significant challenges—PNG ranked 140 in the Gender Inequality Index (GII) out of 155 countries and territories for
which the index has been calculated*. Despite years of rapid economic growth fueled by extractive industries,
poverty remains a major issue with 40 percent of the population living on less than USD 1.25 per day [6].
[1] World Bank. Papua New Guinea, Overview, Context. Washington,
. 25 November 2016.
D.C.
28
September
2016.
[2] Templeton and Omot 2012. 'Food security in East Timor, Papua New Guinea and Pacific island countries and
territories. Australian Government. Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research'. pp.28-39.
.
25
November 2016.
[3]
WFP.
'El
Niño
food
security
impact
in
Papua
New
Guinea'.
. 25 November 2016.
March
2016.
[4] Gurr, Geoff M. et al. 'Pests, Diseases and Crop Protection Practices in the Smallholder Sweetpotato (sic)
Production System of the Highlands of Papua New Guinea.' Ed. Giovanni Benelli. PeerJ 4 (2016): e2703. PMC.
Web. 14 Feb. 2017.
[5] Hou 2015. 'Stagnant stunting rate despite economic growth in Papua New Guinea'. World Bank, Washington,
D.C. .
[6] UNDP 2015. 'Human Development Report 2015'. Work for Human Development, New York. About Papua New
Guinea. .
*Both the HDI and GII rankings for PNG have not been updated by UNDP since 2014, and the Government and
partners are taking actions to improve these rankings.
Response of the Government and Strategic Coordination
In 2016, the Government of Papua New Guinea worked with the United Nations (UN) on developing Sustainable
Development Goal (SDG) targets including for SDG 2: End hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition,
and promote sustainable agriculture and was mainstreaming SDGs into national strategic policies and plans. The
Government developed a roadmap for SDG implementation that included strengthening the network of humanitarian
partners, improving the quality and availability of reliable statistical data, an