Commitment

Avail food and nutrition security information for policy, programming and targets tracking by 2025

Government / Zimbabwe

January 2020 — December 2025

Description

Periodic data collection activities accompanied by dissemination

Develop systems for integrated indicator tracking

Overarching commitment (for commitments submitted pre-2025)

Title

national development strategy

Description

The Government of Zimbabwe has made significant strides in addressing malnutrition and improving agriculture and food systems. In 2014, Zimbabwe made Nutrition for Growth commitments that were based on finance, policy and programmes. Reflecting on the previous commitments and guided by existing national strategic direction, the Government of Zimbabwe commit to the following:

1. Reduce the prevalence of stunting in children under-five years from 23.5% to 17% by 2025.

2. Increase Public Health Expenditure Per Capita from USD$30.29 in 2020 to USD$86 by 2025.

3. Advocate for investment allocations for social services to be nutrition sensitive.

4. Reduce the prevalence of iron deficiency anaemia among women of childbearing age (15-49 years) from 27% to 13% by 2025.

5. Ensure multi-sectoral and multi-stakeholder policy implementation structures remain active and are accountable for implementation, monitoring and evaluation of nutrition response.

6. Avail food and nutrition security information and surveillance to inform policy, programming and Monitoring and Evaluation.

7. Review and enforce existing food and nutrition related legal instruments and establish new ones where required.

8. Operationalise a costed Multisectoral FNS Strategy with accompanying M and E framework

9. Implement the governmentÂ’s commitments in the Food Systems Transformation pathways framework

10. Support community demand-generation and social accountability on prevailing livelihoods, food and nutrition security. This will increase the community involvement in being part of the problem solving matrix which can help in resilience and sustainability issues.

GNR assessment

Verification status
Verified
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SMARTness index

Details

Target population characteristic
  • Ability
  • Age or life course stage/status
  • Chronic illness
  • Community geography
  • Economic status of country
  • Gender identity
  • Indigenous status
  • Religion
  • Socioeconomic status
Global nutrition target(s)
Anaemia
Low birth weight
Exclusive breastfeeding
Childhood stunting
Childhood wasting
Childhood overweight
Adult obesity
Nutrition Action Classification(s)
Enabling > Research, monitoring and data
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Linked event(s)
  • 2021 Tokyo N4G Summit
  • 2021 UN Food Systems Summit
N4G Summit theme(s)
  • Food
  • Health
  • Resilience
  • Data
  • Financing

Measurement

Key indicator Number of assessments undertaken annually
Value Measurement date
Baseline 2 assessments 2020
Target 2 assessments December 2025

Progress

Status:
On Course
Why this status?
The data for one year (or an average of years) suggests that the target could be met by its end date.
Value Measurement date
Progress report 2 assessments June 2024

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