HOW IS FOOD SECURITY DEFINED? HOW IS IT MEASURED?
HOW IS FOOD SECURITY DEFINED? HOW IS IT MEASURED?
When we talk about food security, we must first understand what it truly means: “all people, at all times, have physical, social, and economic access to sufficient, safe, and nutritious food that meets their dietary needs and food preferences for an active and healthy life.” That is not my paraphrase, but the definition adopted by the 1996 World Food Summit — and it remains the gold standard today.
Food security is not a simple concept. It rests on four pillars:
Availability: Is there enough food produced or imported?
Access: Can people afford and physically reach that food?
Utilization: Can they absorb its nutrients — which depends on health, sanitation, and food quality?
Stability: Are the first three dimensions reliable over time, or do shocks — like natural disasters or price spikes — disrupt them?
Measuring Food Security: A Scientific Approach
Globally, organizations use a battery of indicators to monitor food security:
The Global Food Security Index (GFSI) ranks countries on affordability, availability, quality and safety, and resilience.
The Food Insecurity Experience Scale (FIES), developed by the FAO, captures individuals’ lived experiences — whether they’ve worried about food, skipped meals, or gone without preferred foods.
Nutrition is measured through anthropometric indicators like stunting, wasting, underweight in children, and micronutrient deficiencies.
At the household level, tools like the Household Food Insecurity Access Scale (HFIAS), Dietary Diversity Scores (DDS), and Coping Strategies Index (CSI) help analyze how families respond when food is scarce.
The Philippine Reality: Is It Enough to Count Rice?
In the Philippines, the picture is more complicated — and somewhat troubling. While the official definition of food security emphasizes nutrition, the national conversation often reduces security to how much rice we stockpile. Why is it that “months of rice inventory” frequently dominates headlines?
To me, that seems like a very narrow measurement for something as complex and human as food security.
In reality, the Philippines does measure more than rice stockpiles:
The Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) uses food security indicators that include availability, access, and utilization.
The Food Insecurity Experience Scale (FIES) is implemented locally to gauge how many Filipinos face moderate or severe food insecurity.
The World Food Programme (WFP) runs mobile Vulnerability Analysis and Mapping (mVAM) via phone surveys across the country. Their October 2022 report found that about 1 in 10 households were food insecure.
For dietary quality, the Dietary Diversity Score and child malnutrition rates (stunting, wasting) remain central to our national assessments.
Yet despite these tools, many Filipinos end up surviving on unhealthy, unbalanced diets: instant noodles loaded with sodium, plain rice sprinkled with salt, or — shockingly — even recycled food waste (“pag-pag”). These are not just calorie concerns. They are nutrition concerns.
The Big Question: Why Isn’t Nutrition Center Stage?
If our food security definition requires nutritious food, shouldn’t nutritious food be at the center of how we measure it?
I cannot help but ask: Is our national measurement aligned with this global definition — or are we simplifying food security into mere food quantity?
If we truly want to meet that global standard, perhaps we need a more scientific and holistic approach, not just counting rice.
Suggestions & Reflections
The government should prioritize dietary diversity and nutrition metrics more visibly in its food security reporting, not just rice stocks.
Local governments (LGUs) can adopt FIES, mVAM, or dietary diversity tools in barangay-level assessments.
We need public education on more nutritious food alternatives — and policies that make healthy diets affordable, especially for low-income households.
Investment in infrastructure, cold chains, and local production (vegetables, legumes, fish) must be accelerated — so people can access varied, healthy foods.
In short: food security is not just about “do we have enough food?” It is about “do we have good food, all the time, for everyone?” Until we measure it that way — not just by how much rice sits in our warehouses — we risk giving ourselves a false sense of security.
Let’s measure what matters.
RAMON IKE V. SENERES
www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/ 06-24-2026