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1191
FOOD SECURITY AND COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF SITUATION
IN SERBIA AND NEIGHBOURING COUNTRIES
Božić Dragica
1
, Marija Nikolić
2
*Corresponding author E-mail: mnikolic@agrif.bg.ac.rs
A R T I C L E I N F O
Original Article
Received:
02 November 2020
Accepted:
08 December 2020
doi:10.5937/ekoPolj2004191B
UDC 664.8.036.58(497.11)
A B S T R A C T
The concept of food security has expanded significantly over
time, and due to its importance, it is on the list of priorities
of the UN Sustainable Development Goals. The aim of this
paper is to analyze the state of individual dimensions and key
indicators of food security in Serbia and selected neighboring
countries using the Global Food Security Index (GFSI). The
index was created in 2012 by the Economist Intelligence Unit
and it is calculated every year to measure the risk of food
insecurity in individual countries. The latest data indicate that
Serbia has the worst rank among the neighboring countries.
The analysis showed that two
GFSI indicators for Serbia
(gross domestic product per capita and public expenditure on
agriculture) are the worst evaluated and represent the main
limitations of improving food security in Serbia.
© 2020 EA. All rights reserved.
Keywords:
food security, global food
security index, Serbia
JEL: Q18, I31
Introduction
Food security is one of the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) and the
international community is committed to eliminate hunger and all forms of malnutrition
by 2030 (UN, 2015; FAO, 2015). The number of inhabitants in the world is continuously
increasing, and there is a tendency that an increasing share of the population lives in
urban areas. Rapid technological development is accompanied by increasingly strong
ties
between individual economies, i.e. globalization. However, the world economy
is not achieving the expected growth, especially in some countries, which, together
with the existence of conflicts and political instability, causes pronounced migrations of
population. Climate change and severe extremes are affecting agricultural productivity,
rural environment and natural resources which cause the decline in number of farmers.
All of this has led to major shifts in the way food is produced, distributed and consumed
globally, and to new food security (FAO, 2019).
1 Dragica Božić, Full Professor, University of Belgrade, Faculty of Agriculture, Nemanjina
6, 11080 Belgrade, Serbia, E-mail: bozdrag@agrif.bg.ac.rs , ORCID ID (https://orcid.
org/0000-0001-8376-5241)
,
2 Marija Nikolić,
Assistant professor, University of Belgrade,
Faculty of Agriculture,
Nemanjina 6, 11080 Belgrade, Serbia, E-mail: mnikolic@agrif.bg.ac.rs ,
ORCID ID
(https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8691-7113)