Honduras - IFAD
The Context
Honduras is a middle-income country in Central America that battles persistent poverty, food insecurity and socio-economic inequality. It is one of the poorest countries in the region, with nearly six in ten people living in poverty.
Two in five people live in rural areas and one in four people are employed in agriculture. About 32 per cent of the country is agricultural land, primarily growing low-value crops like bananas, plantain, rice, maize and beans.
Honduras faces various converging challenges, including social unrest, gang violence, economic problems, environmental degradation, mass migration, hurricanes and rising prices. It has one of the lowest levels of human development and the highest prevalence of undernourishment in the continent.
The Strategy
IFAD improves income-generating opportunities for poor rural people, especially women.
Key activities include:
improving access to technologies and investments;
integrating small-scale producers into value chains;
strengthening the organizational capacities and bargaining power of grass-roots organizations;
establishing linkages with the private sector;
supporting Indigenous Peoples’ organizations as they voice the particular needs and concerns of their communities; and
increasing the capacity of local governments to facilitate land registration and improve the efficiency and coverage of rural savings and loans associations.
Results-based country strategic opportunities programme (COSOP):
Arabic | English | French | Spanish
Country Facts
In 2020, the convergence of the pandemic with Hurricanes Eta and Iota led to a significant spike in poverty, affecting 57 per cent of the population.
Two in five people live in rural areas.
Over 18 per cent of people face hunger.
Experts
Programme Officer
[email protected]