Discussions on development and nutrition frequently have a double focus: one that considers nutritional status as a reflection of development, and another that admits that nutrition strongly influences the level and rhythm of development. The authors view nutrition as a decisive factor for adequate social and economic development, specifying the fact that nutritional interventions might contribute to significant improvements in individual classroom performance, productivity at the workplace, and resistance to infections. The implications of malnutrition for the economy are thus evident: either by limitations in income expectations, increased costs deriving from burdens assumed by the population to protect themselves, or considerable hidden social costs--absenteeism, work accidents, and rotation of employees. Given modernization and a competitive economy, there is an unquestionable need for nutrition to head the agenda of national priorities, thus promoting human resource development and the preservation of this human capital, one of the chief goals of a socially responsible economy.
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