America cities, small towns, countryside, and everywhere is a boomtown. The US economy has been booming since the 1920s without relenting. Infrastructure was built many years ago, and continuous research and development keep America reinventing itself while adapting to global shocks effortlessly. Even in small towns around the Mojave desert, more desert than Turkana and Northern Kenya combined has plenty of food. Walmart and other chains are selling food in Kingman, Mohave Valley, Barstow, and all the small towns in the Mojave desert. America is the only country on earth that will NEVER run out of milk, both fresh and Mursik, Unga, collard greens, and all your favorite foods, even in the Mojave desert.
For 20 years straight, I have been buying meat, unga, milk, and collard greens (Sukuma wiki) weekly, and I have never seen them run out of the shelves, even in the middle of the pandemic. The factories/supply chain and the economy are steel because people have money.
I have since figured out that hunger in Kenya and many parts of the world is because people don't have money, not famine, drought, or lack of water. If people had money to buy food, other people in the private sector far away would be willing to supply food by setting up food factories everywhere. If Turkanas and people in hunger areas had cash in their pockets, Naivas, Uchumis, and other chains would be setting up shops everywhere. The Middle East is a desert, but people have plenty of food because the economy{dispensing cash to folk} is thriving; hence companies are selling food everywhere. If the money disappears, as in an economic collapse, no one will be willing to take risks and supply food/essential commodities, especially corporations. Kenya's economy has been anemic since the 1960s, which is why Kenyatta, Moi, Kibaki, and Uhuru, were flagging foods to millions of people! I hope Ruto will be the last President to do this. Creating an economy that dispenses cash to citizens in all wards will rectify food and security problems for good. The people who will require food are the usual homeless, sick, and disabled people, which are in every country, rich or poor. They constitute less that 1% of the population.