Venezuela has become an asymmetric country, with great inequalities and family food insecurity is perhaps the most important nutritional problem. In 1996, the “Venezuela Agenda” began to be implemented, which has a social protection component, which includes 14 programs, to compensate the most disadvantaged population groups for economic measures. Objective. Describe and analyze the strengths and weaknesses of the Agenda programs, more linked to the nutritional situation. Materials and methods. It was based on the analysis of reports submitted by the executing agencies, an opinion poll conducted in Caracas, as well as interviews with program coordinators. The programs were examined: strategic food, family subsidy, school feeding, snack and school canteens, daily care homes and multi-homes. Results. The most common weaknesses are poor evaluation and educational support, poor coverage, overlapping beneficiaries, logistical and budgetary problems. Despite the strong investment of resources, the nutritional deficit in children under six years of age shows an upward trend, which reiterates that nutritional problems have multiple causes and require integrated social policies, stable over time and focused on the most vulnerable groups. Conclusions. This situation forces us to reconsider the programs based on their relevance, feasibility, cost-efficiency and impact and has reiterated the need for a decentralization process to grant more responsibility and decision-making power to state and municipal governments and to the organized community and achieve a greater impact on the target population and its context.