10.2.2. Food Security
10.2.2.1. Context of Food Security
Present and future prospects for food security are significant determinants
of the impacts of climate change. International agricultural systems and socioeconomic
conditions at the household level are major elements of vulnerability. The consequences
of present vulnerability for hunger and nutrition are marked. Regional indicators
related to food security are shown in Table 10-2.
Table 10-2: Indicators of regional vulnerability
in Africa (WRI, 1996). |
|
(a) Vulnerability Indicators |
|
|
Expenditure
on Food
(% of consumption) |
Food Aid
(Cereals)
kg per capita
|
Refugees
|
Adult
Female Literacy
(%)
|
Infant
Mortality
(per 1000)
|
|
African Regiona |
|
|
-Northern
|
42
|
18
|
221,450
|
45
|
59
|
|
-Sudano-Sahelian
|
42
|
13
|
974,800
|
17
|
119
|
|
-Gulf of Guinea
|
39
|
6
|
819,750
|
28
|
109
|
|
-Central
|
39
|
3
|
480,500
|
41
|
91
|
|
-Eastern
|
37
|
4
|
1,408,150
|
43
|
102
|
|
-Indian Ocean
|
57
|
12
|
0
|
73
|
66
|
|
-Southern
|
57
|
15
|
1,793,800
|
53
|
85
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total |
57
|
10
|
5,698,450
|
35
|
97
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Comparison Country |
|
|
-Bangladesh
|
59
|
12
|
245,300
|
22
|
108
|
|
-Thailand
|
30
|
2
|
255,000
|
90
|
26
|
|
-Mexico
|
35
|
3
|
47,300
|
85
|
35
|
|
-Greece
|
30
|
-1
|
1,900
|
89
|
8
|
|
-United Kingdom
|
12
|
-3
|
24,600
|
|
7
|
|
(b) Regional Agriculture in Africa |
|
Pop
Density
(pop.
km-2)
|
Pop
Growth
(%)
|
Crop
Land
(% of
total)
|
Irrigated
Land
(% of
total)
|
Avg
Yield of
Cereals
(kg
ha-1)
|
Ferti
lizer
Use
(kg
yr-1)
|
Food
Prod
Index
(1970=
100)
|
GNP
per
Capita
(US$)
|
GNP
in Agri
culture
(%)
|
GNP
Growth
Rate
(% yr-1)
|
Public Agri-
cultural
Invest
ment
(US$)
|
Regiona
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
-Northern
|
226
|
2.25
|
5
|
27
|
1,973
|
94
|
115
|
1,285
|
17
|
3.60
|
25
|
-Sudano- Sahelian
|
106
|
2.72
|
4
|
7
|
727
|
5
|
90
|
860
|
34
|
2.36
|
7
|
-Gulf of Guinea
|
891
|
2.83
|
21
|
2
|
892
|
6
|
100
|
760
|
39
|
1.87
|
15
|
-Central
|
145
|
2.70
|
4
|
1
|
923
|
2
|
87
|
760
|
22
|
2.15
|
5
|
-Eastern
|
451
|
2.88
|
10
|
2
|
1,363
|
12
|
92
|
593
|
47
|
3.05
|
13
|
-Indian Ocean
|
262
|
1.96
|
5
|
23
|
1,988
|
140
|
98
|
280
|
22
|
3.85
|
6
|
-Southern
|
208
|
2.56
|
6
|
7
|
929
|
27
|
76
|
333
|
21
|
3.38
|
7
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total |
253
|
2.65
|
6
|
8
|
1,098
|
25
|
92
|
355
|
30
|
2.75
|
11
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Comparison Country |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
-Bangladesh
|
9,853
|
2.18
|
72
|
31
|
2,572
|
101
|
96
|
205
|
37
|
4.20
|
68
|
-Thailand
|
1141
|
0.92
|
45
|
19
|
2,052
|
39
|
109
|
1,697
|
13
|
7.80
|
78
|
-Mexico
|
491
|
1.55
|
13
|
21
|
2,430
|
69
|
100
|
2,971
|
8
|
1.50
|
129
|
-Greece
|
795
|
0.07
|
30
|
31
|
3,700
|
172
|
101
|
6,530
|
17
|
1.60
|
25
|
-UK
|
2,404
|
0.19
|
28
|
2
|
6,332
|
350
|
112
|
33,850
|
2
|
2.80
|
347
|
|
Food production in most of SSA has not kept pace with the population increase
over the past 3 decades. In Africa as a whole, food consumption exceeded domestic
production by 50% in the drought-prone mid-1980s and more than 30% in the mid-1990s
(WRI, 1998). Food aid constitutes a major proportion of net food trade in Africa,
and in many countries it constitutes more than half of net imports. In Kenya
and Tanzania, for instance, food aid constituted two-thirds of food imports
during the 1990s. Despite food imports, per capita dietary energy supply (DES)
remains relatively low (Hulme, 1996); about one-third of the countries in Africa
had per capita DES of less than 2,000 kcal day-1 in the 1990slower than
the minimum recommended intake (data from WRI, 1998).
Agricultural and economic growth must riseperhaps by 4% yr-1to
realize basic development goals. Today, only a few countries achieve this rate
of growth. One consequence of agricultural growth could be a doubling by the
year 2050 of cultivated land areaat great cost to the natural environmentunless
there is greater investment in agricultural management and technology on existing
cropland (Anon, 1999). The scale of food imports fosters dependence on food
production in the rest of the world. Africa faces the risk that supplies will
fluctuate drastically with the rise and fall of grain reserves and prices on
international markets. A major challenge facing Africa is to increase agricultural
production and achieve sustainable economic growth; both are essential to improving
food security.
Agriculture is not only a vital source of food in Africa; it also is the prevailing
way of life. An average of 70% of the population lives by farming, and 40% of
all exports are earned from agricultural products (WRI, 1996). One-third of
the national income in Africa is generated by agriculture. Crop production and
livestock husbandry account for about half of household income. The poorest
members of society are those who are most dependent on agriculture for jobs
and income. On average, the poor from developing countries of SSA spend 60-80%
of their total income on food (see Odingo, 1990; WRI, 1998; FAO, 1999b). Although
industry is significant in a few patches, it still is in its infancy. In many
countries, the level of mechanizationincluding irrigation, processing,
and storage facilitiesis particularly low.
High-quality land resources per household have shrunk in Africa over the past
2 decades, often dramatically. Traditional, social, and legal status in the
sub-Saharan region is responsible for unequal access to land. This, in turn,
increases the risk of resource degradation. Lack of land tenure security reduces
the motivation to invest in conservation of resources.
Agriculture and household incomes are characterized by large interannual and
seasonal variations. The annual flow of income normally rises and peaks during
the harvest season. Nonagricultural and migrant, off-farm wage incomes are substitutes
during the dry season. The period preceding the harvest is critical: Farmers
engage in unemployment-induced migration to urban centers as one of the strategies
for coping with scarcity. Fluctuations in annual food production resulting from
climate variability place a heavy reliance on food aid, at the national and
household levels.
Reduced food supplies and high prices immediately affect landless laborers
who have little or no savings. Poverty, population, and sometimes conflicts
combine to affect education in many African countries. As a result of population
pressure as well as rural and urban economic depression, population mobility
sets in. Populations move from the savanna to the forest, from plateaus to drained
valleys, from landlocked countries to coastal areas and those with infrastructures,
and from rural to urban centers within a country in search of better lands and
opportunities (Davies, 1996). Internal mobility and its consequences vary from
country to country: It is low in Ghana, Madagascar, Malawi, Burundi, and Rwanda
but high in Burkina Faso and Kenya and very high in Cote d'Ivoire. Migrations
lead to high and rising urban growth across the African region. This translates
into increasing pressure on the environment, including social amenities.
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