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This article is published in collaboration with The Conversation.
Image: REUTERS/Finbarr O'Reilly
A girl selling apples by the roadside waits for customers.
Sub-Saharan Africa has the highest level of food insecurity in the world. An estimated 220 million people
lack adequate nutrition. The nature of the problem is shifting rapidly,
with overweight status and obesity emerging as new forms of food
insecurity while malnutrition persists. But continental policy responses
do not address this changing reality.
Food insecurity is the outcome of being too poor to grow or buy
food. But it’s not just any food. According to the United Nations’ Food
and Agriculture Organisation’s definition, people need sufficient, safe, nutritious food to maintain a healthy and active life.
Current policy focuses on alleviating undernutrition through
increased production and access to food. It does not focus on the
systemic issues that inform the food choices people make. This may
result in worsening food insecurity in the region.
The thinking around food security in Africa is stuck, even though
there are calls for a more nuanced understanding of the problem. The
common thought is that the food insecure are poor, hungry people who
don’t have the means to grow or buy enough food.
The other misconception is that obese people are overweight or
unhealthy because of what they eat; that they are at fault for making
bad choices. This leads us to believe that people need nutrition
education to help them make better choices, and that they deserve a
healthy portion of blame if they make poor ones.
Both understandings are wrong. Food insecurity is driven by the economics and the geographies of the food system.
A poverty related obesity epidemic
In the region, 33% of adults are overweight and a further 11% are obese. The levels of diet-related non-communicable diseases are rising as a result of rapid urbanisation, the urbanisation of poverty and rapidly changing food systems.
Obesity affects both rich and poor people. In the developed world obesity rates
are levelling off. But they continue to climb in the developing world.
This has significant developmental outcomes. In 2010 overweight status
and obesity caused about 3.4 million deaths, 3.9% of years of life lost and 3.8% of disability-adjusted life-years – a calculation of the number of years of life lost to ill health, disability or early death.
Obesity rates
have not doubled and tripled in recent decades because people have
spontaneously and collectively started to make bad food choices.
The poor eat badly because it makes economic sense for them to do so. South Africa’s food system, for example, is one in which corporate power is concentrated. The system is dominated by “Big Food”
– large commercial entities that control the food market. The South
African experience mirrors global trends in which food markets have been
deregulated and liberalised.
For example, the liberalisation of trade has opened up imports of highly processed, cheap food, and large private companies that sell highly processed foods are able to exert pressureon national governments. This has handed power over nutrition to food processors and retailers.
Healthier alternatives like low-fat foods are generally more expensive than less healthy options because they are “value padded” with sugars and refined carbohydrates. At the same time, the price of fresh produce has increased at a faster rate than that of processed foods.
This economic logic is reinforced by marketing and advertising that
sends conflicting health messages. For example, soft drink companies or
fast-food chains associate themselves with sports events and healthy
lifestyles; and schools advocate healthy eating but also have on-site
tuckshops that sell junk food.
Poor people also have limited access to storage and refrigeration, which affects their options.
What the response should be
Blaming the poor for a logical response to a systemic problem is
not helping the situation, and nutrition education alone will not change
what people eat.
Governments must shift their attention from the individual to the
system when considering why people eat what they eat. Governments must
also consider the effects when good food policy is overridden by
economic growth imperatives that support a food system dominated by
highly processed foods.
South African Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan recently announced
that the country will implement a tax on sugar-sweetened beverages from 2017. The sugar industry argues that this will harm businesses and negatively affect the poor. It is, in part, correct.
Regulation of unhealthy foods without corresponding incentivisation
of healthier foods is regressive. Likewise, if issues like access,
storage, refrigeration and transport are not addressed, efforts to
moderate food choice through pricing will only be an additional tax on
the poor. It will not remedy food insecurity of either kind.
Food insecurity in Africa needs to be understood in the context of
the wider food system, as well as in the way that food connects to
economic and other practices. There needs to be a radical
reconfiguration of food security policy that moves away from focusing on
production and household poverty alleviation to consider the nature and
dynamics of the food system.
Failure to do so will simply accelerate the transition from one form of food insecurity to another.
With the 2015 Social Good Summit just around the corner, the list of speakers slated to take the stage is growing daily.
Image: Matt Sayles/Invision/AP
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