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Title: Outline


1
The Status of Food Security In Africa
United Nations Economic Commission for
Africa Suxth Session of the Committee on Food
Security and Sustainable Development
(CFSSD-6) Regional Implementation Meeting (RIM)
for CSD-18 Addis Ababa, Ethiopia 27-30 October2009
Hamdou Raby Wane FSSDD/UNECA
2
Structure of the Presentation
  • The Context of the Current Debate on Food
    Security in Africa
  • Food Security Issues and Challenges
  • The Global Food Price Surge and Its Impact on the
    Food Trade Balance
  • Policy Responses Macroeconomic Implications and
    Food Price Impacts
  • Recommendations on The Way Forward

3
The Context of the Current Debate on Food
Security in Africa
  • Food security (FS) not only the availability
    of food, but also the ability to purchase food.
  • TO BE FOOD SECURE to have a reliable source of
    food and sufficient resources to purchase it.
  • To Deal with FS Policy issues 1) Assess the
    state of FS, 2) identify the underlying causes
    and the proximate factors of food shortages and
    of disruptions/losses in real incomes across the
    most food needy populations.
  • Global food crisis (2007 onwards) as a Systemic
    Factor
  • THREAT - has exacerbated these causes and factors
    of food insecurity
  • OPPORTUNITY CHALLENGE to Africa for long-term
    solutions to hunger through agriculture-led
    growth.

4
  • Novelty of a Food Crisis to Africa?
  • More of the Same food shortages and hardships
  • Additional stringent strains on households
    incomes, on external positions and to national
    budgets
  • FC can complicate, if not reverse any progress,
    towards the attainment of the MDGs-related
    poverty and hunger targets.
  • On the side use of the FC as an opportunity
    for the revitalization and the development of
    African agriculture on the medium to long term.
  • Imperative build a strong consistency between
  • the crisis response i.e. the set of policy
    measures and actions deployed to mitigate its
    short term impacts, and
  • the medium to long term development policy.

5
Food Security Issues and Challenges
Over a decade (1995/97-2003-05), real progress
has been made in many countries and across the
sub-regions. However, the challenge seems
unabated in very large populations and this is
even more compounded by the setbacks that are
stemming from the recent global food crisis.
  • Undernourishment and Hunger on the Rise
  • Worldwide People chronically hungry
    (undernourished) 923 million in 2007, up by 75
    million from 2003-05 (FAO 2008 data)
  • Largest additional contingents in Asia (41
    million) and in SSA (24 million, almost 1/3 of
    the total increase)
  • Setback more accentuated in the recent period
    the progress made at the turn of the millennium
    has been completely wiped out in SSA as well as
    in Latin America and the Caribbean

6
Trends in number and proportion of undernourished
people
  • Undernourished in SSA
  • 236 million (2007) cumulated increasegt67 million
    since 199092 the base period for the World
    Food Summit (WFS) hunger reduction target
  • Annual growth rate 3 times higher between 2003-05
    and 2007 than during the preceding decade
  • 11 of the worlds total population 25 of the
    total of hungry people in 2003-05
  • Proportion in 2003-05
  • North Africa less than 5
  • SSA 30 world average 13 developing world 16
  • Proportion minus 4 percentage points from the
    34 plateau of 1990-92

7
  • High concentration of hunger (in number and in
    prevalence) in East and Central Africa
  • DRC Ethiopia 38 of the SSAs hungry people
    80 percent and 41 percent of their respective
    sub-regions. Together with Nigeria and Tanzania,
    they account for almost half of the total of the
    sub-continent.
  • Central Africa
  • Proportion incr. by 6 between 1995-97 and
    2003-05, mostly due to DRC (76 2.4 per an).
  • 8 out of every 10 additional in SSA in 2003-05
    / 1995-97
  • Large and fast reductions in countries and
    regions (Centre, South, East) with the highest
    prevalence (40-50) in the 90s

Therefore, any substantial progress in these four
countries would have an important impact on the
containment of hunger, and therefore on poverty
alleviation throughout the continent.
8
Patterns and Trends of Food Emergency
  • Hunger Hotspots (HH) critical problems of food
    insecurity (GIEWS/FAO List)
  • Exceptional shortfall in aggregate food
    production/supplies as a result of crop failure,
    natural disasters, interruption of imports,
    disruption of distribution, excessive
    post-harvest losses, or other supply bottlenecks
  • Widespread lack of access, where a majority of
    the population is considered to be unable to
    procure food from local markets, due to very low
    incomes, exceptionally high food prices, or the
    inability to circulate within the country or,
  • severe localized food insecurity due to the
    influx of refugees, a concentration of internally
    displaced persons, or areas with combinations of
    crop failure and deep poverty (FAO/GIEWS 2008).

9
  • Dec.05-April 09 16/46 countries as food secure
    i.e. they did not face any food crisis that
    required emergency assistance
  • 350 million people i.e. 40 of the continents
    population
  • Small size countries have been more successful.
    Average pop. of 6.5 million (Gabon, Rwanda,
    Botswana, Mauritius Namibia).
  • Countries facing food crises
  • 19932000 an average of 15 SSA annually
  • After 2001 up to 25
  • 2005 onward with a core set of 20 consistently
    listed and 12 others that appear occasionally,
    SSA contributed by 60 to 70 to the FAO/GIEWS
    world list.
  • East 34 of the HH. All but Rwanda
  • West 2 out of 3 countries yearly or occasionally
  • Centre and South 18 of HH each

10
Typology of food emergencies (2005-09)
  • Overall
  • Severe localized food insecurity 57
  • Widespread lack of access 23
  • Exceptional shortfall in aggregate
    production/supply 20
  • By sub-region
  • Severe localized food insecurity 70 in Central
    Eastern Africa less than ½ of the cases in
    West Africa
  • Widespread lack of access 53 in West Africa
    where it is more than twice SSAs average and
    more than 5 times the level of East Africa (10
    percent) negligible in Southern and Central
    Africa
  • Exceptional shortfall in food production/supply
    80 of the cases in Southern Africa East 20

11
Main Causes of food emergencies (2005-09)
  • War and conflicts and the related social unrest
    in SSA (2/3 of the cases) main causes of famine
    through destruction of assets, displacement of
    populations albeit the absolute number of such
    crises has been decreasing over the period.
  • More than ½ of the socio-economic and 1/3 of the
    weather-related food emergencies are associated
    with the conflict factor. Increasing proportion
    of natural disasters in SSA, especially floods
    a feature that SSA shares with the rest of the
    world.
  • In 2002, about 6.3 million people (refugees,
    IDPs, returnees) were in need of assistance owing
    to conflicts and natural disasters in the Horn of
    Africa. Three quarter of them were in the IGAD
    member-countries
  • HIV/AIDS scourge from 2006 onwards, identified,
    by GIEWS, as the main cause of the highly severe
    localized food insecurity that prevailed in many
    parts of Southern Africa, e.g. Malawi, Lesotho
    and Swaziland, and in some Eastern Africa
    countries.

12
Supply of major Foods groups, Energy supply and
the Diet diversity
  • Average Daily Supply in 2003-05
  • Cereals almost stagnated over a decade in all
    sub-regions except in Central Africa where it
    increased (at the expense of starchy roots) by
    6.7 percent yearly since early 1990s albeit its
    share remained the lowest of the sub-regions.
  • Starchy roots decreased in Eastern Africa by
    1/2 percent yearly. Dramatically increased In the
    3 other sub-regions almost doubled every 2 years
    in North Africa.
  • Animal products namely milk and eggs (an
    important source of protein and of
    micronutrients) increased very substantially in
    all the sub-regions but Southern Africa and, to a
    lesser extent, in West Africa. In 2003-05, it
    regained in the other three sub-regions, the
    losses incurred between 1990-92 and 1995-97.

13
The dietary energy supply increased only in North
Africa and in few SSA countries. Overall, if not
reversed, its increases were not sufficient to
meet daily energy requirements. The higher the
per capita income levels, the larger the supply
of dietary energy from animal foods (rich in
high-quality proteins and micronutrients, such as
iron, zinc and vitamin A) and the bigger the
intake of fruits and vegetables (which contain
vitamin A precursor) as substitutes to starchy
foods. These foods are usually the most
expensive. The recent global prices hike has
mostly impacted these food commodities and the
cereals. This is one of the main factors of
increased undernourishment and, therefore, of
deepened poverty in sub-Saharan African and of
likely reversals in the North
14
Economic and agricultural growth performance
  • Evidence collected by the FAO shows a positive
    correlation between growth in African
    agricultural and level of performances on the
    MDG-1 target
  • A steady and relatively rapid growth -
    characterized by gains in agricultural value
    added, food production, cereal production and
    cereal yields, in the 14 African countries on
    track on MDG-1 target and, inversely
  • A sharp fall of food production and lower levels
    of agricultural value added (by ¼ of the rate of
    the former group) in the 14 African countries
    that either have failed to reduce the prevalence
    of undernourishment or have seen it increase
    since 199092.
  • Countries that have scored stark successes
    include several that emerged from decades of
    civil war and conflict, offering striking
    evidence of the importance of peace and political
    stability for hunger reduction (FAO 2008).

15
  • Growth in agriculture output has been accompanied
    with a strong growth in overall productivity
    levels in the sector.
  • The best performers in overall agricultural
    productivity also recorded very substantive
    results in reducing the depth of hunger a
    measurement of the intensity of food deprivation.
    The higher the annual growth in Total Factor
    Productivity (TFP), the more retrenched is hunger
    and the higher is the collective food security as
    measured by the share of food aid in the total
    consumption.
  • Most of the growth is explained by efficiency
    gains rather than technological change. Increased
    efficiency and accelerated output growth in SSA
    resulted from differential growth between
    sub-sectors.
  • Maizes annual growth rates 3.5 in 1984-1993 to
    0.9 in the 1990s ?
  • share in total output in 2003 1984 levels.
  • Contributes to the stagnation of supply of
    cereals in all regions but Central Africa
  • increased supply of proteins from animal foods to
    compensate for the maize related losses of
    proteins and lipids.

16
Top contributors (_at_ 70) to total output growth
of
  • Most dynamic sub-sectors
  • Oil crops - in Ethiopia, Sudan, and Ghana
  • Roots and tubers - Nigeria, Ghana, Malawi, and
    Mozambique
  • Other cereals - Ethiopia and Nigeria
  • Milk - the highlands of East Africa and Sudan
  • Vegetables Nigeria and Cameroon.
  • On the Downside
  • Tropical fruits - Nigeria, Ghana, and Kenya
  • Beef - Highlands of East Africa and Sudan
  • Rice production - Mali, Côte dIvoire, Guinea,
    and Nigeria.
  • Sheep and goat meat - Nigeria and Sudan.

17
Main Characteristics of the Best-performers
Similar growth in TFP and increased labor and
land productivity owing to an increased use of
fertilizer per hectare and worker
  • Countries that are more likely to have improved
    rural living standards through increased labor
    income in agriculture.
  • However, acceleration of yields increase is
    needed to compensate the growth in rural
    population, improve rural income and sustain land
    management

The main challenge is now to sustain, accelerate
and broaden this in the medium to longer term in
the current context of global food and fuel
prices hike. This is imperative if Africa is to
achieve the desired changes in poverty and
malnutrition levels within the timeframe defined
under the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
18
The Rising Urban Poverty A Threat to Food
Security
  • In absolute terms, rural poverty remains higher
    than urban poverty, but urban poverty is growing
    at a faster rate.
  • Rising urban poverty is a threat to food
    security
  • it derives from much higher levels of inequality
    within the urban population than in the rural
    one, therefore compromising the food security of
    increasing segments of urban dwellers.
  • High income inequality in urban areas is the
    reason that more than 1/2 of the urban population
    is below the poverty line in SSA countries such
    as Angola, Chad, Madagascar, Malawi, Mozambique,
    Niger, Sierra Leone, and Zambia
  • Unlike in rural areas, food-insecurity problems
    in urban areas are not related to a lack of
    available food. Instead, they are related to
    inadequate purchasing power.
  • This reduces the size of the internal agro-food
    markets, therefore, negatively impacting income
    earnings of farmers.

19
  • In Africa, urban populations can use up to 60
    percent (close to 100 percent for the poorest) of
    their income on food and, thus, creating, a
    growing market.
  • But, as a result of a changing urban diet of the
    wealthiest and of relatively lower cost of
    imports of staple foods derived from rice and
    wheat, the urban food demand is largely
    disconnected from the traditional food supply
    chain i.e. most of local agriculture.
  • Breakdown in positive inter-sectoral linkages
    between agriculture and the rest of the economy.
    This is the main underlying factor to the high
    level of food import dependence, a major feature
    of the vulnerability of the LDCs.

20
The food import-dependency
  • Since the early 90s, African LDCs have been
    exposed to increased import surges - in terms of
    numbers and of frequency. Between 40 and 60
    percent of the total import surges occurred
    during 1990-2003 for any of the commodities
    considered.
  • In 20002003, African countries changed to being
    net food importers from their high surpluses of
    the 1980s. Continents share of global food
    exports stable _at_ 3, while the imports went up
    at 4-5 percent.
  • Therefore, these import surges affected the
    domestic production of processed such as
    poultry meat and unprocessed agricultural goods
    such as rice and tomato paste since the
    concerned imported goods are produced locally or
    are substitutes.

21
  • Yearly, on the average in 2000-2005, the total
    food trade bill was of US 17,340 billion of
    exports and of 24 billion of imports, leading to
    an average deficit of 6,600 billion.
  • Food import bill US 20 billion in 2001 and gt33
    billion i.e. 2/3 of the food market in 2006,
    year in which the deficit was close to 9,600
    billion up by 45 percent on the year before.

22
  • Cereals and preparations accounted for 37 percent
    of the total of the food groups.
  • Share of cereals in North Africa - 43-47 SSA
    9.5-11.5.
  • The global share of cereal imports by Africa
    22 percent, while its share in exports is
    roughly 3
  • Import growths were above average (2.1 percent
    annually) for cereals, oilseeds, meat, beverages
    and miscellaneous food products.
  • 33 countries in deficit and 18 net food
    exporters. However, converting traded food
    commodities into calories tells a different story
    of food trade.

23
  • Over the period 2003-2005, total food
    consumption benefited quite substantially from
    the imports in only 2 food net exporters (Côte
    dIvoire and Malawi) and 2 food net importers
    (Mauritius and Swaziland). This is owing to more
    inward-oriented diets and to a more favorable
    caloric balance of internationally traded
    foodstuff.
  • All the other (48) countries were in deficit
    i.e. the calorie-content of their food imports
    outpaced the equivalent in food exports. The net
    trade caloric balance of food was
  • neutral or significantly in deficit (up to 25
    percent) in either net food exporters (13) or net
    food importers (12).
  • as high as 50 percent at least in 13 others
    including 2 net food exporters (Mauritania and
    Morocco and almost all but three L-MICs).
  • comprised between 1/4 and 1/2 of the total food
    consumption in the remaining 7 countries.

24
  • Concentration of the most dependent along the
    Northern, the North-Western and South-Western
    coasts. Disconnected from the hinterland of the
    continent, they are as food dependent as more
    industrialized and wealthier countries like
    Mexico, Chile and Venezuela in Latin America or
    the big oil exporters in the Middle East or in
    the Arabian Gulf.

Net Trade in Food, 2003-05
25
The Vulnerability of the Households to Food
Insecurity
  • Main factors of vulnerability stem from
  • its status vis-à-vis the food market, primarily
    as net food seller/consumer. According to FAO
    data from nine developing countries, about 3/4 of
    rural households and 97 of urban households are
    net food buyers.
  • importance of the relative share of food
    consumption expenditure in its total consumption
    expenditures
  • More at risks are the vast majority of the poor
    urban and rural households (especially landless
    and female-headed households) depending on
  • their dietary patterns,
  • expenditure shares of internationally traded food
    staples (such as wheat, rice, maize),
  • substitution options towards less-expensive
    foods,
  • access to assets usable to produce and sell food
    staples competitively and to earn incomes.

26
THE GLOBAL FOOD PRICE SURGE AND ITS IMPACT ON
AFRICA
  • The FAO Food Price Index in June 2008, a record
    214 points, or a 85 increase up from last term
    of 2006. Then it decreased to reach an average
    152 points in May 2009.
  • Highest price rises on oils and fats along with
    cereals - a reflection of the increased
    integration of agriculture and energy markets
    through the development of corn and vegetable
    oils-based biofuels as of the feeding needs of a
    booming meat-producing business in the emerging
    markets of Asia.
  • January 05 June/July 08
  • Maize prices almost tripled, rice and wheat
    prices increased 170 and 127. More than doubled
    from end of 2007 well into 2008.
  • palm oil prices up by 200, soybean oil by192
    and other vegetable oil prices by similar
    amounts. In comparison, other food prices i.e.
    of sugar and meat - increased by 30 to 50
  • January-May 09 / same period of 2008, global
    prices of cereals decreased..

27
  • Significant fall in international prices in the
    second half of 2008 by 31 percent and only by
    -0.1 percent for rice. rice prices are still well
    the above their 2007 international prices
  • But, The pass-through between international
    commodity markets and consumer prices was high in
    the phase of increasing prices. The reverse was
    not evident during the subsequent period of
    falling prices.
  • Purchasing food on the international market place
    has been a heavier burden to SSA than to any
    other region. In 2008, the increase was far less
    for developed countries and the expected drop in
    their 2009 bills is disproportionately higher.

All forecasts expect food prices to remain high
in the long run, mainly as a result of
continuously rising biofuel demand and structural
factors related to population and income growth
(OECD-FAO, 2009, USDA, 2009). These are worrisome
prospects for food security in African countries
that are facing losses of shares on the
international markets and depreciating value of
exports.
28
The effect on the food-trade balance
Changes (in ) in export and import of selected
countries, 2006-2008
  • UN Comtrade Data - Sample of 25 African countries
    on 2006-2008. Includes 8 of the top-10 exporters
    and 6 of the top-10 importers over the period
    2000-2005.
  • Total food trade of 43,270 billion, of which
    23,137 billion of imports i.e. 66 percent of
    the estimated imports of the region - it shows a
    deficit of 3 billion.
  • However, the balance deficit is in diminution by
    2,723 billion i.e. -48 on a year ago, when it
    increased by its highest figure i.e. 3,878
    billion between 2006 and 2007.
  • Among the Net Food Exporters
  • 6 substantially improved their surplus,
  • 3 registered a decreasing surplus by as high
    as1/2 (Malawi), 60 (Zambia) or 85 (Seychelles).
  • 6 others became net food importing. Exp.
  • Mauritius 90 million surplus in 2006 and a
    deficit of 190 million in 2008
  • Ethiopia deficit of 40 million in 2008 from
    surpluses of 215 million and 339 million the
    preceding years.

In 2008, the top-8 exporters 60 of the food
trade, an increase in exports faster (39) than
the average of the sample (22). Contraction of
food imports (-10.5)gt av. of the 25 countries
(-4).
29
THE POLICY RESPONSES
  • The Country Level
  • Use of a mix of market-based and command and
    control short-term measures aiming at reducing
    consumer prices, providing safety nets to the
    most food insecure, and guaranteeing an adequate
    food supply and, performances permit, to export
    surplus.
  • Set of measures have included
  • releasing food stock to market, and
    waiving/easing import taxes and/or imposing
    export restrictions to maintain domestic food
    availability
  • applying price controls, subsidies and cash and
    food transfers to keep food affordable to
    different segments of the society
  • iii) drawing down on stocks to stabilize supplies
    and prices and,
  • providing support measures to increase local
    production on the medium to the long-term
  • At least initially, very few governments have
    tried to foster an agricultural supply response.
    But now, almost all of them have taken action to
    provide farmers with the support needed to boost
    agricultural production.

30
  • In 24 countries in 2007 and early 2008, 7/10
    reduced cereal import taxes and roughly the same
    proportion applied export restrictions, and price
    controls or consumer subsidies in an attempt to
    keep domestic food prices below world prices.
    Almost 40 percent of the governments took action
    to increase supply, drawing down on food grain
    stock.
  • Due to shortage of foreign exchange, many poor
    food-deficit countries have been importing much
    less and have been resorting to food aid or
    external assistance to bridge the gap

31
  • Unexpected consequences of export restrictions or
    bans exp. of a cross-examination on both sides
    of the chains in the Sahel and West Africa around
    Nigeria and between the coast and the Sahelian
    hinterland (Staatz 2008). Given their production
    potential or market size both internally and at
    sub-regional levels, non-coordinated measures of
    the kind can jeopardize efforts towards regional
    markets integration, are short of
  • taking advantage of agro-ecological
    complementarities,
  • tend to hurt producers and trade partners, and
  • may actually increase prices of local staple
    produces, taking them out of reach of the common
    diet.

32
  • The biggest challenges faced by the existing
    social policies revolve around the following
    issues
  • efficient targeting to ensure that benefits reach
    the neediest
  • level and sustainability of funding in the
    context of scarcity of donors support and,
  • resources mobilization and allocation i.e.
    alignment with agricultural policies. This is
    particularly relevant as the other main axis of
    action aims at fostering commercial agriculture
    and at promoting smallholder agriculture for
    poverty reduction.

33
  • The Regional level
  • AU/NEPAD Initiative to assist countries to
    address the food price crisis through
    acceleration of CAADP country roundtable process.
    It involves all key AU institutional partners.
  • Overall objective to develop a Government/UN
    Country Action Plan that will include a call for
    assistance. Draft country action plans and
    roadmaps for short, medium and long term have
    been designed.
  • Interagency assessment missions conducted.
    Components 1) Humanitarian assistance social
    safety nets 2) Agricultural production (short
    term leading to longer term solutions) 3)
    Policies to respond to high food prices 4)
    Budget adjustment to assist countries.
  • Completed Action plans for Burkina Faso,
    Mauritania, Sierra Leone, Madagascar, Somalia and
    The Gambia.

34
  • International Action and Commitments
  • UNSG established, on 29 April 2008, a High Level
    Task Force on the Global Food Crisis (HLTF) with
    the aim of drawing a prioritized plan of action
    and coordinate its implementation.
  • Comprehensive Framework for Action (CFA) Joint
    position of HLTF members reiterated by the High
    Level Conference on World Food Security attended
    by Heads of States, Gov. and Rep. of 108
    countries, 3-5 June 2008, FAO, Rome. Common
    Declaration recommending 1) to meet immediate
    needs of vulnerable populations and, 2) to build
    longer term resilience and contribute to global
    food and nutrition security
  • UN System (FAO, WFP, IFAD Funds) and Others The
    World Banks New Deal for Global Food Policy IMF
    Action Plan
  • More recently, LAquila Joint Statement on
    Global Food Security, 10 July 2009

35
Impact on Current Account Balance and on Balance
of Payments
  • Simulations by IMF (2008a 2008b) of fuel
    food prices shocks
  • Food price increase severe negative effect for 5
    LICs countries. DRC - 4 years of reserves
    Eritrea Liberia, resp. ¾ 2/3 of their initial
    position.
  • Combined price hikes would take a heavy toll from
    24 countries. Morocco and South Africa and,
    marginally, Tunisia would compensate partly the
    oil price shock by taking advantage of the food
    prices surge.
  • Severe reduction in coverage in 18 LICs. Stronger
    impact from food price increase (- 0.7 months of
    reserve coverage) than from the oil price ( 0.4
    months)

36
  • Among ten countries surveyed by the IMF in the
    CFA Franc Zone, it is in only one i.e. Senegal,
    that the predicted increase in the food import
    bill would widen the deficit of the current
    account balance as a share of their 2007 GDP, by
    1 percent point

37
The transmission pass-through of
international price changes to domestic food
markets
  • Weak urban-rural linkages buffer the rural
    communities from both urban and global economic
    downturns also limit the benefits of an economic
    upturn. Higher prices were, however, transmitted
    to consumers in most cases in spite of
    governments interventions
  • Despite the decline of prices on the world market
    in the second half of 2008 and early 2009, prices
    of main staple foods in many countries of the
    region remain higher than a year ago.

38
  • The main factor limiting the impact of global
    food price increases on domestic food prices has
    been the existence of a diversified base for
    domestic production of several food commodities
    in combination with a partial insulation from the
    from most global food markets, and from shifts in
    international food prices . Due to poor
    infrastructure and/or trade barriers, such as the
    early export bans in Ethiopia, Mali, Tanzania.
  • In such cases, exchange rate movements also
    mitigated the impact of world market price
    increases on domestic prices. Exp in West of
    Africa (, e.g. in Ghana and Niger) and East
    Africa (e.g. in Uganda, Tanzania and Ethiopia).
  • Prices of crops that are mainly domestically
    produced, e.g. maize, other coarse grains in the
    Sahel for instance, have been more closely
    related to domestic supply conditions and
    regional markets. Should the price of these
    local staples also rise, as demand for them
    increases, rising food prices would have a much
    stronger impact

39
The Household-Level effects An encroaching
Poverty
  • Ivanic and Martin (2008) Increased poverty for a
    majority of the low-income countries covered in
    their sample, mainly due to the negative impact
    of higher wheat prices, followed by the prices of
    rice, dairy and maize.
  • Few cases where higher commodity prices lowered
    rural poverty. West and Central Africa. The
    negative impact of food prices hike for consumers
    larger than the positive impact for net sellers
    of locally produced foods (Wodon Zaman 2008).
  • An increase of 50 to Price ?
  • add 4.4 percentage points to the proportion of
    poor if only the impact on consumers is taken
    into account. In countries that are highly
    dependent on food imports such as Liberia, 8
    additional percentage points with a 50 increase
    in rice prices.
  • Factoring in potential gains for producers,
    poverty would still increase by 2.5 percentage
    points (Quentin Wodon et al 2008).

40
  • 88 of the increase in urban poverty depth - gap
    in consumption between the average poor household
    and the poverty line - is from poor households
    becoming poorer and only 12 percent from
    households falling into poverty.
  • This increase in poverty depth is roughly
    equivalent to 1 percent of GDP for a typical less
    developed country
  • Of the 60 countries with high malnutrition
    burdens, 44 countries have experienced negative
    terms-of-trade impacts of recent food price
    changes (World Bank, 2008a). This is likely to
    result from cuts on food expenditures that poor
    households are to make as coping strategies.
    These cuts ? reduced diet quality and increased
    micronutrient malnutrition

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  • Liberia Joint High Food Price Assessment
    (May-June 08) at 1) households spend more on
    transport and basic food commodities and less on
    higher quality food commodities, health,
    education and housing
  • 2) the proportion of households with poor or
    borderline consumption has increased
  • 3) households consume slightly more staple
    commodities but less protein sources, fruits,
    vegetables and oil
  • 4) restricted sources of income, indebtedness,
    weak asset such as land - ownership are driving
    reduced food consumption fewer meals a day and
    more no-meal days, food on credit ( WFP 2008).

Even though high food prices may be a temporary
shock, they are here to stay at a high level and,
more importantly, they may have long lasting
effects on physical and mental growth if proper
actions are not taken targeting the most
vulnerable groups, and women and children among
them.
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Recommendations on The Way Forward
  • Making the best of the food crisis by mitigating
    its negative effects and seizing the moment to
    think and act strategically return to Long term
    perspective and to Planning in a coordinated
    way at the national, sub-regional and regional
    levels.
  • Identify the main structural factors that hamper
    the supply-response to the FC. Supply response
    should be perceived in a regional as well as
    national contexts. This require open trade in
    staples and reduced transaction costs between
    neighboring countries, and strengthening the
    capacity of the private sector to respond in
    medium and long term
  • Design and pilot-test on 2-3 countries per
    sub-region a Conceptual Framework for the ME of
    the sub-regional and regional impact of the
    national response-policies. Possible expected
    results improved coherence, better understanding
    of impacts strengthening of the governance of
    regional and sub-regional commitments

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  • Achieving a balance between investments in export
    oriented agriculture and locally oriented
    agriculture in order to generate revenues, and
    to guarantee production not just of grains, but
    of a diversity of foods for local consumption.
    Improving the productivity of small farmers has a
    ripple effect that spreads benefits throughout
    poor rural communities, and stimulates urban
    economic activity as well market for
    labour-intensive goods and services from the
    rural non-farm sector,
  • Strengthening The Links Between Nutrition and
    Agricultural development. Indeed, remaining
    malnourished for more than two years increases
    risks of stunting in children. On top of physical
    growth, stunting impairs mental potential and
    becomes an inherited genetic marker. So, should
    they remain unabated for the next few years, high
    food prices would become a huge toll on Africas
    future. Bringing down the global food crisis is a
    moral and a survival imperative. To start
    tackling this challenge, the solution resides
    less on the demand side but more on the supply
    sides i.e. ultimately on the demand side
    through income multiplier.

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  • Establishing food and nutrition surveillance
    systems that can inform decision making at all
    levels, not just by central policy makers. Such
    information can provide the elements of
    predictability and accountability that are
    required in a human rights based approach to
    developing national government responses to the
    food price crisis.
  • Establishing a Market Information System,
    including an Early Warning component on prices
    and cross-border flows of Grains vegetables, and
    oil-fats to inform the ME tool.

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  • THANK YOU
  • FOR YOUR KIND ATTENTION
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