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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Africa
Report shows widespread undernourishment in Africa
By Barry Mason
6 September 2004
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Economic immigrants from Africa are routinely portrayed in
the European press as scroungers as politicians compete in devising
the best methods to keep them out. The real conditions that drive
thousands of people each year to attempt to migrate out of Africa
to the West, often risking their lives and paying huge sums to
traffickers, are revealed in a recent report by the Washington-based
International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). The media
has virtually ignored the report.
About 200 million people in Africa are undernourished, according
to the report. Asia has more undernourished people in absolute
number terms, but the rate in Africa is highest. An estimated
14 percent of the worlds population is undernourished, but
in continental Africa the figure is 27.4 percent and in sub-Saharan
Africa it is around 33 percent. In 12 African countries the rate
exceeds 40 percent and in countries with conflicts or emerging
from conflict the rate exceeds 50 percent.
In Africa undernourishment has increased by 20 percent since
the early 90s and is double the rate in the late 1960s. Undernutrition
was the major factor in around 30 percent of deaths each year,
a figure of 2.9 million.
The IFPRI researches food policy in the developing world and
is financed by the World Bank, the United Nations Childrens
organisation UNICEF, the European Union, the United Nations Food
and Agricultural Organisation FAO amongst others.
Undernourishment is measured by the United Nations Food and
Agricultural Organisation (FAO), combining an estimate of total
food calories available in a country with how these calories are
distributed across the population. It measures the number of people
who are not obtaining an adequate daily energy supply of food.
The IFPRI has produced figures which show that in a third of
African countries the mean daily per capita calorific intake is
below the recommended level of 2,100. In the Democratic Republic
of Congo, Burundi, Eritrea and Somalia that average figure is
below the absolute minimum calorific intake to maintain body weight
of 1,800.
A vicious circle of malnourishment is created: A girl
born to a mother that is undernourished will be likely to be born
stunted in height and weight.... If the infant survives, her growth
will be more likely to falter.... She will be susceptible to infectious
diseases.... During her child-bearing years; she will bear low
birth-weight babies of her own. And so the cycle of intergenerational
poverty and ill-health continues.
For many Africans there is no food security, i.e., no guaranteed
access to food. Even if there is food production taking place,
there is insufficient income for urban dwellers and a lack of
resources in rural African households leaving them unable to access
sufficient food. Food security is further threatened in areas
with a single rainy season. Whilst following the harvest a family
might have sufficient food, there is often insufficient to provide
a secure supply right through to the next harvest.
The report explains how HIV/AIDS impacts on this dire situation.
Adults with HIV infection have a 10-30 percent increased energy
requirement, but their condition leaves them less able to secure
food. HIV poses a double nutritional burden: as the infection
progresses the infected individual is unable to produce or earn
income to reliably get access to the food required, whilst at
the same time his or her nutritional requirements have increased.
Africa bucked the global trend of a decline in child malnutrition
between 1980 and 2000. In Africa the decline in the rate of stunted
growth was less than four percent and, because of population growth,
the actual number of stunted (low height-for-age) children went
up by more than 12 million. The relative and absolute numbers
of underweight (low weight-for-age) children also increased. The
report states: Large populations coupled with high levels
of malnutrition mean that 19 percent of the almost 47 million
stunted preschoolers in Africa are found in Nigeria, while eight
percent are found in DR Congo.
Dependence on a limited range of staple foods leads to health
problems because of the lack of certain micronutrients in such
food. In Africa the four most deficient micronutrients are Vitamin
A, iron, zinc and iodine. The report states: Between 15,000
and 20,000 African women die each year owing to severe iron-deficiency
anaemia ... hundreds of thousands of children ... have lowered
intellectual capacity due to iodine deficiency. Vitamin A deficiencies
in children are common across the continent, reducing their ability
to resist infection and contributing to the deaths of more than
half a million African children annually.
Staples consisting of grains, roots and tubers make up about
65 percent of the food available to most Africans. These staples
are deficient in the micronutrients listed above. The report notes:
The continued reliance on staple grains, roots, and tubers
for the bulk of calories is principally an economic issue. Meat
and fish consumption for the many poor Africans is a luxury....
Unless dynamic, poverty-reducing growth is achieved in the short
term, one should expect that the shares of total calories available
across food types will remain [at the same level].
The total of 200 million undernourished people in Africa is
made up of 160 million facing chronic undernutrition, together
with food emergencies that require international intervention.
The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) estimates that in
2003, 38 million Africans were affected by emergencies. These
crises result from drought, flood and civil conflict and the resultant
refugees. Food emergencies as a result of civil conflict occurred
in Angola, DR Congo and Sierra Leone last year amongst other countries.
Eritrea and Ethiopia were affected by drought, leading to food
emergencies.
While the countries within Africa affected by such emergencies
may change there is a regular occurrence of such emergencies each
year. The danger that the chronic undernutrition can explode into
a full emergency is always present: Undernutrition in its
various forms in Africa is primarily a chronic condition. The
food crises emerge when broad negative shockswhether due
to drought, floods or other natural disasters; economic downturns;
or conflict, and often in combination or in sequenceaffect
chronically food-insecure populations. Those suffering in these
acute food insecurity incidents were food insecure or vulnerable
to begin with.... Although they may not necessarily face an acute
crisis in access to food, their access is not secure. They are
vulnerable. Indeed, if any of the 160 million were to be affected
by one of these broad shocks or a range of other more individual
shocksdeath in the household, loss of an income, and so
onmost would soon face an acute hunger crisis.
Sub-Saharan Africa child mortality rates are 170 per 1000 live
births. In some countries a decline in child mortality has now
been reversed. Malnutrition exacerbates child mortality rates
in over 50 percent of cases. The impact of HIV infection also
dramatically reduces the access to food and healthcare.
As a result of HIV infection the chances of people being born
today reaching their 55th birthday is less than 50 percent. Those
areas with the highest HIV infection have the highest drop in
life expectancy. This has a knock-on effect on nutrition.
The report states that because of HIV/AIDS, high levels
of mortality among parents of young children render these children
nutritionally insecure. In addition to the economic shock resulting
from the death of a parent and resulting impact on the access
a child has to sufficient food of adequate quality, the death
will also reduce the quality of care the child receives.... the
nutrition security of an orphaned child will be reduced due both
to an absolute reduction in the nutritional resourcesfood,
health services, and so on ... and to less effective use of the
resources that are available.
Summing up the situation the report states: a large proportion
of the population of Africa does not enjoy food security. Moreover,
many of those who have good access to sufficient food for their
calorific needs nonetheless suffer from nutrition insecurity.
Many households consume a monotonous, unvaried diet and so suffer
from micronutrient deficiencies.
The report then turns to what must be done. It says economic
growth is necessary to reduce malnutrition. Noting that two thirds
of Africans live in rural areas, it emphasises the need for farmers
to have access to better crop varieties, livestock, fertilisers
and modern techniques. Citing studies that have been carried out,
it explains, To end hunger in sub-Saharan Africa ... a regional
annual average per capita growth rate of 6.3 percent is needed
to meet a target date of 2025 and 3.5 percent if the target date
is 2050. In the past decade, however, only half a dozen countries
have had average per capita growth rates above 2.5 percent. The
challenge is immense.
The report details a disastrous situation in Africa, but the
only answer it offers is more of the same free market measures
that have produced the food shortages in the first place.
African nations and farmers, the report claims,
can be strong participants in such open markets. Consequently
they must remain fully engaged in negotiations within the World
Trade Organisation (WTO) ... African smallholders are in a disadvantageous
position relative to the large, integrated agribusinesses that
dominate global trade. Likely modifications to current forms of
agricultural production will be needed if Africa is to compete
effectively in broad global markets. Not competing, however, is
not an option.
Privatisation of utilities like water and power supplies, cuts
in health care, cuts in subsidies to poor farmers, increased fees
for health and education are all part of the package that has
been forced on the population of Africa under the terms of World
Bank and IMF structural adjustment programmes. Making Africa compete
in the global market will only mean further opening up its agriculture
to foreign companies, who will produce crops for export while
the majority of the population continue to live in near starvation
conditions.
See Also:
Anger at International AIDS
Conference over Bush administrations policies
[29 July 2004]
IMF/World Bank policies
pave way for continuing famine in Africa
[5 February 2003]
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