The COVID-19 pandemic reveals an unprecedented rise in hunger: The South African Government was ill-prepared to meet the challenge

Recent research has shown increasing household food and nutrition insecurity in South Africa, indicating weaknesses in the national food system due to historical and current socioeconomic inequalities. The lack of inclusive governance and collaboration among actors and institutions to develop long-t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tim GB Hart, Yul Derek Davids, Stephen Rule, Precious Tirivanhu, Samela Mtyingizane
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2022-07-01
Series:Scientific African
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2468227622000771
_version_ 1811195055893905408
author Tim GB Hart
Yul Derek Davids
Stephen Rule
Precious Tirivanhu
Samela Mtyingizane
author_facet Tim GB Hart
Yul Derek Davids
Stephen Rule
Precious Tirivanhu
Samela Mtyingizane
author_sort Tim GB Hart
collection DOAJ
description Recent research has shown increasing household food and nutrition insecurity in South Africa, indicating weaknesses in the national food system due to historical and current socioeconomic inequalities. The lack of inclusive governance and collaboration among actors and institutions to develop long-term strategies increase the problem. Such weaknesses intensify the government's ill-preparedness to provide food relief during disasters. We drew upon two rounds of the longitudinal University of Johannesburg and the Human Sciences Research Council's COVID-19 Democracy Survey to illustrate how ill-preparedness has resulted in increased hunger. The rollout of food relief was slow because the state ignored established non-governmental food relief structures. Delayed tender processes and corruption have worsened local distribution and access to food relief, increasing households' hunger. Individuals reported higher experiences of hunger above pre-COVID-19 figures of 11% attaining highs of 42% in 2020. We argue that COVID-19 has emphasised the South African food system's inequalities, particularly the state's inability to ensure integration, inclusiveness and rapidly provide emergency food relief. We focused on individual and households’ experiences of hunger and economic circumstances. Challenges were evident where access to food was provided in-kind or through financial aid. The pandemic food relief interventions and the lack of food price controls were serious challenges. The state and stakeholders must prevent high transitory food insecurity levels from resulting in chronic food insecurity. The state's practices and challenges during lockdown must be examined to ensure this situation does not reoccur. Some essential foods require subsidisation and price regulation to ensure long-term access for the poor. To ensure zero hunger and increased food security, these elements of the NDP must be re-examined. Research is required on vulnerabilities in the system, ways to overcome these and the understanding of factors contributing to system-wide resilience, including at individual and household levels.
first_indexed 2024-04-12T00:37:22Z
format Article
id doaj.art-5c646f7b344d4c59a75372afe6becece
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2468-2276
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-12T00:37:22Z
publishDate 2022-07-01
publisher Elsevier
record_format Article
series Scientific African
spelling doaj.art-5c646f7b344d4c59a75372afe6becece2022-12-22T03:55:07ZengElsevierScientific African2468-22762022-07-0116e01169The COVID-19 pandemic reveals an unprecedented rise in hunger: The South African Government was ill-prepared to meet the challengeTim GB Hart0Yul Derek Davids1Stephen Rule2Precious Tirivanhu3Samela Mtyingizane4Developmental, Capable and Ethical State, Human Sciences Research Council, 134 Pretorius Street, Pretoria 2001, South Africa; Department of Sociology and Social Anthropology, Stellenbosch University, Private Bag X1, Matieland 7602, South Africa; Corresponding author at: Developmental, Capable and Ethical State, Human Sciences Research Council, 134 Pretorius Street, Pretoria 2001, South Africa.Developmental, Capable and Ethical State, Human Sciences Research Council, 116-118 Buitengracht Street, Cape Town 8001, South AfricaDepartment of Geography and Environmental Studies, Stellenbosch University, Private Bag X1, Matieland 7602, South AfricaDevelopmental, Capable and Ethical State, Human Sciences Research Council, 134 Pretorius Street, Pretoria 2001, South AfricaDevelopmental, Capable and Ethical State, Human Sciences Research Council, 430 Peter Mokaba Ridge, Durban 4001, South AfricaRecent research has shown increasing household food and nutrition insecurity in South Africa, indicating weaknesses in the national food system due to historical and current socioeconomic inequalities. The lack of inclusive governance and collaboration among actors and institutions to develop long-term strategies increase the problem. Such weaknesses intensify the government's ill-preparedness to provide food relief during disasters. We drew upon two rounds of the longitudinal University of Johannesburg and the Human Sciences Research Council's COVID-19 Democracy Survey to illustrate how ill-preparedness has resulted in increased hunger. The rollout of food relief was slow because the state ignored established non-governmental food relief structures. Delayed tender processes and corruption have worsened local distribution and access to food relief, increasing households' hunger. Individuals reported higher experiences of hunger above pre-COVID-19 figures of 11% attaining highs of 42% in 2020. We argue that COVID-19 has emphasised the South African food system's inequalities, particularly the state's inability to ensure integration, inclusiveness and rapidly provide emergency food relief. We focused on individual and households’ experiences of hunger and economic circumstances. Challenges were evident where access to food was provided in-kind or through financial aid. The pandemic food relief interventions and the lack of food price controls were serious challenges. The state and stakeholders must prevent high transitory food insecurity levels from resulting in chronic food insecurity. The state's practices and challenges during lockdown must be examined to ensure this situation does not reoccur. Some essential foods require subsidisation and price regulation to ensure long-term access for the poor. To ensure zero hunger and increased food security, these elements of the NDP must be re-examined. Research is required on vulnerabilities in the system, ways to overcome these and the understanding of factors contributing to system-wide resilience, including at individual and household levels.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2468227622000771
spellingShingle Tim GB Hart
Yul Derek Davids
Stephen Rule
Precious Tirivanhu
Samela Mtyingizane
The COVID-19 pandemic reveals an unprecedented rise in hunger: The South African Government was ill-prepared to meet the challenge
Scientific African
title The COVID-19 pandemic reveals an unprecedented rise in hunger: The South African Government was ill-prepared to meet the challenge
title_full The COVID-19 pandemic reveals an unprecedented rise in hunger: The South African Government was ill-prepared to meet the challenge
title_fullStr The COVID-19 pandemic reveals an unprecedented rise in hunger: The South African Government was ill-prepared to meet the challenge
title_full_unstemmed The COVID-19 pandemic reveals an unprecedented rise in hunger: The South African Government was ill-prepared to meet the challenge
title_short The COVID-19 pandemic reveals an unprecedented rise in hunger: The South African Government was ill-prepared to meet the challenge
title_sort covid 19 pandemic reveals an unprecedented rise in hunger the south african government was ill prepared to meet the challenge
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2468227622000771
work_keys_str_mv AT timgbhart thecovid19pandemicrevealsanunprecedentedriseinhungerthesouthafricangovernmentwasillpreparedtomeetthechallenge
AT yulderekdavids thecovid19pandemicrevealsanunprecedentedriseinhungerthesouthafricangovernmentwasillpreparedtomeetthechallenge
AT stephenrule thecovid19pandemicrevealsanunprecedentedriseinhungerthesouthafricangovernmentwasillpreparedtomeetthechallenge
AT precioustirivanhu thecovid19pandemicrevealsanunprecedentedriseinhungerthesouthafricangovernmentwasillpreparedtomeetthechallenge
AT samelamtyingizane thecovid19pandemicrevealsanunprecedentedriseinhungerthesouthafricangovernmentwasillpreparedtomeetthechallenge
AT timgbhart covid19pandemicrevealsanunprecedentedriseinhungerthesouthafricangovernmentwasillpreparedtomeetthechallenge
AT yulderekdavids covid19pandemicrevealsanunprecedentedriseinhungerthesouthafricangovernmentwasillpreparedtomeetthechallenge
AT stephenrule covid19pandemicrevealsanunprecedentedriseinhungerthesouthafricangovernmentwasillpreparedtomeetthechallenge
AT precioustirivanhu covid19pandemicrevealsanunprecedentedriseinhungerthesouthafricangovernmentwasillpreparedtomeetthechallenge
AT samelamtyingizane covid19pandemicrevealsanunprecedentedriseinhungerthesouthafricangovernmentwasillpreparedtomeetthechallenge