Quantifying food insecurity in Ethiopia: Prevalence, drivers, and policy implications
AbstractFood insecurity remains persistent challenges in Ethiopia. This study analyzed secondary data to examine the prevalence and drivers of these issues. Food insecurity was assessed using 2014-2019 Gallup World Poll data and the Food Insecurity Experience Scale methodology. Logistic regression i...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
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Taylor & Francis Group
2024-12-01
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Series: | Cogent Social Sciences |
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Online Access: | https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/23311886.2024.2318862 |
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author | Henok Fasil Telila Elsa Abebe Sima |
author_facet | Henok Fasil Telila Elsa Abebe Sima |
author_sort | Henok Fasil Telila |
collection | DOAJ |
description | AbstractFood insecurity remains persistent challenges in Ethiopia. This study analyzed secondary data to examine the prevalence and drivers of these issues. Food insecurity was assessed using 2014-2019 Gallup World Poll data and the Food Insecurity Experience Scale methodology. Logistic regression identified vulnerable subgroups. Qualitative interviews offered context on structural drivers. Analysis found 52.1% of Ethiopians experienced moderate or severe food insecurity in 2019, up from 47.7% in 2014. Severe food insecurity rose from 12.0% to 15.8%. Individuals aged 35-44 years and in the second lowest income quintile had higher likelihood of food insecurity. In 2019, 37% of children under 5 were stunted, indicating chronic malnutrition. Stunting was more prevalent in rural areas (40% vs 26% urban) and varied by region from 48.4% in Tigray to 15% in Addis Ababa. Stunting declined with mother’s education and household wealth. Wasting affected 7% of children. Interviews pointed to interconnected factors including poverty, agricultural underinvestment, gender inequality, climate vulnerability, and policy limitations driving food insecurity. Overall, the analysis demonstrates persistently high and worsening food insecurity despite economic growth, indicating the need for multi-sectoral strategies to strengthen rural agricultural livelihoods, social protection, women’s empowerment, and child nutrition. These findings can inform policy aimed at meeting SDG 2 in Ethiopia. |
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institution | Directory Open Access Journal |
issn | 2331-1886 |
language | English |
last_indexed | 2024-03-07T22:09:30Z |
publishDate | 2024-12-01 |
publisher | Taylor & Francis Group |
record_format | Article |
series | Cogent Social Sciences |
spelling | doaj.art-bf424ccf807e426e81a532a4151c16702024-02-23T16:34:26ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Social Sciences2331-18862024-12-0110110.1080/23311886.2024.2318862Quantifying food insecurity in Ethiopia: Prevalence, drivers, and policy implicationsHenok Fasil Telila0Elsa Abebe Sima1The World Bank, Addis Ababa, EthiopiaUNIFAD, Rome, ItalyAbstractFood insecurity remains persistent challenges in Ethiopia. This study analyzed secondary data to examine the prevalence and drivers of these issues. Food insecurity was assessed using 2014-2019 Gallup World Poll data and the Food Insecurity Experience Scale methodology. Logistic regression identified vulnerable subgroups. Qualitative interviews offered context on structural drivers. Analysis found 52.1% of Ethiopians experienced moderate or severe food insecurity in 2019, up from 47.7% in 2014. Severe food insecurity rose from 12.0% to 15.8%. Individuals aged 35-44 years and in the second lowest income quintile had higher likelihood of food insecurity. In 2019, 37% of children under 5 were stunted, indicating chronic malnutrition. Stunting was more prevalent in rural areas (40% vs 26% urban) and varied by region from 48.4% in Tigray to 15% in Addis Ababa. Stunting declined with mother’s education and household wealth. Wasting affected 7% of children. Interviews pointed to interconnected factors including poverty, agricultural underinvestment, gender inequality, climate vulnerability, and policy limitations driving food insecurity. Overall, the analysis demonstrates persistently high and worsening food insecurity despite economic growth, indicating the need for multi-sectoral strategies to strengthen rural agricultural livelihoods, social protection, women’s empowerment, and child nutrition. These findings can inform policy aimed at meeting SDG 2 in Ethiopia.https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/23311886.2024.2318862Food insecuritymalnutritionstuntingEthiopiaprevalenceRobert Read, Economics, University of Lancaster, Lancaster, UK |
spellingShingle | Henok Fasil Telila Elsa Abebe Sima Quantifying food insecurity in Ethiopia: Prevalence, drivers, and policy implications Cogent Social Sciences Food insecurity malnutrition stunting Ethiopia prevalence Robert Read, Economics, University of Lancaster, Lancaster, UK |
title | Quantifying food insecurity in Ethiopia: Prevalence, drivers, and policy implications |
title_full | Quantifying food insecurity in Ethiopia: Prevalence, drivers, and policy implications |
title_fullStr | Quantifying food insecurity in Ethiopia: Prevalence, drivers, and policy implications |
title_full_unstemmed | Quantifying food insecurity in Ethiopia: Prevalence, drivers, and policy implications |
title_short | Quantifying food insecurity in Ethiopia: Prevalence, drivers, and policy implications |
title_sort | quantifying food insecurity in ethiopia prevalence drivers and policy implications |
topic | Food insecurity malnutrition stunting Ethiopia prevalence Robert Read, Economics, University of Lancaster, Lancaster, UK |
url | https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/23311886.2024.2318862 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT henokfasiltelila quantifyingfoodinsecurityinethiopiaprevalencedriversandpolicyimplications AT elsaabebesima quantifyingfoodinsecurityinethiopiaprevalencedriversandpolicyimplications |