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Starving in the city: Why SA’s richest province is hungry

  • Gauteng is South Africa’s richest province, but 35% of its people skip at least one meal a day.
  • A study of nine of the province’s municipalities found that most people with too little food lived in Johannesburg, Tshwane and Ekurhuleni. The lower someone’s education level was, the less likely they were to have enough food.
  • Government programmes that create jobs and provide financial support don’t go far enough because such plans aren’t rolled out effectively.

Food serves as one of the critical needs a person requires for daily survival. In South Africa it’s recognised as a fundamental human right under the country’s Constitution.

Approximately 11% (6.5-million) of South Africa’s population is hungry and food insecure. Conflict and insecurity, climate change, poverty, and population growth are primary drivers of hunger and food insecurity.

Food insecurity is classified into two severity levels. Low food security is when households have lower diet quality and variety from the required 10 dietary guidelines. Meagre food security describes severely food insecure households. These typically have several indications of lower food intake and altered eating patterns, such as skipping meals.

Food insecurity and hunger continue to be a challenge in South Africa. Food insecure households do not have enough money to buy food and cannot make their own. In addition, the households are either unemployed, receive low income, or have high population sizes. These factors make them particularly vulnerable to economic shocks.

In Gauteng province, the richest of South Africa’s nine provinces on economic performance, about 35% of the population is meagre food insecure. They have (at the very least) skipped a meal because there was insufficient money for food.

We conducted a study on the determinants of food insecurity from nine municipalities in the Gauteng City Region. Our analysis used data collected in 2020-2021.

Our hypothesis was that a number of factors contributed significantly to reducing food insecurity in the region. These were: gender (particularly being male), race (particularly being white), unemployment, good physical health status, availability of food support, higher levels of education, age (particularly being young), smaller household size, availability of grant support, availability of indigence rebates, and higher levels of income.

Our main findings are supported by economist and philosopher Amartya Sen’s capability theory. This accentuates that hunger and food insecurity are related to a number of factors. These include a lack of access to resources, various psychosocial capabilities and the effects of rights, freedoms, policies and social, political and economic arrangements.

People who live in larger households are more likely to go hungry

The statistics indicated that most households that participated in the study and were experiencing food insecurity were concentrated in the three metropolitan municipalities of Johannesburg, Tshwane and Ekurhuleni.

The findings showed that the six factors significantly defined household’s food insecurity. Nevertheless few were statistically significant. And the signs of effects differed. Some, such as unemployment, health status, household size, had positive effects. Others, such as education, grant application, indigence rebates, income, had negative effects.

The findings also highlighted that food insecurity is more prevalent in larger households than in those with few members. And that the determining factor was education. Those with lower education levels were more likely to experience hunger and food insecurity.

Why state support is not enough

How have vulnerable families been able to survive?

The role of the state is crucial. This is true when it comes to the delivery of essential services as well as providing safety nets to help poor households.

The Gauteng municipalities have implemented programmes to reduce food insecurity, foster economic growth, and create employment. These have included the Tshepo youth programmes and Expanded Public Works programme.

Despite these steps, food insecurity remains prevalent. There are a number of reasons for this. They include:

  • poor coordination in the policy implementation processes
  • the fact that the policy environment is encumbered by too many actors, conflicting institutions, and
  • a lack of socioeconomic transformation.

Food, farms and finance: What the government could do next 

We propose interventions that could address each of the drivers of insecurity in the Gauteng-City region.

First, the provincial education department should improve financing for learning and skills development. Skills development can help to reduce unemployment and underemployment, boost productivity and raise living standards.

Second, income is identified as a determinant of household food insecurity. We therefore recommended that municipalities use innovative mechanisms to spark investments. These could include special economic zones, and effective implementation of the department of trade and industry’s one-stop-shop initiative.

Third, household rebates and grants should be maintained to support households below the food poverty line.

Fourth, community leaders need to work with municipalities to plan and implement programmes. This would require urban municipalities to foster public-private partnerships in food production and supply chain systems to boost income from urban food projects.

Finally, promoting sustainable urban agriculture would help reduce food insecurity. Here a number of investments could be made. This could be in education and food production infrastructure, prioritising irrigation infrastructure, offering support for households that depend on grants, and implementing state food security policy programmes.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons licence. Read the original article

The Conversation

Adrino Mazenda is a senior researcher at the University of Pretoria.

Saul Ngarava is a research fellow in the Risk and Vulnerability Science Centre at the University of Fort Hare.

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