Food security in Mozambique
It is estimated that 64 percent of the Mozambique population is food insecure. The prevalence is higher in the southern region (75 percent).[1][2][3]
Health factors
According to the 2009 Human Development Report of the United Nations Development Programme, about 55 percent of the population of Mozambique is living in poverty, nearly half illiterate, and about 40 percent is undernourished, and 47 percent have access to safe water, with a life expectancy at birth of 48 years. Mozambique ranked 165th out of 169 countries in the human development index.
The country has one of the highest HIV/AIDS prevalence rates in the world. The prevalence of the HIV/AIDS virus in Mozambique is a further point of vulnerability for poor rural households, aggravating poverty and malnutrition levels. These factors put the country’s agricultural production at risk.
Farming practices
With more than 80 percent of its population dependent on agriculture for livelihood, Mozambique’s food security can be extremely volatile. 90% of the land is made up of farms of 10 hectares (25 acres) or less. Large-scale productive farming is virtually non-existent.
Mozambique suffers from multiple plagues. The most devastating by far for agriculture is the red locust, which is endemic in the Pungwe basin.
Natural disaster
Mozambique is particularly vulnerable to natural disasters such as droughts and floods, with a total of 15 over the last 25 years. These events greatly damaged the rural sector and the country’s overall economy. For example, the floods of 2000 affected some 2 million people, while the droughts of 1994 and 1996 affected 1.5 million people in the southern and central parts of the country.[4]
Cyclones in Mozambique occur during the cropping season, from October to April. For example, in February 2007, Cyclone Flávio caused widespread damage in Inhambane, Sofala and Manica provinces.
The poor are particularly vulnerable to weather-induced risks simply by virtue of their poverty. Poor households have few assets to sell and their consumption is already low, so in times of scarcity they do not have much to buffer them from food insecurity. Most households have little income or real food security, and women-headed households have even less.
Mozambique has a relatively well-developed system of disaster preparedness plans at the district level. Donor-funded projects related to the National Early Warning System help the government cope with food insecurity.
See also
References
- ↑ United Nations Development Program (UNDP). International Human Development Indicators
- ↑ The World Bank. Mozambique at a glance, 2/25/2011.
- ↑ Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO). Nutrition Country Profile for Mozambique
- ↑ The World Bank. Mozambique Agricultural Development Strategy Stimulating Smallholder Agricultural Growth, February 23, 2006
Bibliography
- Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) and World Food Program (WFP). Special Report Crop and Food Security Assessment Mission to Mozambique, 12 August 2010. Text Online: http://www.fao.org/docrep/012/ak350e/ak350e00.htm#3
- United Nations Development Program (UNDP). International Human Development Indicators. Text Online: http://hdr.undp.org/en/statistics/
- Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO). Nutrition Country Profile for Mozambique. Text Online: http://www.fao.org/ag/AGN/nutrition/moz_en.stm
- The World Bank. Mozambique Agricultural Development Strategy Stimulating Smallholder Agricultural Growth, February 23, 2006. Text Online: http://siteresources.worldbank.org/MOZAMBIQUEEXTN/Resources/Moz_AG_Strategy.pdf
- The World Bank. Mozambique at a glance, 2/25/2011. Text Online: http://devdata.worldbank.org/AAG/moz_aag.pdf