Reducing seasonal food insecurity of smallholder farmer households through improved on-farm storage

A study on the impact of on-farm storage by Dr. Michael Brander, ETH Prof. Thomas Bernauer and Dr. Matthias Huss highlights the need for greater consideration of improved on-farm storage as a means for reducing severe food insecurity. They present the first experimental evidence from Sub-Saharan Africa on the topic. The results of their approach, including a randomized control trial and SMS-based mobile phone surveys, were published in Food Policy.

by Marina Voudrisli
Reducing food insecurity
Improved on-farm storage reduces seasonal food insecurity of smallholder farmer households – Evidence from a randomized control trial in Tanzania

Ending hunger is a key goal of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, adopted in 2015. This goal notwithstanding, the prevalence of severe food insecurity of the world’s population has increased. It is highest in Sub-Saharan Africa, where the seasonality of harvests leads to fluctuations in food insecurity, particularly in the lean season, the time before the harvest is brought in. We posit that addressing seasonal food insecurity requires not only increased food production, as is commonly argued, but also consideration of post-harvest losses during storage.

Here we present the results of a randomized control trial on the effects of improved on-farm storage on seasonal food insecurity. Our intervention provided farming households from two districts in Tanzania with hermetic storage bags that can help reduce storage losses. Seasonal food insecurity was measured via multiple rounds of SMS-based surveys. The results show that the intervention reduced the proportion of severely food insecure households by 38% on average in the lean season, and by 20% in the full seasonal cycle. These findings demonstrate that a simple and inexpensive technology could contribute strongly to reducing seasonal food insecurity and improving smallholder farmers’ year-round access to food.

Fig. 1. Map of Study Areas in Tanzania. Notes: Figure shows the two study districts in Tanzania. Upper shape shows the administrative district boundaries for Kondoa, and lower shape shows the district boundaries of Kilosa. Source of geographic data: https://www.openstreetmap.org.
Fig. 1. Map of Study Areas in Tanzania. Notes: Figure shows the two study districts in Tanzania. (Source of geographic data: https://www.openstreetmap.org)

For more information and the full article, please visit the external pageFood Policy homepage.

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