Business Day (Nigeria)

Child hunger must be a priority for African states Economic growth has been impressive, but it has had little impact on child nutrition

- GRACA MACHEL

Hunger is the most acute problem facing Africa’s children. As you read this, around 60m children across the continent suffer from it. Not the mildly uncomforta­ble hunger that comes from skipping the odd meal, but permanent, relentless malnourish­ment, stunting and wasting.

It is utterly unacceptab­le that lack of decent food is still killing African children on such a vast scale in the 21st century. Nine out of ten African children do not eat the minimum amount of calories with the desired degree of frequency. One in three is stunted. Two out of five do not get regular meals. Hunger is in decline worldwide, but in some parts of Africa it is getting worse. Between 2014 and 2017, 44m more people went hungry, most of them children.

This creates a huge economic impact. Stunting alone is estimated to have reduced Africa’s present gross domestic product by 10 per cent. In

Ethiopia, for example, economic losses linked to children being undernouri­shed and facing diminished lifetime earnings equal about 16.5 per cent of GDP. The resulting impact on cognitive and physical developmen­t has stunted the developmen­t of African societies.

It doesn’t have to be like this. As African government­s decide where to spend their money, they must remember that here is a powerful economic argument for reducing child hunger. For every dollar invested in reducing stunting, there is a return of about $22 in Chad, $21 in Senegal and $17 in Niger and Uganda. The benefits are even higher if the investment is made early in a child’s life, ranging from $85 in Nigeria to $60 in Kenya. Halving rates of child stunting by 2025 could, according to the UN Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on, lead to average annual savings ranging from $3m in Swaziland to $376m in Ethiopia.

Africa’s economic growth over the past two decades has been impressive, but it has had little impact on child hunger. Despite average 2 per cent annual GDP growth in Kenya, stunting increased by 2.5 per cent. And in Nigeria, 4 per cent average annual growth did not lead to any reduction in stunting at all.

Child hunger is fundamenta­lly a political problem, the offspring of an unholy alliance of political indifferen­ce, unaccounta­ble governance and economic mismanagem­ent. It is driven by poverty and wealth and gender inequality — children from poor and rural background­s suffer most from hunger and women and girls are disproport­ionately affected. In some places, stunting rates are twice as high among rural children as among their urban counterpar­ts.

In addition, the continent’s food system is broken. Increased food production has not resulted in better diets. Supply chains are unfit for serving rapidly expanding urban population­s and the rural poor. Agricultur­al economic growth targets encourage the production of major cereal crops — often for export — instead of more nutritious foods like pulses, fruit and vegetables.

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