Improved storage mitigates vulnerability to food-supply shocks in smallholder agriculture during the COVID-19 pandemic
Abstract
Millions of smallholder farmers in low-income countries are highly vulnerable to food-supply shocks, and reducing this vulnerability remains challenging in view of climatic changes. Restrictions to limit the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic produced a severe supply-side shock in rural areas of Sub-Saharan Africa, including through frictions in agricultural markets. We use a large-scale field experiment to examine the effects of improved on-farm storage on household food security during COVID-19 restrictions. Based on text message survey data we find that the prevalence of food insecurity increased in control group households during COVID-19 restrictions (coinciding with the agricultural lean season). In treatment households, equipped with an improved on-farm storage technology and training in its use, food insecurity was lower during COVID-19 restrictions. This underscores the benefits of improved on-farm storage for mitigating vulnerability to food-supply shocks. These insights are relevant for the larger, long-term question of climate change adaptation, and also regarding trade-offs between public health protection and food security.
- Publication:
-
Global Food Security
- Pub Date:
- March 2021
- DOI:
- 10.1016/j.gfs.2020.100468
- Bibcode:
- 2021GlFS...2800468H
- Keywords:
-
- Food insecurity;
- COVID-19;
- Smallholder farmers;
- Post-harvest losses;
- Hermetic storage;
- RCT