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Food security in Malawi

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Malawi is one of the world’s least developed countries and is ranked 170 out of 187 countries according to the 2010 Human Development Index.[1] It has about 16 million people, 53% of which live under the national poverty line, and 90% of which live on less than $2 per day.[2] In 2002, there was a famine in Malawi with death estimates ranging from 300 to 3,000[3] Rising levels of poverty, food shortages, and political and economic issues all contributed to the resulting famine. The harvest in the latter half of 2002 alleviated the worst of the famine, but Malawi has since entered a food crisis that has persisted to this day.[4]

85 percent of Malawians’ primary source of income comes from agriculture, and maize is the primary crop grown and consumed.[5] Unusual rainfall and flooding in 2001 sparked a food crisis in 2001 that worsened until 2006.[3] The 2000/2001 maize harvest fell from 2.5 million to 1.7 million metric tons, creating a national deficit of 273,000 metric tons. In February 2002, the Malawi government announced that there was a food emergency and that the country was in a State of Disaster.[6] The president at the time, President Bingu wa Mutharika, declared a national disaster on October 15, 2005[7] and the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) estimated that there are 46,000 severely malnourished children.[8]

History

Scholars trace back Malawi’s food crisis to 1991 and 1992, when a drought in southern Africa severely reduced Malawi’s maize production. The price of maize shot up: the cost of maize, which is 54% of the average caloric intake for Malawians,[9] almost doubled between 1992 and 1993.[10] Although there was a maize surplus in 1993 due to improved rainfall and government-subsidized hybrid maize seed and fertilizer, food consumption did not increase because of people’s eating and coping habits during the famine.[11]

A government-owned corporation called ADMARC controlled the purchasing and trading of smallholder cash crops and fertilizers prior to 1998.[6] Corruption within the agency caused it to exploit small farmers and falsify grain prices.[6] When tobacco prices fell in 1985, ADMARC nearly went bankrupt.[12] In order to acquire loans from the World Bank, ADMARC became a partially privately owned company and eliminated its fertilizer subsidies in 1988/1989.[12] ADMARC’s inability to provide fertilizer and seeds to small farmers also contributed to the food crisis in 1992.[13]

Since then, periodic droughts and floods have continued to affect Malawi.[14] Between 1990 and 2006, there were 33 weather-related disasters, a rise from the 7 that occurred between 1970 and 1989.[14] Malawi’s economy is heavily agricultural; most people survive on their own harvest and sell the excess to make a small income.[15] The high number and increasing severity of droughts and floods since 1990 has impacted much of the country’s population—farmers had little ability to adapt to or recover from disasters, making them more vulnerable to future events, and the cycle of poverty and hunger worsened.[14] From the early 1970s to 1994, the government subsidized hybrid maize growth. When the government stopped this program because it was becoming too expensive support, maize production fell and price increased again.[14]

Contributing factors

Political

After gaining independence in 1962, Malawi was under the presidency of Hastings Banda.[16] Although the people had voting rights, Malawi was a one-party state, and Banda was the leader of the Malawi Congress Party (MCP), the only existing party at the time.[16] Banda therefore had the authority of a dictator, and there were many human rights violations during his reign such as the killings of political dissenters.[16] It wasn’t until 1993 when people voted for a multiparty state that Banda and the MCP were voted out of power.[16] A new constitution was established in 1995, creating a government with an executive, unicameral legislative, and judicial branch.[17] In 1998, under the democratic presidency of Makili Muluzi, the government established the National Food Reserve Agency (NFRA) to manage the strategic grain reserve in disaster relief. The NFRA, a government-owned agency with a board of trustees appointed by the Malawian government, and it managed not only the physical grain reserve, but also the finances and imports and exports involved with the reserve.[18]

However, the NFRA quickly incurred a debt of 1 billion Malawian kwacha (MWK) due to the high interest rate of 56% at which it bought 165,000 metric tons of maize. In 2001, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) recommended that the government sell the grain reserve because harvest had been ample in 2000. There seemed to be little use for such a large reserve, and the grain itself was rotting. The IMF’s recommendation also came as a result of a 2000 study requested by the European Commission that showed that only 30,000-60,000 metric tons of maize would be necessary to support the country in the case of a localized disaster.[6] Maintaining such a large supply of maize is expensive, and the study recommended developing better importation strategies in the case of an unexpectedly large food crisis.[6] NFRA followed the IMF’s advice and sold a majority of its reserve to Kenya and Mozambique decreasing the reserve from 165,000 metric tons of maize to 60,000.[3][5][6] One of the popular opinions about the causes of the food crisis, according to a 2002 ActionAid report, is that the food crisis was in part caused by the IMF's advice to sell the grain reserve.[3] However, the IMF and ActionAid recognize that the grain was old and expensive to store, and at the time, it made sense to advise NFRA to sell.[3]

By 2002, when the worst of the famine hit, the grain reserve was depleted, and the government did not have any additional resources. The situation was exacerbated by the government’s poor preparation in replenishing the reserve sources as they were used.[6] Furthermore, private traders bought out much of the grain reserve, and resold it at excessive prices when food was scarce in 2001.[5] The government began importing maize from neighboring countries and abroad, but the maize was slow to arrive.[6] From congested roads to inefficiently rerouted trucks and overcrowded ports, there were a variety of transportation bottlenecks that delayed the arrival of food aid.[3] Additionally, poor relationships with some donor countries made them slow to respond; many were suspicious of the IMF’s involvement in depleting the strategic grain reserve, and others were wary of government corruption.[3]

Furthermore, the current policies in place to address food crises are insufficient. The policies for disaster management, the National Adaptation Programme of Action (NAPA), do not take into consideration gender and health, only agriculture and environment.[14] Most disaster and climate change management occurs on a national level, and not all policies and practices trickle down to local communities; district leaders in Nsanje and Salima did not know that the NAPA existed when asked in 2006.[14]

Economic

In 2009, 80% of Malawi’s population was rural;[19] there are few industry- or service-related jobs.[5] Some were able to work on large tobacco plantations, find jobs in cities, or migrate to neighboring countries for low-wage jobs, but there are few openings.[5] In the 2000s, over 80% of the population worked in agriculture. Approximately 33% of the national GDP came from agriculture, as well as over 50% of the export earnings (namely tobacco, sugar, tea, and cotton).[20]

Malawi’s current economy is neither completely liberal (a laissez-faire market), nor completely regulated (a state-regulated market). ADMARC, a government-owned corporation and one of the primary suppliers of maize, controls some of the market and subsidises food. The market price of maize increased from 4MK/kg in June 2001 to 40+MK/kg in January 2002. The daily wage for workers, however, remained the same at 20MK/day.[5] The liberalization of the market, especially in regards to the loss of control by ADMARC, has made tracking and controlling the maize market difficult. The price of maize is dependent on the market, and the NFRA does not have the power to intervene in the market.[3]

Malawi’s agricultural policies are also problematic: the country’s food supply is heavily reliant on maize, and efforts to diversify crops have been unsuccessful.[6] Therefore, a majority of its population suffered when the crop production, especially maize production, failed in 2001, because people could no longer grow food for themselves and did not have an income to purchase food.

Tobacco, the main export product in Malawi, has declined in international sales. Since the 1980s, its revenue has decreased by 50%, and thus the income and purchasing power of small farmers has decreased.[5] In 2000/2001, many small farmers failed to repay their private and government loans. Therefore, in 2001/2002, many were unable to receive credit with which to buy seeds and fertilizer for their crops.[21] Other efforts to strengthen the agricultural sector such as encouraging mixed land usage, improving irrigation schemes, offering crop storage and protection, constructing roads and buildings, and providing credit and marketing opportunities, have been mainly offered to estate farmers, not small farmers.[20]

Social and health

HIV/AIDS orphans in Malawi.
The food crisis made HIV/AIDS orphans in Malawi especially vulnerable to poverty, hunger, etc.

Poverty is widespread in Malawi, with 50% of its population living under the poverty line of $2/day according to the World Bank.[22] The rural poor were especially vulnerable to the food crisis because they could not afford to buy food when their harvests failed.[3]

A 2002 ActionAid report speculates that since 1994, when democracy was established in Malawi, there has been a social shift away from community solidarity. During the 1991/1992 drought, communities banded together and supported one another, giving food and employment to those that needed it. During the 2001/2002 food crisis, however, peoples’ philosophies changed to an “anarchic mob justice,” an “everyone for himself” attitude, according to the 2002 ActionAid report.[9]

HIV/AIDS in Malawi is widespread: the disease affects about 15% of Malawians.[3] Households with adults affected by HIV/AIDS and households without adults due to HIV/AIDS have significantly lower agricultural productivity. Not only are those with HIV/AIDS prevented from working the fields, but other people must take care of them and a portion of the household income must go to medication and funerals. Thus, the prevalence of HIV/AIDS has made many Malawians vulnerable during the food crisis.[23] During the 2002 famine, 70% of deaths in hospitals were due to HIV/AIDS.[24]

Ecological

The soil in Malawi is in poor condition due to many farmers’ historical inability to afford fertilizer.[25] There are few easy solutions to maintaining soil fertility; Malawi is too poor to import organic materials to restore soil nutrients, and land is too scarce to allocate large plots of land to soil restoration.[25] Individual farmers cannot afford fertilizer for their land.[3] Therefore, food production levels are also largely affected by declining soil fertility and land shortages.

Poor land use and deforestation have also been suggested to play a role in the increasing droughts and floods.[14] Large tobacco farms have replaced forests, and commercial farmers have cut down reeds along rivers that control flooding, which has lead to more severe floods.[14]

Climatological

A 2006 ActionAid report suggests that global warming has contributed to the food shortage in Malawi by changing the climate. As rainfall patterns change and temperatures increase, the length of the productive growing season decreases and farmers must purchase more costly hybrid crops in order to obtain an adequate harvest.[14] Some farmers shifted their maize season from November to December, while others shifted it earlier, in order to handle the changing weather.[14] As aforementioned, the increasing frequency of droughts and floods has made farmers especially vulnerable to food shortages.[14]

The rainfall in 2000/2001 and 2001/2002 was sporadic, with recurrent dry spells and floods that prevented sufficient harvests.[26] Many farmers, in order to cope with the unpredictable weather, harvested their crops prematurely, which further decreased the crop production in 2001/2002. Furthermore, the changing weather patterns made the methods of predicting crop prediction unreliable; the existing warning systems that predicted crop production based on weather forecasts and regular crop assessments only predicted that a decrease in maize production in the 2001/2002 season would be compensated for by an increase in other crops such as roots and tubers production.[26] However, all crops suffered in the 2001/2002 season. Thus, the government was unprepared for a food crisis in 2002.[26]

Response & relief efforts

The Malawian government implemented a fertilizer subsidy program called the Farm Input Subsidy Program (FISP) in 2005, under which the government subsidized fertilizer and seed to vulnerable farmers. Fertilizer was priced at $7 per 50 kg bag, a marked discount from the market price of $27 per 50 kg bag. Although the erratic rainfalls curbed the program’s effectiveness in 2005/2006, improved weather in 2007 allowed the program to flourish and Malawi had a record maize harvest of 3.4 million tons, a surplus of 1.4 million. As a result, in 2007, Malawi was able to export maize for profit and donate maize to other countries in need; Zimbabwe imported 40,000 metric tons of maize from Malawi, and Lesotho and Swaziland both received 5,000 metric tons of maize donated by Malawi.[27]

International and local NGOS, including the World Food Programme (WFP), the EU, UK, and USAID, donated food to Malawi after it was declared a state of disaster in 2002. In 2005, the WFP estimated that its food aid was feeding 11% of Malawi’s population.[4]

Long-term effects

Health

The food crisis has made children especially vulnerable to malnutrition and disease. In 2006, UNICEF estimated that 46% of children under five were chronically malnourished and 19% were underweight.[28] Since 1992, when the roots of the food crisis began, children’s nutritional status has not changed.[28]

In 2001/2002 and 2005/2006, during seasons of severe food shortage, there were large cholera outbreaks throughout the country. UNICEF recognized that the outbreaks were prompted by poor hygiene and unsafe water sources compounded with the food crisis, which made people susceptible to disease.[28] Similarly, a study conducted by Save The Children UK in February 2002 found that the food crisis affected people's health by causing swelling in the hands and feet of both adults and children.[29]

The food shortage has resulted in several thousand hunger-related deaths; the exact numbers are unknown.[14] Many of these deaths have further exacerbated the problem of HIV/AIDS, leaving those afflicted by the disease especially vulnerable and also producing a large orphan population. UNICEF estimates that 17% of children do not have living parents due to HIV/AIDS.[28]

During the peak of the food crisis, from April to May 2002, the WHO conducted a health assessment in Malawi. It found that between October 2001 and March 2002, there was an average of 1.9 deaths per 10,000 every day. There was a cholera epidemic with 33,150 detected cases and 981 deaths, a fatality rate of 3%. Yet, the number of people seeking aid at health facilities decreased by 25% in that same period. The study suggested that the health facilities were crippled by shortages of staff and drugs and poor communication and transportation systems. As people began to prioritize food security over all else, health and seeking treatment at poorly-maintained health facilities fell to the wayside.[30]

Starving people began to eat unsafe roots, maize cobs, sawdust, and boiled fruits and contracted food poisoning and other stomach illnesses.[29] A report in the Lancet found that many families, even considerably wealthy ones, in Nsanje, a southern district in Malawi, were eating water-lily bulbs called nyika. These bulbs, which used to be considered snack foods but are now staple foods, cause diarrhea if eaten in abundance.[31] In one instance, the eldest son of a family of ten found a collection of poisonous yams. The father gave the children and mother the yams to eat because they had no other food; he did not eat the yams themselves because he prioritized his children's hunger and his wife's hunger over his own. The mother and all eight children died, one after another, due to vomiting and food poisoning.[31]

Policy

The government’s food security policy, the FISP, has raised agricultural productivity. As aforementioned, maize production surpassed domestic demand after the implementation of FISP. Between 2005 and 2011, Malawi’s GDP grew at an average of 11.7% per year, and many experts contributed the agricultural GDP growth to FISP. However, recent studies have suggested that FISP is not a sustainable program: as the number of needy households increase, the amount of fertilizer and seed provided has decreased from 85 kg per farmer in 2005/2006 to 60 kg per farmer in 2012/2013.[32]

New food security policies were developed in 2002 and 2003. The Malawi Poverty Reduction Strategy was a framework policy document intended to direct and inform budget decisions for the central government. At the heart of the policy were economic growth, human capital, safety nets, and governance; by making budget decisions that encouraged agricultural economic growth and create effective safety nets, the government could promote food security and food availability.[33] The Ministry of Agriculture collaborated with civil society organizations, other ministries, private companies, and donors to create a Food and Nutrition Security Policy. The policy aimed to: 1) increase food availability by extending irrigation systems and access to fertilizer and land, 2) strengthen the rural market, 3) create a number of health and dietary guidelines and services, and 4) establish and strengthen disaster management plans, the strategic grain reserve, and food production monitoring/predicting systems.[33] Finally, the Ministry of Economic Planning and Development developed a growth strategy policy that would increase access to food by promoting trade and investment in rural Malawi to increase income and employment opportunities.[33]

Culture and society

During the food crisis, people began to change their lifestyles to obtain food. Some have begun taking casual jobs in exchange for food. Many have sold household items and livestock at low prices to purchase food, making it difficult for them to regain stability after the food crisis.[34] Some have migrated to Zambia and other neighboring countries to work for low wages or food.[14]

The food crisis has also had an impact on education. In some areas, the dropout rate has increased to 25% due to hunger. Many skip school in order to work or search for food, while others can no longer afford the school fees.[34] Some teachers have complained that schools have lost their control over students because they cannot force students to stay, study, or do their homework if they are hungry and sick.[14] UNICEF claims that in some areas where the food crisis is especially severe, one-half to three-quarters of school-aged children have stopped going to school.[31] In response to this drop in school attendance, UNICEF and WFP began implementing programs that fed children in school and provide extra support and materials to teachers and staff. UNICEF reported that the program brought a "great improvement" in school attendance, in some cases even causing school buildings to overflow with children seeking food.[31]

The overall social order has also worsened, as people have begun stealing from their neighbors, abandoning children, fighting for food, and exchanging sex for food.[14] Theft of food and money has become much more common. In some areas, captured thieves are tortured and mutilated as punishment.[14] The elderly, orphans, and women are increasingly vulnerable, not only because it is more difficult for them to provide for themselves, but also because they are bigger targets for theft and violence.[14] In 2005, many women reported being attacked at the ADMARC market when purchasing their allotted 25 kg of maize.[35] The price of sex work has decreased from MK1000 to MK200, heightening the risk for women and girls that must engage in such behaviors at a higher rate to earn money.[35] The social structure of marriage has also changed as a result of the food crisis: many girls were forced to marry young because their families could not support them during the food crisis, leading to an increase in failed and abusive marriages.[34] Other married men and women turned to infidelity to earn money and food, again leading to an increase in failed and abusive marriages.[34]

Kamkwamba's first windmill.
The windmill that William Kamkwamba built.

There is a personal account of the famine by William Kamkwamba in his book "The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind." At the age of 14, Kamkwamba dropped out of school because his family could no longer afford the tuition.[36] He began studying electronics in the local library and realized that he could use wind power to supply electricity to his village. His first windmill was used to power light bulbs and charge cell phones; others were used to pump irrigation systems and clean water wells.[36] His story gained national publicity in 2007, from TED talks to The Daily Show, and his windmill projects gained the support of donors from around the world.[36] According to the novel, the government estimate of famine deaths appears to be severely understated.[19]

Current food shortage

The maize harvest in 2012 decreased by 7% from 2011, and harsh flooding at the beginning of 2013 in southern Malawi destroyed 10,000 homes.[26] The Malawi Vulnerability Assessment Committee estimated in 2012–2013 that 2 million people were suffering from food shortages.[37] In July 2012, the World Food Programme reported that “households in parts of the country have harvested almost nothing.”[38] The World Bank estimated that Malawi would require at least 57,000 metric tons of maize in the 2013/2014 season in order to address the food scarcity.[22] The price of maize increased by 162% in 2013,[39] due to low harvest, high cost of transportation, and devaluing of the MK.[38] In July 2013, the UK announced that it would donate $20 million to Malawi for the “looming food crisis.”[40]

ADMARC has rationed maize sales to 10 kg per person. The Ministry of Agriculture claimed that this policy was created to prevent vendors from buying all the maize and reselling it to the poor at higher prices.[41] However, news reporters from Blantyre Newspapers Limited, a Malawi-based news publisher, have found that ADMARC itself may also be suffering from a grain shortage because people have reported not being able to receive even their allotted 10 kg of grain.[41]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ UNDP 2013
  2. ^ FINCA 2014
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Devereux 2002
  4. ^ a b Phillips, E 2007
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Lilliston, B and Ranallo, A 2012
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i IMF 2002
  7. ^ "Malawi issues food crisis appeal". BBC. 2005-10-15. Retrieved 2007-12-13.
  8. ^ "High stakes for Malawi's children as malnutrition rises". UNICEF. 2005-10-14. Retrieved 2007-12-13.
  9. ^ a b Minot 2010
  10. ^ United Nations 1994
  11. ^ Hayes 1997
  12. ^ a b Lele 1988
  13. ^ Mkandawire 1999
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q ActionAid 2006
  15. ^ Dorward and Kydd 2004
  16. ^ a b c d globalEDGE 2014
  17. ^ CIA 2014
  18. ^ NFRA 2014
  19. ^ a b UN 2009 Cite error: The named reference "Number30" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  20. ^ a b Britannica Online 2014
  21. ^ FAO 2002
  22. ^ a b World Bank 2013
  23. ^ Meera, et al. 2002
  24. ^ Avert 2012
  25. ^ a b Hardy 1998
  26. ^ a b c d Lameck 2013
  27. ^ Jayne, Chapoto, Minde, Donovan 2008
  28. ^ a b c d UNICEF 2006
  29. ^ a b Kamowa 2002
  30. ^ WHO 2002
  31. ^ a b c d Tenthani 2005
  32. ^ Pauw and Thurlow 2014
  33. ^ a b c Sahey 2005
  34. ^ a b c d TearFund 2010
  35. ^ a b Global Policy Forum 2008
  36. ^ a b c Kamkwamba 2012
  37. ^ MVAC 2012
  38. ^ a b ActAlliance 2012
  39. ^ WFP 2014
  40. ^ BBC 2013
  41. ^ a b Musa 2013

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References