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Poverty and malnutrition in Africa: a conceptual analysis

Samuel Ayofemi Olalekan Adeyeye (Department of Food Science and Technology, Mountain Top University, Prayer City, Ibafo, Nigeria)
Abiodun Omowonuola Adebayo-Oyetoro (Department of Food Technology, Yaba College of Technology, Yaba, Nigeria)
Hussaina Kehinde Tiamiyu (Department of Home Economics, Aminu Sale College of Education, Bauchi, Nigeria)

Nutrition & Food Science

ISSN: 0034-6659

Article publication date: 13 November 2017

2579

Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to examine the concept of poverty and malnutrition in Africa, implications and the way out.

Design/methodology/approach

Several literatures were reviewed on the causes, modes, implications and solutions to the contemporary challenges of poverty and malnutrition in Africa.

Findings

Poverty and malnutrition are two sides of a coin that are ravaging the African continent. These were as a result of underdevelopment, maladministration and lack of focus and vision by the generations of leaders saddled with administration in different African countries. Poverty in Africa embraces lack of basic human needs faced by people in African society. Many African nations are very poor, and their income per capita or gross domestic product per capita fall toward the bottom of list of nations of the world, despite a wealth of natural resources. In 2009, according to United Nations (UN), 22 of 24 nations identified as having “Low Human Development” on the UN’s Human Development Index were in sub-Saharan Africa and 34 of the 50 nations on the UN list of least developed countries are in Africa. The UN Food and Agriculture Organization estimates that 233 million people in sub-Saharan Africa were hungry/undernourished in 2014-2016 (its most recent estimate). In total, 795 million people were hungry worldwide. According to the World Bank, sub-Saharan Africa was the area with the second largest number of hungry people, as Asia had 512 million, mainly due to the much larger population of Asia when compared to sub-Saharan Africa. World Bank also reported in 2012 that sub-Saharan Africa Poverty and Equity Data was 501 million people, or 47 per cent Poverty has also been reported as the principal cause of hunger in Africa and the principal causes of poverty have been found to be harmful economic systems, conflict, environmental factors such as drought and climate change and population growth.

Originality/value

This study examined the concept of poverty and malnutrition in Africa, the implications and the way out.

Keywords

Citation

Adeyeye, S.A.O., Adebayo-Oyetoro, A.O. and Tiamiyu, H.K. (2017), "Poverty and malnutrition in Africa: a conceptual analysis", Nutrition & Food Science, Vol. 47 No. 6, pp. 754-764. https://doi.org/10.1108/NFS-02-2017-0027

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2017, Emerald Publishing Limited

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