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Agrekon
Agricultural Economics Research, Policy and Practice in Southern Africa
Volume 56, 2017 - Issue 3
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Articles

Does Food Assistance Improve Recipients' Dietary Diversity and Food Quality in Mozambique?

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ABSTRACT

Little is known about the potential for food assistance in the form of cash and food transfers to improve nutrition and create demand for nutritious food in crises. This study investigated the influence of the World Food Programme’s cash and food transfers on the diversity and quality of diets among recipient households in Mozambique and the implications of this for the design of systemic food assistance intentions. The study found that direct food provision improved dietary diversity, while cash enabled beneficiaries to purchase more nutritious foods and improve their diet quality. Both cash and food transfers have potential to generate demand for a variety of nutritious foods in the communities investigated through this study. Providing adequate rations of basic food with a cash portion could improve both dietary diversity and quality and stimulate demand for nutritious foods by addressing both income (purchasing power) constraints as well as stimulating demand for these foods. This demand could have a pull factor in terms of local food systems, stimulating demand not only for food but also for food system services – both upstream and downstream – provided a functioning market exists. Context analysis is necessary to understand if cash injections could lead to price spikes, eroding purchasing power and if the incentives exist for private traders to respond to demand.

Acknowledgements

Fieldwork for this study was conducted by the World Food Programme in Mozambique and the Vulnerability and Analysis Group in Mozambique’s Technical Secretariat for Food Security and Nutrition (SETSAN), Mozambique Ministry of Agriculture. The authors thank the World Food Programme in Mozambique and SETSAN for permission to use the data analysed for this study, the University of Pretoria for providing a postgraduate bursary and the National Research Foundation (NRF) (grant numbers CPR20110706000020, 77053 and 80529).

ORCID

Sheryl L. Hendriks http://orcid.org/0000-0002-1487-4302

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