ABSTRACT
The study analyzed the food security status and the
coping strategies adopted by rural farm households against food insecurity in
Kaduna State, Nigeria. Primary data were used for the study and the research
work was conducted in 2015. Structured questionnaire was used to collect data
from rural farm households. The list of rural farm households from Kaduna State
Agricultural Development Project was used to randomly select 10% of farmers
from each of the sixteen villages to give a sample size of 390 farmers. The
analytical tools used to achieve the stated objectives are descriptive
statistics to analyze the socio-economic characteristics of respondents and
crop contributions to rural households‟ food security. The food security index
was used to determine food security status of households while logistic
regression model was used to examine the determinants of food security among
the households surveyed and Kendall‟s coefficient of concordance to describe
and rank the coping strategies adopted by rural farm households. The study
found that the mean age of the farmers was 49 years and most of the sampled
respondents were males. About 89% were married and 30% of the farmers had no
formal education. The mean farming experience in the study area was 19 years.
The most widely grown crops were cereals, of which maize was the most important
.The mean per capita expenditure of the households in the study area was about N405
per day, putting this household at extreme risk of food insecurity. The
Z-Statistic result indicated that there was a significant difference between
expenditure pattern of food secure and food insecure households. The study
showed that about 41% of the respondents were food secured while 59% were food
insecure. The food security indices for the food secured and insecure
households were found to be 1.43 and 0.81 respectively implying that food
secured households consumed 43% in excess of their daily calorie requirements;
while food insecure households consumed 19% less than their daily calorie
requirements. This study also revealed that 9.2% of the total sampled
households were found to be severely food insecure and had both adult and children
food intake reduced to an extent that they witnessed severe hunger .The results
of the Logistic regression model revealed that age, education, access to
production credit, household size, dependency ratio, household farm income and
non-farm income were the determinants of food security status of rural farming
households in the study area. The months of April and May were the periods in
which households experienced severe food shortage. The study indicated that
eating less preferred food was the most widely used of all the coping
strategies considered in the study area. The Kendall‟s (W) of 0.56 show that
there was agreement among 56% of the rankers (respondents)which was significant
at 1% as indicated by the p-value of 0.000. Most of the coping strategies used
by farming households were moderate in terms of the frequency at which
different coping strategies were used to temporarily mitigate the impact of
food insecurity. These results have implications for agricultural food policy
in developing countries, especially Nigeria, because large chunk of expenditure
would go into importation of food in order to reduce the severity of food
insecurity and hunger to the bearest minimum level and it might be quite
unsustainable at the long run especially in the period of recession. The study,
therefore, recommended that rural households should be educated on the need to
diversify their sources of income from agriculture to off- farm income
generating activities. This is to improve food security at the household level.
CHAPTER ONE
1.0 INTRODUCTION
1.1 Background to the Study
In Nigeria, agriculture was the most important
sector of the economy from the standpoint of rural employment, sufficiency in
food and fibre, and export earning prior to the discovery of crude oil (Kehinde
et al., 2012). The agricultural
sector is still the leading sector in Nigeria‟s ailing economy. It provides
over 70% of informal sector jobs created in the economy (Central Bank of
Nigeria, 2016). The contribution of the agricultural sector to Gross Domestic
Product (GDP) in the first quarters of 2016 is 24.18% (Central Bank of Nigeria,
2016).
Nigeria is facing huge food security challenges now
and 67.1% of her population lives below poverty line (National Bureau of
Statistics, 2016). Poverty and hunger have remained high in rural areas, remote
communities and among female -headed households and these cut across the six
geo-political zones, with prevalence ranging from approximately 46.9% in the
South-West to 74.3% in North-West and North-East (United Nations, 2016). In
Nigeria, 37% of children under five years old were stunted, 18% wasted, 29%
underweight and overall, only 10% of children aged 6-23 months are fed
appropriately based on recommended infant and young children feeding practices
(United Nations,2016). Nigeria has about 79 million hectares of arable land of
which 32 million hectares are cultivated and over 90% of agricultural
production is rain-fed (Nwajiuba, 2012). Smallholders, mostly subsistence
producers account for 80% of all farm holdings. Both crop and livestock
production remains below potentials (Nwajiuba,
2012); although the agricultural growth was 4.03%
in the fourth quarter of 2016, this growth lies below the 10% necessary for
attaining food security and poverty reduction (National Bureau of Statistics,
2017).
Based on the hierarchy of human needs, food is
unquestionably the most vital need considering its centrality to human
existence (Obayelu and Obayelu, 2012). The country today is facing incessant
worsening food crisis era unnoticed in the last twenty years and with the
potential of leading to national food disaster. However, various interventions
have been made by the Nigerian government in modernizing agriculture in Nigeria
which was previously characterized by sluggish growth, low factor productivity,
declining terms of trade, and often linked to practices that degrade the
environment (Obayelu and Obayelu, 2012). Since the late 1970s to 2016 Nigeria
have implemented macro-economic policies, sectoral and institutional reforms
aimed at ensuring high and sustainable economic growth, food security and
poverty reduction. Though, Nigeria have recorded some level of growth in the
agricultural sector (National Baureau of Statistics, 2017), however, the
sector‟s growth remained insufficient to adequately address poverty, attain
food security, and lead to sustained Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth. Food
security and poverty reduction have been a major campaign issue across all
political parties in the country, yet provision of enough food to feed the
entire population has eluded many governments because of their inability to
meet the agreed Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP)
target of investment of at least 10% of the National budget on Agriculture.
In Nigeria, concerns regarding food security and its related issues are vital for poverty reduction. Attainment of food security is core problem confronting farming households; especially women and rural populations due to low productivity in staple crop production, seasonal variability in food supply as well as price fluctuations. These problems facing farming households come about as a result of over-reliance on rain-fed agriculture, inadequate or inappropriate usage of chemical inputs as well as inadequate improved varieties of crops and animal species (Victoria and Benjamin, 2012). Food security of farming households is of serious concern if Nigeria wants to come out of her present economic recession. Tragically, farmers who are vulnerable to food and nutritional insecurity have limited capacity to respond to agricultural programmes (Victoria and Benjamin, 2012). Nevertheless, the production of staple foods in rural areas is seen as a coping mechanism in situations of severe food insecurity and is geared towards household consumption in most part of Kaduna State. In rural areas, families have access to a small plot of land to engage in small-scale food production for their own consumption and to increase the family income. Hence, the study would analyse food security status and the coping strategies of rural farm households in Kaduna State North-West, Nigeria.
1.2 Problem Statement
Nigeria‟s overall performance in terms of agricultural production and productivity remains inadequate and has failed to make significant progress in the food security front. The issue of food security and coping strategies therefore is a major concern in Nigeria. This is particularly more among the rural farmers who have the highest prevalence of under nutrition (Victoria and Benjamin, 2012). They also estimated that about 66% of Nigeria‟s population lives below poverty line as portrayed by their level of food security. Moreover, the country is characterized by high reliance on food imports as malnutrition is widespread and rural areas are especially vulnerable to chronic food shortages, malnutrition, unbalanced
nutrition, erratic food supply, poor food quality, high food cost, and even
total lack of food despite the country‟s vast potential food production
capacity (Victoria and Benjamin, 2012). The connections among dwindling food
production capacity, rising food prices and dependency on food importation and
the consequence of food insecurity are nowhere more clearly demonstrated in
recent times than in the sahelian food crisis, which also affected many of the
northern states of Nigeria (Ojeleye et al.,
2015). The issue of food security and coping strategies therefore is a concern
in Nigeria and calls for continuous attention and strategy.
Food insecurity and malnutrition also have profound
implication for health and development, and present major obstacles to
attaining the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG‟s). In Nigeria, understanding
smallholder farmers– how much they earn, what they eat, as well as broader
question about the role food security plays in livelihood outcomes is crucial
to designing sustainable strategies to reduce hunger, poverty, and illness. In
Nigeria, a Global Food Security Index (GFSI) rank of 91st among 109 countries in 2015,
together with rising food prices, malnutrition and deaths as a result of
wide-spread poverty is an indication of the prevalence of food insecurity in
the county. It is also a sign of extreme suffering for millions of poor people
as described by Global Hunger Index Report of 2015.
In the midst of this challenging and disturbing
statistics, the population of Nigeria is growing at the rate of 3.2 percent yet
agricultural growth is sluggish and fluctuating (National Bureau of
Statistics,2016 ). Available statistics indicate that the economy of Nigeria is
technically in recession because of the negative GDP for more than two
quarters consecutively (Central Bank of Nigeria,
2016). Equally worth-noting are the high food prices and changing climatic patterns
(Ojeleye et al., 2015). These
situations have made it needful to examine the current food security status and
coping strategies of farming households already trapped in poverty web.
However, some research works done on food security and coping strategies in
Nigeria such as Abubakar (2010); Obayelu and Obayelu (2012); Victoria and
Benjamin (2012) are very general and consider the problems from national or
regional points of views. While the aggregate data are generally available at
the national level, little work has been done to understand the food security
problems at the household level in specific states like Kaduna and despite the
increasing global concern of improving food security, the nature and extent of
food security at the household level in rural areas are not well documented. It
was against this background that this research was undertaken to analyze the
food security and coping strategies among rural farm households in Kaduna
State. Based on the foregoing, the questions of interest in this research were
as follows:
- What are the socio-economic characteristics of rural farm households in the study area?
- What are the food crop contributions to rural farm households‟ food security?
- What is the expenditure pattern of rural farm households in the study area?
- What is the food security status of rural farm households?
- What are the determinants of food
security of rural farm households in the study area?
- What are the coping strategies
adopted by rural farm households to mitigate the stress and shock of food
insecurity?
1.3 Objectives of the Study
The broad objective of this study was to analyze the food security and
coping strategies of rural farm households in Kaduna State. The specific
objectives are to:
- describe the socio-economic characteristics of rural farm households in the study area;
- assess the expenditure pattern of rural farm households in the study area;
- determine the food security status of rural farm households;
- analyze the determinants of food security of rural farm households in the study area; and
- identify the coping strategies
adopted by rural farm households to mitigate the stress and shock of food
insecurity.