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Food insecurity as a supply chain problem. Evidence and lessons from the production and supply of bananas in Uganda

Food insecurity as a supply chain problem. Evidence and lessons from the production and supply of bananas in Uganda

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dc.contributor.author Francis Ssennoga
dc.contributor.author Godfrey Mugurusi
dc.contributor.author Pross N. Oluka
dc.date.accessioned 2021-01-10T11:55:55Z
dc.date.available 2021-01-10T11:55:55Z
dc.date.issued 2019
dc.identifier.issn 24682276
dc.identifier.uri https://combine.alvar.ug/handle/1/49286
dc.description.abstract Abstract Despite agriculture being the main economic activity in Uganda, increasing food prices within the country point to the growing challenge of food insecurity. In 2016, food shortage was reported in some parts of Uganda (mainly in Karamoja sub-region and parts of Serere) and government resorted to temporary relief distribution of food from other regions of the country. The acute food shortage in one part of the country while another part, a few hundred kilometers away, has excess farm output calls into question the efficiency of the supply chain of some agro-commodities. This research attempts to examine the challenges faced in the production and supply of bananas in Uganda and how the supply chain perspective can help us address these challenges better. We juxtapose the supply chain approach against the value chain perspective and argue that the supply chain perspective offers a much deeper understanding of market-based challenges, which affect livelihoods of smallholders who often sell their products at rock-bottom prices. A cross sectional survey of various banana production and consumptions points in Uganda was conducted. The findings show that losses in the supply chain accounted for about 29% of banana production – a figure slightly lower than that 40% previously reported in the literature. In addition, the farmers did not benefit from increased food prices due to inadequate market information at their disposal despite banana value chains having recently received significant development attention. We also found that infrastructural bottlenecks and limited collaboration and coordination among smallholders heavily affected the supply of bananas in the country. This is arguably a key factor that strongly explains the food insecurity problem in Uganda. We conclude that the findings point to a different problem, which is that of a dysfunctional supply chain structure of bananas from the rural areas to urban centres in Kampala.
dc.publisher Elsevier BV
dc.relation.ispartof Scientific African
dc.title Food insecurity as a supply chain problem. Evidence and lessons from the production and supply of bananas in Uganda
dc.type journal article
dc.identifier.doi 10.1016/j.sciaf.2019.e00076
dc.identifier.mag 2943354673
dc.identifier.lens 108-487-134-659-948
dc.identifier.volume 3
dc.identifier.spage e00076
dc.subject.lens-fields Value chain
dc.subject.lens-fields Supply chain
dc.subject.lens-fields Agriculture
dc.subject.lens-fields Rural area
dc.subject.lens-fields Business
dc.subject.lens-fields Government
dc.subject.lens-fields Food prices
dc.subject.lens-fields Food insecurity
dc.subject.lens-fields Livelihood
dc.subject.lens-fields Agricultural economics


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