Food Security in Bangladesh
-Achievement and challenges
One of the fundamental rights of the citizens stipulated in
the Bangladesh Constitution is food security for all. Food security exists when
all people, at all times, have access to sufficient, safe and nutritious food
to maintain healthy and productive lives. The key elements of food security
are: a) availability of enough food from domestic production and/or imports to
meet the demand, b) access of the food to all people at all times through
enough incomes and affordable prices, c) proper hygiene and sanitary practices
and safe water for utilisation of food to have optimum impact on health and
nutrition, and d) a regulatory framework in place and its proper implementation
for controlling contamination to ensure food safety.
Availability of food
In view of repeated
experience of severe hunger and famine, food security in Bangladesh has long
been synonymous with achieving self-sufficiency in rice, the dominant staple
food. The Bangladesh economy has made respectable progress in rice, tripping
production from 11 million tonnes in 1971 to 33 million in 2012. The per capita
rice production has increased substantially over the level at independence. The
growth of production was achieved by fast adoption by farmers of higher
yielding crop varieties developed by scientists, supported by rapid expansion
of irrigation infrastructure through private investment in tube wells.
Bangladesh used to receive substantial amount of wheat, the
secondary staple food, as food aid from
developed countries. Commercial import of wheat has however increased despite
growth in domestic production till the 1990s, mainly due to the discontinuation
of food aid and stagnation of domestic production after a rapid growth in the
1980s. The import has recently exceeded three million tonnes. It appears that
even if Bangladesh achieves self-sufficiency in rice production or becomes a
rice exporting country, the import of wheat will continue.
Notable progress has been achieved in the production of
potatoes and vegetables. The growth has been particularly impressive in the
last decade. The major problem faced by potato and vegetable production is the
volatility in prices leading to large year to year fluctuations in production.
The production of most other food crops – pulses, oilseed and sugarcane – has
either remained stagnant or has declined. The production of oilseeds has picked
up in recent years due to favourable prices, some progress in the development
of higher yielding varieties, and identification of favourable agro-ecological
niche. The dependence of Bangladesh on the world market for the availability of
pulses, edible oil and sugar and milk has been growing, along with wheat.
Bangladesh has rich biological resource base for fish
production. In terms of nutrition, fish occupies a significant position in the
dietary habits of the people. The growth in fish production was sluggish in the
1970s, it picked up in the 1980s, and was very rapid (7 percent per year) in
recent years due to the expansion of pond aquaculture. Entrepreneurs have started
converting low-lying lands into fish ponds and engaging in highly productive
and profitable pond aquaculture. The prices of cultured fish such as tilapia,
koi, and pangash have declined compared to other fish, and have been within the
reach of low income consumers.
The growth in the production of meat and milk has remained
unsatisfactory despite the expansion of the poultry industry. With economic
progress the demand for animal products has been growing fast. The growth in
livestock and poultry farming is constrained by lack of feed, risk imposed by
avian flu and other animal diseases, and poor processing, storage and marketing
infrastructure.
Access to food
In a market economy,
the access to food depends on four elements: a) production-based element that
depends on ownership of land, b) trade-based entitlement that depends on market
prices of food, c) labour-based entitlement that depends on the employment and
wages, and d) transfer-based entitlement that includes gifts, remittances from
relatives, and relief and subsidies obtained from the government. The ability
of the household and the people to access food is the outcome of the complex
operation and interactions of all these elements.
In Bangladesh, 70 percent of the people live in rural areas where
agriculture is the major occupation. Almost 60 percent of the rural households
are engaged in farming. The farming household can access their food from
self-production and/or trading the surplus with other foods available in the
local market. But the landownership is
unequally distributed, and so is the access to food from self-production.
Almost 30 percent of the households do not own any land and another 30 percent
own only up to half an acre. Such tiny landownership is insufficient to meet
the food needs of four to five-member households, whatever advanced technology
the farmer use. A tenancy market is in
operation, which provides access to land to landless and marginal landowners
for farming. But the terms and conditions of tenancy do not favour tenants. So,
a large proportion of marginal farmers go the market to access food as their
own production (after payment of rent and interest for loans) is inadequate to
meet the household needs.
The dominant determinant of access to food is obviously the level
and the growth of income. In Bangladesh, the per capita income remained almost
stagnant till the end of 1980s due to slow growth of GNP and high population
growth. The income growth per year has accelerated since 1990, reaching 6.5
percent in recent years. Bangladesh has also achieved respectable progress in
population control. But, the income is highly unequally distributed and the
disparity has been growing. As a result nearly one-third of the people still
live below the poverty line, with inadequate income to access food from the
market.
An indicator often used to assess the capacity of the poor
to access food from the market is the level and trend in real wages. This indicator shows that since the mid-1990s
there has been a favourable trend in the income of the households who depend on
selling labour in the market, such as agricultural wage labourers, transport
operators and construction workers. The Land Reform in 1984 stipulated a
minimum wage equivalent to 3.5 kg of rice at the prevalent market price. The
rice equivalent wage had increased from about three kg in 1990 to nearly 8 kg
in 2011. The only low group who have not been able to increase their real
income are industrial labourers, particularly the unskilled workers in the
garment industry and the fixed wage earners in the public sector.
The hike in food prices after the food crisis in 2007 has
had a negative impact on the real wages and access to food. Sharp increase in food grain prices
significantly lowers the real income of poor households who spend over half of
their income on staple food. At the same time the instability in producer
prices increases risks and uncertainty, and discourages the subsistence farmer
to invest in agriculture. The volatility in food prices remains an issue for
achieving seasonal and temporal stability in food security.
Bangladesh is often at the mercy of natural calamities such
as floods, droughts and cyclones. Riverine Bangladesh also witnesses frequent
land erosion causing thousands of people to lose their land every year. Despite
the gains achieved by Bangladesh in augmenting availability of staple food, a
safety net programme is essential to insulate the poverty stricken population
from chronic as well as temporary food insecurity that results from external
shocks. A number of food safety net
programmes are in operation in Bangladesh, each with its own specific
objectives and target population. These
include test relief, Vulnerable Group Feeding, Vulnerable Group Development,
Food for Work, Employment Guarantee Scheme, etc. A number of social protection
programmes such as vulnerable group feeding, allowance for destitute women, and
old age pensions have also been introduced to support food security of the
extremely needy people.
The present government has given high priority to the safety
nets for ensuring food security. Currently nearly 2.2 percent of the GDP are
allocated for safety nets and social protection. The evaluation of the
programmes however revealed several limitations; a) large overheads due to
operation of a large number of small programmes by different ministries often
with the same objectives, b) improper targeting of beneficiary households, and
c) leakages in implementation. The only
exception is the employment guarantee programme during the slack seasons, which
appears to be self-targeted as the beneficiary has to provide manual labour.
Utilisation of food
and nutrition security
The acceleration in
economic and agricultural growth has made a positive impact on the the diversity of food intake away from the
rice and vegetable based diet in favour of quality food. The change in per
capita consumption of different items in the food basket for the rural and
urban people, as estimated by the Household Income and expenditure surveys
(HIES) of the BBS, are reported in Table 1. It may be noted that the per capita
consumption of rice and wheat has been declining, while the consumption of
vegetables, fruits and fish and meat has been growing. For rural areas the consumption of rice has
declined from the height of 175 kg per person per year in 2000 to 161 kg in
2010, a decline of about 1.4 kg per year. For urban areas, the consumption of
rice and wheat together has declined from 155 kg per person per year in 2000 to
140 kg in 2010, a decline 1.5 kg per year. During 2000 to 2010, the consumption
of meat has increased by one-third for rural areas and by 40% in urban areas.
However, the level of consumption of other food items,
hardly meets the requirement for balance diet as specified by the National
Nutrition Council and FAO. The numbers in Table 1 shows the average level of
consumption has reached the adequacy level for rice and vegetable, and about to
be reached for fruits and fish, but serious deficiency persists for quality
food such as pulses, oil, and livestock products.
The average numbers also masks serious inequality in the
distribution of consumption across the income scale. While the richer sections
of the society are being able to gradually reduce their cereal intake and
diversify their diet, the poor still have an unmet demand for rice. For all the
other food items, consumption for all income groups have increased, marginally
for the bottom 40 percent but substantially for the top 20 percent. A recent IFPRI study shows that nearly 20
percent of the population is still calorie deficient and the gender disparity
in calorie intake still persists. The 2011 report of the Food Security and
Nutrition Surveillance project implemented by the Helen Keller International
(HKI) and BRAC University shows that a quarter of the households has go without
a meal a day or to reduce the intake of food a number of days during a month.
Bangladesh has made significant progress in reducing
undernutrition for the children (see Figure 1). The prevalence on underweight
children for their age declined from 60 percent in 1990 to 36 percent in 2011,
and is on track for achieving the target set by the Millennium Development
Goals (MDGs). However, progress in reducing stunting, the indicator of chronic
malnutrition, shows a less encouraging picture. The level is still about 41
percent, much higher than countries in sub-Saharan Africa. Over 2007 to 2011,
the stunting declined by only two per cent points. Stunting affects the
cognitive ability and the immunity of the children from diseases. The
prevalence of wasting, an indicator of current nutritional status, remains at
an alarming level of 15 to 17 percent, with very little improvement over time.
Low birth weight among Bangladeshi infants is among the
highest in the world, ranging between 20 and 22 percent. The nutritional status
of women shows a better trend. The proportion of women with chronic energy
deficiency has declined from 52 percent in 1997 to 25 percent in 2011. But the
prevalence of obesity among women is also emerging as a public health issue.
The hidden hunger, the insufficiency of vitamin A, iron and zinc in the diet
that causes major diseases such diarrhoea and anaemia and poor eye sight is
still a major health issue.
Challenges for
achieving food security
The main challenge
for achieving and sustaining food security comes from continuing growth of
population. The progress in reducing population growth, from 3 percent per year
at independence to about 1.3 percent now, is laudable. But the population is
still increasing by 1.8 million every year.
Rice production has to increase by four lakh tonnes every year to meet
the need for staple food for the growing population. The increase in domestic
production at that rate would be difficult due to several supply side factors.
The arable land has been shrinking by 0.6 percent every year
due to demand from housing and industries, and infrastructure, as well as loss
of land from river erosion. With global warming and climate change, another
one-sixth of the land may be submerged with brackish water due to rising sea
levels. The on-going climate has made the monsoon more erratic, raising risks
in food production. The soil fertility has been declining due to
overexploitation of soil nutrients, and imbalanced use of fertilisers. The
ground water aquifer has been going down from over-mining for irrigating boro
rice. The low hanging fruits with regards to irrigation expansion and technological
progress have already been harvested.
Due to all these factors the potential for further increase in
production is getting limited.
There are some silver linings however. As mentioned earlier,
with economic progress people now have capacity to access a diversified diet
with less rice and more quality food. The per capita consumption of rice has
been declining by almost 1.5 kg per person per year. Japan and South Korea had
the same experience during their process of economic development. It seems that
we have reached the stage of economic growth when people are going to gradually
reduce the consumption of rice with higher intake of other food. So, despite some growth of population the
demand for rice may not grow much further.
Rice production can further be increased with
intensification of land use with the use of shorter maturity varieties and
adoption of submergence tolerance, drought tolerance, and saline tolerance
varieties in adverse agro-ecological environments such the southern coast and the
Haor areas in the Northeast, and the flood-prone areas in the river and coastal
chars. The diffusion of hybrid rice could further increase the rice yields, and
the yield gaps of existing varieties could be reduced with the adoption of
finer crop management practices, such as the System of Rice Intensification
(SRI). Indeed, with all these potentials
exploited, Bangladesh could become a rice exporting country.
The more difficult challenge is accelerating the growth in
the production of non-rice foods, such as pulses, oils, fish and animal
products, whose demand has been growing fast with economic prosperity. We must
reduce the growing import dependence of food to insulate the domestic market
from the volatility of the world market. The R&D system must find ways to
fit in pulses and oilseeds in the rice-based system. The vast potential for
increasing fish production from the intensive use of the flood plains must be
explored. Women are already heavily engaged in homestead based vegetable and
fruit production, and subsistence based poultry and animal farming. The
potential is large in this area. Women farmers should be supported with easy
access to knowledge of improved technology and disease management, supply of
quality seeds, and access to finance at easy terms. Private sector should have
the enabling environment to link farmers to markets with expansion of
processing and storage facilities and removing constraints in the value chain.
Bangladesh has yet to achieve comprehensive food security
that resolves the problems of inadequate food intake and chronic malnutrition
among poor people. Solving these
problems will require concerted action by the government, the private sector
and individual households. Continuous efforts need to be made in developing and
diffusion of improved crop varieties and natural resource management to
generate adequate supply of food to meet the needs of the growing
population. A more efficient public food
grain distribution system can make a significant contribution to the food security
of vulnerable households who lack means to access food. Appropriately targeted income transfers,
credit programs and insurance mechanisms in times of crisis may generate high
payoffs in reducing poverty and improving food security. These interventions
should be part of a broader social protection strategy that is both
cost-effective and comprehensive in coverage.
The writer is Exective Director, BRAC.
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