Balana Bedru B, Ogunniyi Adebayo, Oyeyemi Motunrayo, Fasoranti Adetunji, Edeh Hyacinth, Andam Kwaw
International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), Abuja, Nigeria.
International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), Abuja, Nigeria.
Food Secur. 2023;15(1):219-241. doi: 10.1007/s12571-022-01312-w. Epub 2022 Aug 16.
The policy measures of the government of Nigeria to restrain the spread of COVID-19, particularly in the initial three months (April - June 2020) led to significant disruptions to household livelihoods and food security. We investigate the effects of COVID-19 on food security and dietary diversity of households; focusing on the pathways through which income loss, endowments of wealth, social capital, and safety net programs moderate the severity of households' food security and dietary diversity. Primary data obtained from a telephone survey of 1,031 Nigerian households were analyzed using ordered logit and negative binomial models. Our results show that income losses due to the COVID-19 restrictive measures had pushed households into a more severe food insecurity and less diverse nutritional outcomes. Regarding wealth effects, livestock ownership significantly cushioned households from falling into a more severe food insecurity amid the pandemic. We found that because of the pandemic's indiscriminate effect across communities, the potential of social capital as an informal support mechanism might have been eroded to enable households to cope with shocks. Furthermore, safety net programs by the government and NGOs did not provide significant protection to households from falling into severe food insecurity and malnutrition amid the pandemic. We suggest three policy propositions - prioritize investment in local job creation to curb income loss; build the wealth base of households (e.g., land tenure security or livestock) to enhance resilience to shocks; and target safety nets and other social support programs spatially, temporally, and across social groups to enhance the effectiveness of such programs amid shocks.
尼日利亚政府为遏制新冠疫情传播所采取的政策措施,尤其是在最初三个月(2020年4月至6月),给家庭生计和粮食安全带来了严重干扰。我们研究了新冠疫情对家庭粮食安全和饮食多样性的影响;重点关注收入损失、财富禀赋、社会资本和安全网计划减轻家庭粮食安全和饮食多样性严重程度的途径。通过对1031户尼日利亚家庭进行电话调查获得的原始数据,使用有序逻辑回归模型和负二项式模型进行了分析。我们的研究结果表明,新冠疫情限制措施导致的收入损失使家庭陷入了更严重的粮食不安全状况,营养结果也更加单一。关于财富效应,牲畜所有权显著缓解了家庭在疫情期间陷入更严重粮食不安全状况的情况。我们发现,由于疫情对各社区的影响不分青红皂白,社会资本作为一种非正式支持机制的潜力可能已被削弱,无法使家庭应对冲击。此外,政府和非政府组织的安全网计划在疫情期间并未为家庭提供显著保护,使其免于陷入严重的粮食不安全和营养不良状况。我们提出三项政策建议——优先投资于创造本地就业机会以遏制收入损失;建立家庭财富基础(如土地保有权或牲畜)以增强抵御冲击的能力;在空间、时间和社会群体层面上针对性地实施安全网和其他社会支持计划,以提高此类计划在冲击期间的有效性。