Assessing impacts of COVID-19 and their responses among smallholder farmers in Brazil, Madagascar and Tanzania

被引:8
作者
Loehr, Katharina [1 ,2 ]
Mugabe, Paschal [1 ,3 ]
Turetta, Ana Paula Dias [1 ,4 ]
Steinke, Jonathan [1 ,2 ]
Lozano, Camilo [1 ]
Bonatti, Michelle [1 ,5 ]
Eufemia, Luca [1 ,5 ]
Ito, Larissa Hery [1 ]
Konzack, Alexandra [1 ,2 ]
Kroll, Stefan [6 ]
Mgeni, Charles Peter [7 ]
Andrasana, Dina Ramanank'
Tadesse, Sophia [1 ,2 ]
Yazdanpanah, Masoud [8 ]
Sieber, Stefan [1 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Leibniz Ctr Agr Landscape Res ZALF eV, Muncheberg, Germany
[2] Humboldt Univ, Urban Plant Ecophysiol, Berlin, Germany
[3] Univ Dares Salaam, Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania
[4] Brazilian Agr Res Corp, Embrapa Soils, Rio De Janeiro, RJ, Brazil
[5] Humboldt Univ, Resource Econ, Berlin, Germany
[6] Peace Res Inst Frankfurt PRIF, Res Dept Int Inst 2, Hessen, Germany
[7] Sokoine Univ Agr, Coll Econ & Business Studies, Morogoro, Tanzania
[8] Univ Khuzestan, Agr Sci & Nat Resources, Mollasani, Iran
关键词
COVID-19; coping strategies; preventive measures; agriculture; smallholders; government policies;
D O I
10.1177/00307270221127717
中图分类号
S [农业科学];
学科分类号
09 ;
摘要
This study investigates the impacts of the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic on smallholder farmers and their coping strategies in three contrasting Low- and Middle-Income Countries. The case studies include Brazil (South region), Madagascar (Atsimo Atsinanana region), and Tanzania (Morogoro/Eastern Tanzania). These countries were chosen because i) the economies are strongly influenced by the agricultural sector; ii) their national food security is strongly affected by smallholder production, and, iii) they represent a set of contrasting government responses to COVID-19 including the denial of the pandemic. Data were collected through semi-structured household interviews in all three countries in rural areas. COVID-19 induced effects were found in all three countries, including in Brazil and Tanzania where both national governments initially neglected the existence of COVID-19 and introduced few containment measures only. Here, mobility and trade restrictions of other countries impact also on agricultural trade and production in countries in which governments took less action to COVID-19 and also people remained home and practiced social distancing even if no official government policy was issued. The findings in all three countries suggest that the COVID-19 crisis had negatively affected smallholders' agricultural production, leading to a vicious cycle of low production, low incomes, and higher food insecurity. Results of this study raise the thorny issue of how best to balance containment of pandemic and future shocks against the well-being of the vulnerable rural population in lower- and middle-income countries; especially considering also the degree of global interconnected and the potential of polices to effect people beyond the national scale.
引用
收藏
页码:460 / 469
页数:10
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