Effect of COVID-19 on Household Food Insecurity and Poverty: Evidence from Ghana

被引:42
作者
Bukari, Chei [1 ]
Aning-Agyei, Millicent Abigail [2 ]
Kyeremeh, Christian [3 ]
Essilfie, Gloria [4 ]
Amuquandoh, Kofi Fosu [5 ]
Owusu, Anthony Akwesi [6 ]
Otoo, Isaac Christopher [7 ]
Bukari, Kpanja Ibrahim [8 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cape Coast, Sch Econ, Cape Coast, Ghana
[2] Univ Cape Coast, Directorate Res Innovat & Consultancy DRIC, Cape Coast, Ghana
[3] Sunyani Tech Univ, Sch Business & Management Studies, Sunyani, Ghana
[4] Ghana Technol Univ Coll, Fac IT Business, Dept Econ, Takoradi, Ghana
[5] Univ Cape Coast, Inst Review Board IRB, Cape Coast, Ghana
[6] Univ Cape Coast, Dept Business & Social Sci Educ, Cape Coast, Ghana
[7] Univ Cape Coast, Sch Business, Dept Finance, Cape Coast, Ghana
[8] Kwame Nkrumah Univ Sci & Technol, Dept Sociol & Social Work, Kumasi, Ghana
基金
英国科研创新办公室;
关键词
COVID-19; Food insecurity; Ghana; Pandemic; Poverty; VULNERABILITY; FLEXIBILITY; IMPACT;
D O I
10.1007/s11205-021-02766-9
中图分类号
C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
Following the outbreak of COVID-19 and its heavy toll on the global community and humanity, a fierce debate on the pandemic and Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) performance nexus has emerged. While the literature on this subject remains highly contested, evidence within the Ghanaian contest is sparse. Thus, we present micro-level evidence on how COVID-19 poses a threat to hunger and poverty as SDGs in Ghana. Precisely, we examined the effect of COVID-19 on households' food insecurity and poverty and further analysed gender and locational sub-samples for differential effects. Data on 3905 households were obtained via concurrent online survey and telephone interviews. The results indicate that, on several occasions, a significant number of the sampled households (57.76%) did not get enough food to eat due to the pandemic. The proportion of households that went on several times without clean water for home use and access medicines/medical treatments were 50.52% and 52.22%, respectively. About 60.72% of the sampled households affirmed that, on several times, they did not have enough income due to the pandemic. At the same time, the share of households that suffered food insecurity due to the pandemic was 69.04%. Instrumenting for COVID-19 using distance to the affected communities, we find that a standard deviation increase in COVID-19 is associated with a rise of 0.232 and 0.289 standard deviations in poverty and food insecurity, respectively. Our results are robust to alternative estimation approaches to addressing the endogeneity of COVID-19 and other sensitivity checks. We conclude that Ghana would need to develop a new spectrum of gender- and location-sensitive policies that engender social inclusion as a conduit to expediate the attainment of zero poverty and hunger.
引用
收藏
页码:991 / 1015
页数:25
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