Poverty is at the heart of South Africa's food problems.
While the country produces more than enough food to feed all its citizens, many
do not have access to the right amount and types of food, according to a 2014
report by the Southern Africa Food Lab. With a national unemployment level at
25 percent and 15 million people receiving social grants, many people do not
have enough money to buy food, while others cannot afford to eat healthily,
according to Oxfam's Hidden Hunger in South Africa report. The price of white
maize increased by 90 percent between 2011 and 2012
South Africa is the fattest country in sub-Saharan Africa
and one of the 20 fattest countries in the world. At the same time, one in
every four South Africans regularly goes hungry Meanwhile, half of us have
access to so little food that we are at risk of hunger. Doing the maths, this
means that many South Africans then are both fat and hungry. About 40 percent
of South Africans eat the amount of calories recommended daily but eat food
with so little nutrition that they are actually malnourished, according to the
South African National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey.
"People think of food insecurity as only having
insufficient amounts of food, but it can also includes not having enough food
of sufficient quality," says Prof David Sanders from the University of the
Western Cape's School of Public Health.
A typical "low quality" meal consists of mostly
mealie meal, bread or rice, with very little animal protein or vegetables. The
meal is also usually prepared with cheap oil and lots of salt. This means that
South Africans, even those who are overweight, experience high levels of
nutrient deficiencies, including those relating to vitamin A, iron and other
minerals and vitamins. Although all
commercially-produced maize meal in South Africa must be fortified with
micronutrients, three 850g-servings supply less than half of the Recommended
Dietary Allowances (RDA) of protein and iron, and only about a third of the RDA
of vitamin A.
On average, the IQs are being lowered because of this
chronic under-nutrition, especially in early childhood" Close to half of
all children (43.6%) have vitamin A deficiency, while one in 10 are anaemic, a
condition linked to iron deficiencies and can leave children feeling tired and
weak. Both conditions result in stunting, or a failure to grow, in children,
according to the SANHANES 1 report.
"They are not thin and wasted like children you see in
pictures of places where there is famine," Sanders tells Health-e News.
"This is a much more chronic form of under-nutrition where they may not go
to bed hungry, but they don't get enough nutrition from their low-quality
diet."
Stunting may put children at risk of infections,
particularly diarrhoea and pneumonia, and also may result in "sub-optimal
intellectual development."
"They're not unintelligent, but if you take the
population as a whole, on average the IQs are being lowered because of this
chronic under-nutrition, especially in early childhood," Sanders explains.
Adults on this diet are also predisposed to illness, and are
likely to become overweight or obese, which puts them at high risk for
diabetes, heart disease and certain cancers.
"Poor South Africans are not able to spend money on a
diverse diet, instead the only option to facilitate satiety and alleviate
hunger is to feed family members large portions of maize meal porridge that do
not address nutritional needs," according to Laura Pereira, author of the
Food Lab report.
Sanders adds that "energy dense" foods such as
white bread, biscuits and processed meats that are high in calories but low in
nutritional value, are cheaper than healthy food. Healthier foods typically
cost South Africans between 10 and 60 percent more than less healthy foods. Many
South Africans do not have refrigeration or readily available cooking
facilities, which makes the storage and preparation of fresh food more
difficult. According to Sanders, tackling poverty as well as unemployment and
income inequality are among the most important solutions to South Africa's
hidden hunger. However he adds there are steps government can take now
including taxing unhealthy food and using revenues to subsidise healthy foods.
New York City's former Mayor Michael Bloomberg regulating
the cup size of sugary drinks was withdrawn after lobbying by soft drink
manufacturers. In 2011, Denmark implemented a tax on all foods with high levels
of saturated fat, or so-called "bad fat." The tax was repealed a year
later after the food industry mobilised against it. Mexico implemented a tax on
sugary drinks last year and became the only country to have successfully
implemented a "sin tax" on a foodstuff. Early reports indicate a
positive impact on the country's obesity rate.
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