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Research article2018Peer reviewed

The impact of the homestead food garden programme on food security in South Africa

Tesfamariam, Bahta Yonas; Owusu-Sekyere, Enoch; Emmanuel, Donkor; Elizabeth, Tlalang Boipelo

Abstract

The South African government has implemented homestead food garden (HFG) programmes directed at enhancing food production in order to reduce food insecurity, malnutrition, poverty and hunger. The present paper evaluated the impact of this programme on household food insecurity using surveys of 500 households. Endogenous switching regression, propensity score matching and household food insecurity average scores were employed in our analysis. Our findings demonstrated that participation in an HFG programme could significantly enhance the food security status of participants by increasing household food supply and consumption as well as by income derived from selling any excess production from the garden. Specifically, our empirical findings showed that participation in the HFG programme significantly reduced food insecurity among rural households by as much as 41.5%. Therefore, we recommend that policy makers should encourage more rural households to participate in the programme in order to reduce their food insecurity. Facilitating easy access to credit, extension services, fertilizer, irrigation facilities and land are policy options needed to promote farmers participation in HFG programmes. Furthermore, the formation of farmer-based organizations and the building of positive perceptions about HFGs are some of the key policy options that can be employed to improve households' participation in the programme. Promotion of education, participating in off-farm activities, access to market, irrigation, extension and credit, and adoption of fertiliser are some policy interventions that can reduce food insecurity among rural house holds whether or not they participate in the HFG programme.

Keywords

Food insecurity; Homestead food garden programme; Rural households; Selection bias; South Africa

Published in

Food Security
2018, Volume: 10, number: 1, pages: 95-110

    UKÄ Subject classification

    Economics
    Social Sciences Interdisciplinary

    Publication identifier

    DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12571-017-0756-1

    Permanent link to this page (URI)

    https://res.slu.se/id/publ/123627