key: cord-0880325-spw7mgmk authors: Agamile, Peter title: COVID-19 Lockdown and Exposure of Households to Food Insecurity in Uganda: Insights from a National High Frequency Phone Survey date: 2022-02-11 journal: Eur J Dev Res DOI: 10.1057/s41287-022-00510-8 sha: 571dc857e77908c2b953bd51d6bea8cc7dc2e0a2 doc_id: 880325 cord_uid: spw7mgmk We estimate the impact of COVID-19 lockdown induced income shocks on household food insecurity outcomes in Uganda using five rounds of a nationally representative High Frequency Phone Survey. Relative to the baseline survey conducted just before the pandemic, there was a significant decrease in households’ participation in wage work, agricultural production, and non-farm business which in turn increased their income losses. Consequently, we find that lockdown induced income losses significantly increased incidences of food insecurity within households. With incidences of food insecurity increasing especially in rural areas, it is likely that COVID-19 reversed some of the gains recorded in recent years in lifting millions of rural smallholder farming households out of poverty. These results suggest that to assure the food security of poorer segments of the population especially in anticipation of future shocks, the government needs to invest more in social protection i.e., income and consumption support. The initial spread of COVID-19 around the world in the first half of 2020 presented a major headache for national governments and health agencies charged with maintaining public health. As there was no known treatment or vaccine for the virus at the time many governments around the world-on the advice of health authoritiesimposed severe lockdowns, 1 restricting the movement of people in attempts to slow the spread of the virus. Uganda like many other countries imposed a national lockdown. On 21 March 2020, a day before the first case of COVID-19 was reported in Uganda, the government closed all schools and shortly thereafter introduced a slew of measures including a lockdown, closure of the nation's borders (except for movement of cargo and goods) and suspension of public transport within the country. Although credited 2 with helping to slow the spread of COVID-19 in China (Yuan et al. 2020) , lockdowns through their limitations of people's movements, severely disrupted economic activity in the countries in which they were implemented. For example, economic sectors such as travel and tourism, industrial manufacturing, nearly came to a halt when lockdowns were imposed (Farrell et al. 2020 ). In the case of Uganda, the World Bank (2021), estimated that Gross Domestic Product growth contracted by 1.1% in 2020 relative to 2019 because of the COVID-19 pandemic. A consequence of this was a massive increase in unemployment in both formal and informal sectors, exposing millions of people to large income losses. According to the International Labour Organisation (2021) projections for the Ugandan labour market, there were significant losses in working time equivalent to 1.8 million fulltime jobs in 2020 compared to 2019. Globally the International Labour Organisation estimated that the COVID-19 pandemic induced job losses led to a contraction of global labour income by a staggering 8.3% in 2020 compared to 2019. While most workers who became redundant because of lockdowns in high-income countries received some form of income protection from their respective nations' governments, this was not the case in many medium-and lower-income countries. For those in the informal sectors of low-income countries with minimal job protection, the lockdowns meant instant job losses and total income loss. Furthermore, given intra-and inter-country economic connectedness, the lockdowns also helped to amplify and transmit the impact of COVID-19 to areas with no or low infection rates as well as those areas with limited direct risk and threat to human life from the disease. This was visible in many low-income countries especially in sub-Saharan Africa as evidenced by Stoop et al. (2021) who show that people suffered substantial job losses because of lockdowns in the North Kivu province of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), a large region with a population of over 6.5 million people which had only reported 251 cases of COVID-19 by late July 2020. While it is ex ante conceivable that all pillars of food security 3 could be affected by the lockdowns (Laborde et al. 2020) our study, to a large extent, only examines food insecurity resulting from the disruption of access to food. This is on account of lockdowns having primarily induced household income losses resulting from rising unemployment and reductions in farm and non-farm revenues. These "demand side" challenges negatively affected households' access to food by reducing their purchasing power. The empirical focus on access to food is supported by Akter and Basher (2014) who showed that household income losses generally tend to increase household food insecurity. Although we do not focus so much on the "supply side" challenges which is closely associated with food availability, we recognise that the lockdown may have impacted food production through the disruption of farmers access to inputs. However, we still examine farm income losses which could be occasioned by the disruption of marketing and potentially agricultural casual labour employment opportunities. Additionally, the available data gives us richer information to analyse food insecurity from a demand than supply side because in general there is more variability in income than agricultural production at the high frequency in which the data we use was collected. Uganda provides an interesting case to analyse the impact of the lockdowns on household food security because it had a very high and perhaps rising level of vulnerability among its population preceding the COVID-19 pandemic. First, according to the last available data for 2016, the prevalence of poverty in the country measured using the $1.90 a day (2011 Purchasing Power Parity (PPP)) threshold and national poverty lines, stood at 41.5% and 21.4% respectively (World Bank 2020). This was a clear deterioration from four years earlier when the prevalence of poverty in the country measured using the same thresholds stood at 35.7% and 19.7% respectively. Secondly, and according to the respective last available data for 2016 and 2017, the coverage of social protection in the country stood at 2.6% of the population even though 89.4% of workers were employed informally 4 (International Labour Organisation, 2020). It should be noted that the people working in the informal sector were particularly hard hit by the lockdown measures. With these levels of poverty, coverage of social protection, and the proportion of people working informally, the lockdown may have had a serious effect on the food security of millions of vulnerable people in the country. There is now a growing body of literature such as Béné (2020), Ceballos et al. (2020 ), Farrell et al. (2020 , Heck et al. (2020) , Huss et al. (2020) , Gupta et al. (2020) , Zidouemba et al. (2020) Stoop et al. (2021) , Mahmud and Riley (2020) , Kansiime et al. (2021) , Hirvonen et al. (2021) and Ruan et al. (2021) examining the impacts of COVID-19 on food systems, household income, and consumption. The general conclusion from these studies is that COVID-19 induced income losses may have led to an increase in the prevalence of food insecurity. While these studies offer useful insights, they may still have potential limitations based on their coverage and use of only one data point. Therefore, our contribution to this growing body of literature lies in presenting a new analysis that exploits nationally representative and repeated phone survey data which covers both urban and rural households. By using repeated rounds of data collection, we provide new insights that help to expand our understanding of how households fared throughout the course of the lockdown. This knowledge has potential future policy applications especially in deciding when and for how long appropriate public interventions should be applied to assure the welfare of vulnerable populations after exposure to shocks. Even though the full health, socioeconomic, and other impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic may take several years to understand since the pandemic is far from over, this paper aims to provide initial insights that can be used to inform ongoing policy responses to the pandemic and to be a basis for deeper analysis. Our specific objective is to estimate the impact of COVID-19 lockdown induced income shocks on household food security outcomes. The rest of the paper is structured as follows. In Sect. 2, we describe our data and present some descriptive statistics. In Sect. 3, we briefly present the estimation strategy. Thereafter, our regression results are presented in Sect. 4. Section 5 concludes the paper. Although the lockdown disrupted traditional ways of data collection such as face-toface interaction between survey respondents and interviewers (Rahman et al. 2021) , the World Bank together with Uganda Bureau of Statistics (UBOS) were able to leverage the existent Living Standards Measurement Study (LSMS) infrastructure and framework in Uganda to conduct High Frequency Phone Surveys (HFPS) at monthly intervals (Uganda Bureau of Statistics 2020) to understand the impact of COVID-19 on household welfare. The sample in the HFPS was selected from households in the 2019/2020 Uganda National Panel Survey (UNPS) which had a phone number for at least a household member or one reference individual. The data collection started in June 2020, and we used five rounds of the survey collected up to February 2021. 5 Like the standard UNPS, the coverage of the phone survey was national, and included both rural and urban areas. To compute the magnitude of changes in household participation in key occupations and income before and during the lockdown, we matched the HFPS to the baseline 2019/2020 UNPS. The key variables we selected from the data included different household occupations (wage work, agricultural production, and non-farm business) and changes i.e., an increase, no change, reduction, and total loss in household income from the different occupations. To measure food insecurity, we use the range of indicators: 1. Eat non healthy food; 2. Eat fewer kinds of food; 4. Eat less, 5. No food stock; 6. Nothing to eat; 7. Have no food for a whole day and 8. Skip meal. According to Maxwell (1996) , the frequency and intensity of these different coping strategies measure the short-term food insecurity of households. An important point to note here is that the food insecurity indicators surveyed in the HFPS were not tracked in the 2019/2020 UNPS. Table 1 summarises the characteristics of our sample. The sample had 2,227 households selected out of the 3077 households in the 2019/2020 UNPS that were interviewed right before the arrival of COVID-19 in Uganda. The selected households were interviewed repeatedly during the lockdown in five rounds giving us conducted on an annual basis-and thereby possess greater variation in household size and number of children per household-this was not the case in the phone surveys which were conducted on short monthly intervals. The number of males who head households was more than twice that of females. Whereas the sample was almost evenly distributed across the four regions of the country, most of the households were in rural areas. The bigger percentage of rural households in the sample somewhat reflects the general settlement pattern in the country with over 75% of the total population of the country living in rural areas as of 2019 (World Bank 2020). A full list of the variables used in our analysis and their respective definitions is presented in the Appendix in Table 11 . Table 2 summarises changes in household occupation and income before and during the lockdown. The results show that there was a significant reduction in household participation in all three occupations tracked during the lockdown relative to before the lockdown. The largest decline in work participation during lockdown relative to the period before was recorded in wage work at 29.3%. This could be attributed to the severe movement restrictions that denied workers the opportunity to travel to their usual work locations. While in many other countries, most people switched to virtual work, this was largely not possible in Uganda due to constraints such as low internet connectivity and the fact that most businesses and offices still do not have the set up to operate online. As expected, there was minimal decline in the proportion of household engaged in farm work compared to the waged work and non-farm business. This is because, overall, the lockdown conditions did not prevent farmers from going to work on their farms. In terms of income reduction, the largest losses were recorded in non-farm business. This could be attributed to the informal nature of these businesses meaning they did not have any external support mechanisms such as insurance to mitigate their losses. While the government did announce a stimulus package to provide credit lines to help businesses recover from the pandemic induced losses, it is unlikely that most of the small and often informal businesses accessed this money. This is because the largest chunk of the stimulus package, 93% was channelled through mainly two entities; Uganda Development Bank (UDB) and Uganda Development Corporation (UDC) and just 7% left to be channelled through the Microfinance Support Centre (MSC) (Initiatives for Social and Economic Rights 2021). As UDB and UDC generally tend to lend to large formal businesses, it means the small informal businesses did not get much relief since their main source, the MSC got a very small share of the government's stimulus package for onward delivery. The modest income losses recorded for wage work could be attributed to the fact that most employers due to contractual obligations likely continued to pay their employees even during the lockdown. Table 3 summarises differences in household occupation and income between households that were selected and non-selected from the baseline sample for the HFPS. Other than participation in non-farm business, there was no significant difference between households that were selected and those not selected. Table 4 presents key summary statistics on household occupations, changes in income, and food insecurity outcomes. The first five columns present the results by round of data collection, whilst the sixth column presents the pooled results. The results show that the proportion of households engaged in waged work declined from 14.7% in the first round to 9.6% in the second round. After the second round, the proportion of households engaged in waged work rose continuously up to the fifth round. The initial low proportion of household engaged in waged work and the eventual rise of the same, can be attributed to the severe restrictions on people's movement at the onset of the lockdown which was thence relaxed some months later; thereby enabling an upsurge in waged work. On average, 67.3% of households engaged in agricultural production, marking it as the single largest occupational activity within households. This is somewhat expected given that 74.2% of the households in the sample are in rural areas (see Table 1 ) and agriculture tends to be the main livelihood activity there. The notable increase in the proportion of households engaged in agricultural production from 63% in round one to 72.5% in round three before declining to 60.4% in round five can be attributed to agricultural seasonal cycle in the country. Basically, the initial increase coincides with the second agricultural season which peaks around September (round three) and the decline thereafter coincides with harvest season and long dry season between season two in 2020 and season one in 2021. During the harvest period and dry spell between the two seasons highlighted above, agricultural labour requirements generally tend to be minimal. While there is a stronger seasonal element driving the trends in the number of households engaged in agriculture, it is also possible that the disruption of economic activity in urban areas may have pushed some people to relocate to rural areas and join the farming ranks. The damaging effects of the lockdowns with regards to agricultural production was primarily in limiting post farmgate activities such as transporting, processing, and marketing of farm produce thereby affecting farmers income. Accordingly, on average, households reported the largest income losses in agricultural production (33%) followed by non-farm business (26.8%), wage work (14.5%). The slightly lower reduction in waged work income could be attributed to the fact that waged work usually carries contractual obligations 6 on the part of the employer meaning most employees likely continued to receive wages. Even though the geographic coverage of the studies of Mahmud and Riley (2020) and Kansiime et al. (2021) was limited, our results support their findings that showed a significant reduction in non-farm, labour dependent income loss following the imposition of the lockdown. In terms of food insecurity, on average between 45 to 48% of households reported eating non healthy and fewer kinds of food, between 21 to 28% reported skipping a meal or eating less, and between 5 to 16% had no stock, nothing to eat and no food for a whole day. Additional summary statistics showing household food security status by the different income losses they suffered i.e., farm, non-farm business, wage and remittance income loss are presented in the Appendix in Tables 12, 13, 14. We estimated the impact of COVID-19 induced income loss on households' food security outcomes using a Probit model. The choice of a Probit model was informed by the nature of our dependent food insecurity variables which are categorical. Peele et al. (1998) show, empirically, that when the dependent variable is categorical, a Probit model is a better choice. Additionally, we also estimated the impact of income loss on households' food security outcomes using Ordinary Least Squares (OLS) estimation. While OLS is typically not the preferred choice when the dependent variables are categorical, Noreen (1988) empirically showed that OLS can still perform as well as a Probit. The regression equation we estimated can be written as below. where y is the incidence of a range of food seurity indicators i (with i = eat non healthy food, few kinds of food, skip meal, eat less, no stock, nothing to eat and no food for a whole day) in a household j at time t (with t = June, July, September, and October 2020, and February 2021). The different food security indicators are binary variables which take the value one if a household reports using them and zero otherwise. e is a vector of variables which capture the main household occupations, and these include wage work, agricultural production, and non-farm business. The variables were defined as dummies which took the value one if a household engaged in that occupation and zero otherwise. x is a vector of income loss shocks such as loss of farm, non-farm business, wage, and remittance income. The variables were defined as dummies which took the value one if a household experienced income loss from that income source and zero otherwise. d is a vector of different household head and household characteristics such as age, gender, household size and number of children in the household. r and w are region and round/wave specific fixed effects. ε is the error term. Tables 5 and 6 respectively summarise the results of the Probit and OLS parameter estimates. The dependent variable in each of the estimations is the specific food insecurity indicator as listed in the column head. Consistent with expectations, engagement in either waged or farm work significantly reduced incidences of food insecurity among households. Both the Probit and OLS estimation results show that lockdown induced reductions in household income from the major income sources significantly increased incidences of food insecurity among households. The Probit estimation results in Table 5 show that, a reduction in wage income significantly increased incidences of households' eating less (41.4%), non-healthy (43.7%) and fewer kinds (49%) of food. Additionally, it also significantly increased incidences of households' skipping a meal (40.4%), having no food for a whole day (15%), having nothing to eat (30.2%) and possession of no stock (30.1%). Similarly, a reduction in farm income significantly increased incidences of households' eating less (44.4%), non-healthy (29.9%) fewer kinds (34.3%) of food, skipping a meal (37.6%), having no food for a whole day (9.9%), having nothing to eat (42.3%) and possession of no stock (32.7%). While the increase in incidences of food insecurity following the reduction of farm income may appear to be counterintuitive on account of the general expectation that agricultural households typically rely on home produced food to assure their food security, we advance two possible explanations for this. First, as Simler (2010) shows, poor households in Uganda including those in rural areas y ijt = + 1 e jt + 2 x jt + 3 d jt + r t + w t + jt COVID-19 Lockdown and Exposure of Households to Food Insecurity… Robust standard errors are reported in the brackets. The dependent variable in all regressions is the different household food insecurity indicator in the column head *p < 0.10, **p < 0.05, ***p < 0.0 Robust standard errors are reported in the brackets. The dependent variable in all regressions is the different household food insecurity indicator in the column head (see main text) *p < 0.10, **p < 0.05, ***p < 0.01 who primarily practice agriculture tend to be net buyers of staple foods meaning they do not produce all the different kinds of food they require for consumption and thus must rely on markets for some items. Therefore, any reduction in farm income would increase the prevalence of food insecurity amongst them. Secondly, with the lockdown having severely disrupted movement, it is likely that two mutually reinforcing forces may have come into play further driving food insecurity. On one hand, farmers fearful of limited market opportunities scaled back production, which in turn reduced their income. On the other hand, markets fearing reduction in supply hiked food prices. Therefore, farmers with reduced income in a market with high food prices were bound to experience an increased prevalence of food insecurity. Relatedly, non-farm business income loss also significantly increased incidences of households' eating less and fewer kinds of food in addition to skipping meals, the magnitude of the increase was much less compared to that which resulted from wage and household agricultural income reduction. This could be because non-farm business is secondary for most households. The main explanation for the increase in incidences of household food insecurity was the reduction in the purchasing power of households to access food due to loss of income. The additional shock of continuous increase in food prices especially during the lockdown from May to December 2020 (FAO 2021), may partly explain the large and drastic increase in the incidences of food insecurity within households. The results for the other explanatory variables were also consistent with our expectations. For example, a greater number of children in a household increased incidences of food insecurity. In terms of regional incidences of food insecurity, the results showed that unlike the central and western regions of the country, there was a significant increase in incidences of food insecurity among households in northern Uganda. This trend can be explained by two factors. First, in Kampala and neighbouring districts in the central region, the government provided emergency relief food 7 to the poor (Isabirye and Musasizi 2020) following the start of the lockdown thereby drastically helping to assure the food security of the most vulnerable. Secondly, and consistent with the particularly low prevalence of poverty in western Uganda compared to other regions (Uganda Bureau of Statistics 2019), the lockdown did not have such a damaging impact on the food security of households in the region compared to other regions. The round dummies also showed that the magnitude of incidence of food insecurity was higher in the first round than in the later rounds. This could be attributed to the fact that government gradually relaxed the lockdown rules allowing people to resume some of their livelihood activities thereby improving their food security outcomes. In general, the results in Table 5 continue to hold in the OLS estimation in Table 6 although the coefficients are quantitatively smaller. Specifically, a reduction in wage income significantly increased incidences of households eating less (13.1%), nonhealthy (15.5%) and fewer kinds (17.4%) of food. It also significantly increased incidences of households skipping a meal (11.1%), having nothing to eat (6.5%) and possession of no stock (6.5%). On the other hand, reduction in farm income also significantly increased the incidences of households eating less (12.8%), non-healthy (10.7%) and fewer kinds (11.8%) of food, skipping a meal (8.9%), having nothing to eat (8.2%) and possession of no stock (6.1%). The same trend in incidences of food insecurity due to reduction in wage and farm income was also recorded for non-farm income reduction. To examine the impact of the lockdowns on the food security status of rural and urban households, we re-estimated Eq. (1) and restricted the sample in each case to either rural or urban households. Tables 7 and 8 summarise the results of the Probit parameter estimates and 9 and 10 summarise the results of the OLS parameter estimates with samples in each case restricted to either rural or urban households, respectively. While the results show that there was a significant increase in incidences of food insecurity across both rural and urban areas, there are still notable differences between the two locations especially in terms of the magnitude of incidences of food insecurity. As expected, the loss of farm income had a significantly bigger impact on incidences of food insecurity in rural than urban areas. For example, whereas loss of farm income significantly increased incidences of households that ate fewer kinds of food, skipped a meal, or ate less by 40.8%, 45.3%, and 53% respectively (Table 7) , the corresponding increase in urban areas (15.9%, 19.9% and 23.7%) ( Table 8) was about half or less than that of the rural areas. This differential between rural and urban areas could be attributed to the fact that unlike the later that tend to have multiple income sources, the former largely rely on sole farm income. Therefore, any shocks to farm income would expose them to more food insecurity relative to urban dwellers with multiple income sources including even urban farming. Maxwell (1995) already documented that especially in the urban settings of Kampala, many households engaged in urban farming to diversify their income sources. Similar findings of engagement in urban farming to diversify household income sources were reported by Foeken and Owuor (2008) and Mkwambisi et al. (2011) in their analysis of the urban poor across selected cities in Kenya and Malawi, respectively. On the other hand, non-farm business income reduction increased incidence of food insecurity within households in urban more than in rural areas as evidenced by the respective significant positive coefficients. This could be attributed to the generally high ownership of non-farm business by people in urban areas compared to their counterparts in rural areas. Nagler and Naude (2014) explain that rural households essentially engage in non-farm business as a secondary measure to help them cope with shocks or possibly during off agricultural season when they do not have farm activities to undertake. In general, the respective results in Tables 9 and 10 also followed the same trend seen between Tables 7 and 8. Overall, the elevated levels of food insecurity especially in rural areas suggests that COVID-19 may have reversed some of the gains recorded in recent years in lifting millions of rural smallholder farming households-those who typically constitute the biggest proportion of the poor in the country-out of poverty. This would be consistent with the findings of Valensisi (2020) who shows that the COVID-19 pandemic may have pushed between 68 and 100 million people into poverty globally in 2020. Probit estimation of household food security situation during the lockdown -rural areas Robust standard errors are reported in the brackets. The dependent variable in all regressions is the different household food insecurity indicator in the column head *p < 0.10, **p < 0.05, ***p < 0.01 Non healthy food Table 8 Probit estimation of household food security situation during the lockdown -urban areas Robust standard errors are reported in the brackets. The dependent variable in all regressions is the different household food insecurity indicator in the column head *p < 0.10, **p < 0.05, ***p < 0.01 Figure 1 tracks the progression of households' food insecurity situation over the five rounds of data collection. The trends clearly show that up to the fourth round, there was a clear reduction in incidences of households that had no food stock, nothing to eat, no food for a whole, and/ or skipped a meal. On the other hand, there was also an increase in incidences of households that ate non healthy or fewer kinds of food. While still within the zone of food insecurity, it appears that households were able to transition from extreme to less extreme forms of food insecurity months after the lockdown started. We attribute these transitions to a stabilisation of their access to food over time. This may be because over the course of the lockdown, the government did provide exceptions to initial stringent rules which barred almost all businesses from operating. In this regard, the government published guidelines which detailed the standard operating procedures for many businesses to implement whilst in operation. This allowed many people to resume work and is likely, therefore, to have contributed to the reduction of incidences of extreme food insecurity over time. This trend generally echoes the findings of Ruan et al. (2021) who showed that following an initial lockdown induced spike, prices of wholesale vegetables eventually stabilised at their usual annual average after 11 weeks. Between the fourth and the fifth round, there was a reversal in the trends observed in the preceding four rounds. Other than being the peak of lean season in the country, this period also coincided with the peak of Uganda's 2021 national electoral season when lockdown rules were enforced stringently due to fears of large movement of people possibly contributing to spread of COVID-19. These two dynamics likely explain the changes in food insecurity in round five. In this paper we examined the impacts of COVID-19 lockdown induced income losses on household food security in Uganda. Our analysis shows that lockdown induced income losses significantly increased within households' incidences of eating less, non-healthy and few kinds of food, skipping a meal, having nothing to eat, or no food to eat for a whole day, and possession of no stock. We therefore conclude that lockdown induced income losses significantly increased the incidence of food insecurity among households by reducing their access to food. While income-based food access and its associated challenges generally tends to be a concern for urban households on account of their dependence on market-purchased food, our results show that the lockdowns exerted food access challenges across both urban and rural areas. However, our analysis also shows that there was a gradual recovery in the food security situation over the course of the lockdowns. The main policy recommendations from these findings which may be useful in the future in preparing for similar shocks are threefold. First, for waged workers, there is need for the development of an all-inclusive employment insurance scheme that can provide protection to workers when unprecedented shocks such as the one occasioned by the pandemic occur. This will help to smoothen their income amidst uncertainty thus protecting their welfare. Secondly, for non-farm businesses, there is need to develop and deepen the financial markets to be able to provide credit to both large and small businesses including special products that can support businesses in the informal sector. Given that the government COVID-19 stimulus package was largely accessible to large businesses in the formal sector only, the government may also want to develop systems that can allow it to increase its support to the small businesses in the future. Thirdly, there is need for targeted investment in building the resilience capacity of particularly agricultural households in rural areas where over 70% of the population still lives. Addressing pre-existing inefficiencies in the production system may substantially enhance the food security resilience of particularly rural agricultural households to future epidemics. These inefficiencies can be addressed through, for example, enhanced investment in the increased use of improved inputs and the mechanisation of agricultural operations across the entire value chain of production from land preparation, weeding, harvesting, and post-harvest operations. This latter suggestion is supported by evidence from the work of Deininger and Okidi (2003) , and Fan and Zhang (2008) on Uganda who show that investments in increasing the production and productivity of the poor provides the best avenue for poverty reduction and leads to improved food security outcomes. Additionally, as Abraham and Pingali (2017) have shown, growth in agriculture will offer great potential for reducing food insecurity. The corresponding author states that there is no conflict of interest. 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