Swaziland loses as much as 3.1 percent
of its Gross Domestic Product (GDP) due to the
effects of undernutrition. This
is the alarming conclusion of a new study entitled The Cost of Hunger in Africa
released by the government of Swaziland and WFP.
Children who have to repeat
grades in school because they’re
too hungry to concentrate cost
the Swaziland’s education
system around US $701,000 per
year
|
MBABANE—The African Kingdom of
Swaziland loses roughly 3.1 percent of its GDP every year due to the long-term
impacts of hunger, a new study assessing the economic impact of malnutrition
across Africa has shown.
The Cost of Hunger in Africa report,
prepared by the government of Swaziland working together with WFP, estimates
that hunger costs the country around US $92 million per year in lost worker
productivity.
"This study provides an elegant
argument for addressing undernutrition,” said Prince Hlangusemphi, the
country’s minister of economic planning and development. He added that
eradicating hunger was a “tangible goal” that Swaziland was committed to
achieving.
A heavy toll
The Cost of Hunger in Africa study
drew on data from 2009 to measure the economic impact of stunting and chronic
malnutrition. Stunting, or being short for one’s age, results when children are
denied the necessary proteins, vitamins and minerals their bodies need to
develop before the age of five.
Around 270,000 adults in Swaziland, or
more than 40 percent of its workers, suffer from stunting. As a result, they’re
more likely to get sick, do poorly in school, be less productive at work and
have shorter lives.
Treating cases of diarrhoea, anaemia,
respiratory infections and other help problems related to hunger costs
Swaziland around US $6 million per year. An estimated 37 million working hours
were lost in 2009 as a result of hunger-related deaths, with a cost to the
economy of about 1.4 percent of GDP.
Low worker productivity saps around US
$14.8 million per year out of sectors that rely on manual labour and another US
$29.5 million from those that require some education. Children who have to
repeat grades in school because they’re too hungry to concentrate cost the
country’s education system around US $701,000 per year.
The study estimated that by reducing
the rate of stunting from 40 percent to 10 percent of the population by 2025,
it could reduce losses to its economy by as much as US $60 million per year.
Cost of hunger in Africa
Swaziland was the fourth country on
the continent to carry out the Cost of Hunger in Africa study. Earlier findings
indicated that Ethiopia loses 16.5 percent of its GDP to hunger for a total
cost of US $4.7 billion per year.
Egypt put its own losses from hunger
at $3.7 billion per year (1.9 percent of GDP) while Uganda, the first country
to release the report, estimated that hunger cost it 5.6 percent of GDP, or
around $899 million per year.
The research is being conducted in a
total of 12 African countries, using a methodology originally applied in Latin
America. Eight other countries will release their own reports later in the year
including: Botswana, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Ghana, Kenya, Malawi, Mauritania
and Rwanda.
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