Food security in Tanzania

the challenge of rapid urbanisation

authored by
Hugh Wenban-Smith, Anja Faße, Ulrike Grote
Abstract

Urbanisation in Tanzania is proceeding apace. This article seeks to identify the challenge posed by rapid urbanisation for food security in Tanzania to 2030, the Sustainable Development Goals horizon. It is hypothesized that urban food security largely depends on the food supply systems and the rural food production potential. The analysis of these interlinkages is based on secondary macro data and own primary micro data. Tanzania has done well to achieve broad self-sufficiency in basic foodstuffs to date, but rapid urbanisation will pose a severe future challenge as regards food security, particularly for the disadvantaged poorer people of the towns and cities in terms of food affordability, stability and food safety. Whether Tanzania can avoid future deterioration in urban food security will depend on how responsive and resilient the urban food supply systems prove to be in the face of continuing urban growth, changing consumption patterns, weak rural–urban food supply linkages and production constraints in the smallholder farming sector.

Organisation(s)
Institute of Environmental Economics and World Trade
Type
Article
Journal
Food security
Volume
8
Pages
973-984
No. of pages
12
ISSN
1876-4517
Publication date
10.2016
Publication status
Published
Peer reviewed
Yes
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Food Science, Development, Agronomy and Crop Science
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG 2 - Zero Hunger, SDG 11 - Sustainable Cities and Communities
Electronic version(s)
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12571-016-0612-8 (Access: Closed)