From Corn to Popcorn? Urbanization and Food Consumption in Sub-Saharan Africa: Evidence from Rural-Urban Migrants in Tanzania

L. Cockx, Liesbeth Colen, Joachim De Weerdt
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引用次数: 26

Abstract

There is rising concern that the ongoing wave of urbanization will have profound effects on eating patterns and increase the risk of nutrition-related non-communicable diseases. Yet, our understanding of urbanization as a driver of food consumption remains limited and primarily based upon research designs that fail to disentangle the effect of living in an urban environment from other socioeconomic disparities. Data from the Tanzania National Panel Survey, which tracked out-migrating respondents, allow us to compare individuals’ dietary patterns before and after they relocated from rural to urban areas and assess whether those changes differ from household members who stayed behind or moved to a different rural area. We find that individuals who relocated to urban areas experience a much more pronounced shift away from the consumption of traditional staples, and towards more high-sugar, conveniently consumed and prepared foods. Contrary to what is often claimed in the literature, living in an urban environment is not found to contribute positively to the intake of protein-rich foods, nor to diet diversity. Though we do not find a strong association with weight gain, these changes in eating patterns represent a clear nutritional concern regarding the potential longer-term impacts of urbanization. Our results however also indicate that the growth of unhealthy food consumption with urbanization is largely linked to rising incomes. As such, health concerns over diets can be expected to spread rapidly to less-urbanized areas as well, as soon as income growth takes off there. Our findings clearly call for more in-depth research that may help to improve health and food and nutrition security as well as correctly predict food demand and adapt trade, agricultural and development policies.
从玉米到爆米花?撒哈拉以南非洲的城市化和粮食消费:来自坦桑尼亚城乡移民的证据
人们越来越担心,正在进行的城市化浪潮将对饮食模式产生深远影响,并增加与营养有关的非传染性疾病的风险。然而,我们对城市化作为食物消费驱动因素的理解仍然有限,并且主要基于未能将生活在城市环境中的影响与其他社会经济差异区分开来的研究设计。来自坦桑尼亚国家小组调查的数据追踪了外迁受访者,使我们能够比较个人从农村搬到城市地区之前和之后的饮食模式,并评估这些变化是否与留守或搬到不同农村地区的家庭成员不同。我们发现,搬到城市地区的人经历了一个更明显的转变,即从传统主食的消费转向更多的高糖、方便消费和预制食品。与文献中经常声称的相反,生活在城市环境中并没有发现对摄入富含蛋白质的食物有积极的贡献,也没有发现对饮食多样性有积极的贡献。虽然我们没有发现肥胖与体重增加有很强的联系,但这些饮食模式的变化代表了城市化潜在的长期影响所带来的明确的营养问题。然而,我们的研究结果也表明,随着城市化的发展,不健康食品消费的增长在很大程度上与收入的增加有关。因此,一旦收入开始增长,人们对饮食健康的担忧也会迅速蔓延到城市化程度较低的地区。我们的发现显然要求进行更深入的研究,这可能有助于改善健康、粮食和营养安全,以及正确预测粮食需求和调整贸易、农业和发展政策。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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