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Food Science & Technology

A vision of achieving food security: does physical infrastructure matter? A Sub-Saharan African perspective

ORCID Icon, ORCID Icon & ORCID Icon
Article: 2350146 | Received 06 Oct 2023, Accepted 27 Apr 2024, Published online: 16 May 2024
 

Abstract

Achieving Food Security and ending hunger in Africa have been identified as necessary for attaining sustainable growth and development. On the other hand, physical infrastructural development has been documented to have a strong impact on global food security. This study investigates the nexus between physical Infrastructure, including transport, electricity, information and communication technology, water supply and sanitation and food security in Sub-Saharan Africa. The study uses the Panel Corrected Standard Errors (PCSEs) estimation technique on data from 2000 to 2021 across a sample of 40 selected countries. The finding indicates that transport, electricity, information and telecommunication, water supply and sanitation have positive and positive effects on food security in selected SSA countries. The estimated coefficient indicates that improvement in transport, electricity, information and telecommunication technology (ICT), water supply and sanitation enhance food security by 0.916%, 0.664%, 0.448% and 0.758%, respectively. This is a reflection that improvement in physical infrastructure has the potential to accentuate the attainment of food security in Africa. In addition, GDP per capita growth, merchandise trade and political stability positively affect food security, while inflation and population growth negatively affect food security. In this light, the study recommends that special attention should be tailored towards the quality of physical infrastructures and access to such infrastructure at all times. SSA countries must strengthen their infrastructure systems to enhance sustainable agricultural practices, which will greatly improve food security.

Disclosure statement

The authors did not report any conflict of interest.

Additional information

Funding

No funding was received by the authors.

Notes on contributors

Yaya Deome Hamadjoda Lefe

Yaya Deome Hamadjoda Lefe Pan African Scholar with a Ph.D/Doctorate Degree in Governance and Regional Integration from the Pan African University-African Union Commission. His areas of research interest are: Climate change, food security, infrastructural developments, Governance and Regional integration, climate finance; Gender, Tourism, Inequalities, Development Economics, Migration and others.

Aloysius Mom Njong

Yaya Deome Hamadjoda Lefe Pan African Scholar with a Ph.D/Doctorate Degree in Governance and Regional Integration from the Pan African University-African Union Commission. His areas of research interest are: Climate change, food security, infrastructural developments, Governance and Regional integration, climate finance; Gender, Tourism, Inequalities, Development Economics, Migration and others.

Richardson Kojo Edeme

Yaya Deome Hamadjoda Lefe Pan African Scholar with a Ph.D/Doctorate Degree in Governance and Regional Integration from the Pan African University-African Union Commission. His areas of research interest are: Climate change, food security, infrastructural developments, Governance and Regional integration, climate finance; Gender, Tourism, Inequalities, Development Economics, Migration and others.