Regional Developments
Africa south of the Sahara
Jemimah Njuki, Samuel Benin, Wim Marivoet, John Ulimwengu and Caroline Mwongera
Responses to climate change in Africa must focus on adaptation by tailoring innovations to diverse local contexts and mobilizing investments for resilience
Africa’s food systems are evolving rapidly, driven by the rise of an African middle class, growing urbanization, shifts in the labor force from farming to nonfarm jobs, and increased availability of digital technologies. As a result, the entire food system is changing, marked by rising food import bills as the gap between Africa’s food production and consumption widens, by growing consumer demand for more diverse, higher-quality and safer foods, and by new preferences regarding packaging, shopping outlets, and financial and electronic payment services. Despite growing demand and competition for African farmland, low-input, rainfed production systems with low yields still predominate, and the entire food value chain is led by smallholders and small and medium enterprises (SMEs), with women playing critical roles in the production, processing, retailing, preparation, and waste management of food.
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