Abstract

Abstract Despite agriculture being the main economic activity in Uganda, increasing food prices within the country point to the growing challenge of food insecurity. In 2016, food shortage was reported in some parts of Uganda (mainly in Karamoja sub-region and parts of Serere) and government resorted to temporary relief distribution of food from other regions of the country. The acute food shortage in one part of the country while another part, a few hundred kilometers away, has excess farm output calls into question the efficiency of the supply chain of some agro-commodities. This research attempts to examine the challenges faced in the production and supply of bananas in Uganda and how the supply chain perspective can help us address these challenges better. We juxtapose the supply chain approach against the value chain perspective and argue that the supply chain perspective offers a much deeper understanding of market-based challenges, which affect livelihoods of smallholders who often sell their products at rock-bottom prices. A cross sectional survey of various banana production and consumptions points in Uganda was conducted. The findings show that losses in the supply chain accounted for about 29% of banana production – a figure slightly lower than that 40% previously reported in the literature. In addition, the farmers did not benefit from increased food prices due to inadequate market information at their disposal despite banana value chains having recently received significant development attention. We also found that infrastructural bottlenecks and limited collaboration and coordination among smallholders heavily affected the supply of bananas in the country. This is arguably a key factor that strongly explains the food insecurity problem in Uganda. We conclude that the findings point to a different problem, which is that of a dysfunctional supply chain structure of bananas from the rural areas to urban centres in Kampala.

Highlights

  • Improving smallholders’ access to markets is a leading policy objective of most governments in Sub-Saharan Africa [1,4,17]

  • We argue that the systemic farm-to-market losses of agricultural produce including bananas largely explain the food insecurity problems that many African countries like Uganda faces [28]

  • As we have demonstrated in this paper, a long and complex supply chain coupled with infrastructural impediments and weak collaboration and coordination among banana supply chain actors is central to understanding the food insecurity challenge in some parts of the Uganda

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Summary

Introduction

Improving smallholders’ access to markets is a leading policy objective of most governments in Sub-Saharan Africa [1,4,17]. We argue that the systemic farm-to-market losses of agricultural produce including bananas largely explain the food insecurity problems that many African countries like Uganda faces [28]. This paper focuses on supply chain challenges, which can be summarized as high variability in supply, asymmetric information flow, low balance of power between smallholders and intermediate buyers, and quality related issues These are compounded by category (i) or policy related challenges such as infrastructure problems. We postulate that infrastructural bottlenecks play a significant role in the food insecurity problem in the country and by focusing on the banana production and supply, we hypothesize : H1. Lack of collaboration and coordination amongst supply chain players is responsible for food crisis in Uganda

Methodology
Findings
Conclusion and policy recommendations
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