Abstract

Food insecurity is a salient dimension of household poverty and a crucial issue viewed on a global or within a country level. It applies not only to less-developed countries, but also to countries of the European Union. In the European conditions, it implies that people affected by this problem cannot afford enough food of sufficient quality and quantity that would allow them to stay healthy and participate in the society. This paper attempts to fill that gap in the existing literature regarding food insecurity in the Visegrad Group countries. It aims to identify the factors affecting the occurrence of this phenomenon. In the empirical analysis based on the data from the European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions Survey, logit models with country dummy variables are applied. The study shows that the households’ food insecurity is associated with income, level of urbanisation, household type, disabilities of household members, and attributes of household head, such as educational attainment, gender, age, health and status of economic activity. Moreover, the findings strongly support the research hypothesis that the food insecurity profile exhibits country-specific effects. The results provide a much-needed baseline of evidence on food insecurity in the vulnerable households in the Visegrad Group countries.

Highlights

  • One would not expect food insecurity (FI) to be a European problem and the analysis of this issue should be restricted to poor, low-income countries

  • The study deals with the cross-sectional data of the European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions survey (EU-SILC) for 2017 and it is conducted at the household level

  • In low-income economies, households that live in rural areas appear to be more vulnerable than those living in towns and cities (Magaña-Lemus et al, 2016; Smith, Rabbitt and Coleman-Jensen; 2017), on the other hand, in middle-income and high-income economies, no statistically significant difference exists between rural and urban areas regard to prevalence of food insufficiency, controlling for multiple socio-economic and demographic factors (Smith, Rabbitt and Coleman-Jensen, 2017)

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Summary

Introduction

One would not expect food insecurity (FI) to be a European problem and the analysis of this issue should be restricted to poor, low-income countries. The study deals with the cross-sectional data of the European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions survey (EU-SILC) for 2017 and it is conducted at the household level In this survey, the household reference person is asked “Can your household afford a meal with meat, chicken, fish (or vegetarian equivalent) every second day?”, which has a binary outcome (Yes/No). The study examines households’ profiles of food insecurity measured by people’s ability to afford a meal with meat, fish or vegetarian equivalent every second day. It provides new evidence on this issue by examining common correlates of food insecurity in the countries under consideration. We present and discusses the results of the carried out analysis and the final section provides conclusions

Literature review
The data
The method
The results and discussions
Limitation
Findings
Conclusions
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