Abstract

The benefits of interventions which improve early nutrition are well recognised. These benefits, however, only accrue to the extent that later life circumstances allow. Consequently, in adverse contexts many of the benefits will never be realised, particularly for the most vulnerable, exacerbating inequality. Returns to investment in early nutrition could be improved if we identified contextual factors constraining their realisation and interventions to weaken these. We estimate cost and impact of scaling 10 nutrition interventions for a cohort of South African children born in 2021. We estimate associated declines in malnutrition and mortality, and improvements in years of schooling and future earnings. To examine the role of context over the life-course we estimate benefits with and without additional improvements in school quality and employment opportunities by socio-economic quintile. Scale up reduces national stunting (height for age < = -2SD) rates among children at 24 months by 3.18 percentage points, implying an increase in mean height for age z-score (HAZ) of 0.10, and 53,000 years of additional schooling. Quintile 1 (the poorest) displays the largest decline in stunting, and largest increase in mean HAZ. Estimated total cost of increasing coverage of the interventions for the cohort is US$90 million. The present value of the additional years of schooling is estimated at close to US$2 billion. Cost-benefit ratios suggest the highest return occurs in quintile 5 (1:23). Reducing inequality in school quality closes the gap between quintile 5 and the lower quintiles. If school quality and labour force participation were equal the highest returns are in quintile 1(1:31). An enabling environment is key to maximising human development returns from investing in early nutrition, and to avoid exacerbating existing inequality. Therefore, particularly for children in adverse conditions, it is essential to identify and implement complementary interventions over the life course.

Highlights

  • South Africa faces a high burden of child undernutrition, 2016 data indicate that 27% of children under 5 years of age were stunted (height for age z-score (HAZ)

  • We focus on the interactions between early nutrition, which protects human development potential, school quality which influences the realisation of protected potential, and labour market opportunities which shape the utilisation of realised potential

  • Folic acid supplementation or fortification Calcium supplementation in pregnancy Multiple micronutrient supplementation in pregnancy Balanced energy supplementation Breastfeeding promotion Complementary feeding—supplementary feeding and education Vitamin A Supplementation Zinc supplementation Therapeutic feeding for severe wasting (SAM) Treatment for moderate acute malnutrition (MAM) Total cost nutrition interventions Cost of increased years of schooling arising from improved early nutrition Total cost

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Summary

Introduction

South Africa faces a high burden of child undernutrition, 2016 data indicate that 27% of children under 5 years of age were stunted (height for age z-score (HAZ)

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