The effect of crop post-harvest losses on household expenditure and nutrition security of smallholder farmers in Uganda.
The effect of crop post-harvest losses on household expenditure and nutrition security of smallholder farmers in Uganda.
Date
2025-12
Authors
Arinda, Johny
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
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Publisher
Makerere University
Abstract
About one-third of global food production is lost before consumption which threatens nutrition
security. As the world's population continues to grow and demand for food escalates, addressing
crop post-harvest losses becomes increasingly imperative. This study examines the effect of crop
post-harvest losses on food consumption, non-food consumption expenditure and nutrition
security among smallholder farmers in Uganda. Using a balanced panel dataset of 621 smallholder
farming households collected as part of the Centre for development (ZEF) project across eight
districts between June 2020 and August 2021, the research applies fixed-effects panel regression
and binary probit panel regression models to analyze the effect of crop post-harvest losses on
household food, non-food consumption expenditure and nutrition security. Results reveal that crop
post-harvest losses significantly increase both food and non-food consumption expenditure,
indicating that households divert more resources to compensate for lost produce. However, crop
post-harvest losses do not affect household nutrition security. Regional disparities are evident, with
Karamoja exhibiting the lowest consumption levels and Eastern showing the highest food
consumption expenditure. Socioeconomic variables such as region, occupation, sex of the
household head, land ownership, education of household head, and household size were found to
influence household food consumption expenditure. In addition, variables like region, marital
status, occupation, land ownership, access to remittances, access to credit, household size, and
level of education of the household head were found to influence household non-food consumption
expenditure. Finally, variables like region, occupation, land ownership, access to remittances,
household size, level of education, age of the household head, and income of the household head
were found to influence household nutrition security. The findings underscore that reducing crop
post-harvest losses could improve household welfare by enhancing food availability, stabilizing
incomes, and freeing resources for non-food needs. There is therefore a need to reduce crop post-
harvest losses through improving storage facilities, strengthening extension services, and
enhancing farmers’ access to credit and markets.
Description
A dissertation submitted to the Directorate of Research and Graduate Training in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the award of the Degree of Master of Agribusiness Management of Makerere University.
Keywords
Citation
Arinda, J. (2025). The effect of crop post-harvest losses on household expenditure and nutrition security of smallholder farmers in Uganda [unpublished masters thesis]. Makerere University, Kampala.