The state of food security in Pakistan: future challenges and coping strategies.
Ahmad, Munir ; Farooq, Umar
Pakistan is a low-income developing country and agriculture is its
most important sector due to its primary commitment of providing healthy
food to her fast-growing population. The total cultivated area has
increased by just 40 percent during the past 60 years, while there has
been more than a four-times increase in population and a sevenfold urban
expansion resulting in mega cities (2a) as well as a rising population
pressure on cultivated land. Although the production of wheat, which is
a major food crop, has increased five-fold during the same period, yet
the country is a marginal importer of wheat. Reducing poverty, hunger,
and food insecurity are essential parts of the Millennium Development
Goals. The paper refers these and highlights the implications of the
government's current food security policies--on the one hand, the
government's wheat-centred food policy is heavily costing the
national exchequer, and on the other, urban consumers are subsidised at
the expense of farmers, which wheat millers are absorbing almost all the
subsidy provided by the government to implement the wheat policy. Much
effort is needed to narrow the gap between population growth and
domestic food production. Managing food security in Pakistan requires an
understanding of how agricultural policies affect food supply and
income, and the poor and the vulnerable in the rural and urban areas,
and how this burden is transferred to the other sectors. The main focus
of this paper is to find the pathways to achieve food and nutritional
security for a growing population in Pakistan.
Keywords: Food Security, Nutritional Security, Food Availability,
Food Policies, Social Safety Nets, Sources of Growth in Agriculture,
Pakistan
1. INTRODUCTION
Pakistan is a low income developing country. Agriculture is the
most important sector of the country meeting food and fiber requirements
of the fast growing population. Although the rate of population increase
has considerably slowed down from over 3 percent in 1980s to 2.09
percent in 2009-10, it is still considered high. (1) With the current
rate of population growth, the population is expected to get doubled by
2050--making Pakistan 4th largest nation by 2050 from current status of
6th most populous state of the world [Pakistan (2010)].
The total cultivated area has increased by just 40 percent during
past 60 years, while there has been more than 4 times increase in
population with urban expansion of over seven-fold--resulting into
mega-cities (2) as well as rising population pressure on cultivated
land. Wheat production, a major food crop, has increased five-fold
during the same period--yet the country is marginal importer of wheat.
Tremendous efforts are needed both advances in technology and population
control to narrow the food supply-demand gap.
Reducing poverty, hunger and food insecurity are essential part of
MDGs (3) and are pre-requisites for economic development. Food security
and economic growth mutually interact and reinforce each other in the
development process [Timmer (2004)]. A country unable to produce the
needed food and has no resources or afford to buy food from the
international market to meet demand-supply gap, is not food sovereign
state [Pinstrup-Andersen (2009)]. Food security is thus fundamental to
national security, which is generally ignored [Fullbrook (2010)]. The
extra-ordinary rise in food prices in later part of the first decade of
21st century raised an alarm bell on food security, particularly for the
developing world. Pakistan is no exception. To achieve food-secure and
pro-poor agricultural growth, Pakistan needs to adopt a comprehensive
approach towards increasing productivity of all foods rather than merely
concentrating upon achieving just wheat-based food security. Moreover,
for benefiting from adoption of new agricultural technologies, the farm
households should be able to finance expensive inputs and diversify
their livelihoods through optimum farm and non-farm sectors'
employment mix.
Managing food security in Pakistan also requires an understanding
about its dimensions; future challenges of agricultural growth and food
security; and impact of agricultural policies on food supply and income,
the poor vulnerable in rural and urban areas; and what are do-able
options. Thus, the main focus of this paper is to trace the pathways to
achieve food and nutritional security for a growing population in
Pakistan.
This paper is organised into seven sections. Section 2 discusses
food security concept. Section 3 analyses food security situation in
Pakistan in terms of food availability trends, its factors and nature of
food security in the future. Section 4 critically evaluates
Pakistan's food and other policies. Future challenges are discussed
in Section 5. The ways forward are described in Section 6. Section 7
concludes the paper.
2. WHAT IS FOOD SECURITY?
Food security is the people's right to define their own
policies and strategies for the sustainable production, distribution and
consumption of food that guarantees the right to food for the entire
population, on the basis of small and medium-sized production,
respecting their own cultures and the diversity of peasant, fishing and
indigenous forms of agricultural production, marketing and management of
rural areas, in which women play a fundamental role. (4)
The history of food security dates back to the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights in 1948 in which the right to food was
recognised as a core element of standard of living and also to the world
food crisis of 1972-1974. The food security concept continued developing
overtime and approximately 200 definitions and 450 indicators are now
available in the literature. (5)
The term "food security" refers the access to adequate
amount of food for meeting dietary energy needs that implies for many as
self-sufficiency as producing required food domestically
[Pinstrup-Andersen (2009)]. A country is self-sufficient in food when it
can manage the balance between supply and demand by producing
domestically--no matter what the equilibrium price would be that could
be beyond the reach of majority of the population in a developing
economy.
The focus of national and global food security is generally on the
supply side of the food equation--whether sufficient food is available
[Pinstrup-Andersen (2009)]. (6) The availability of food however cannot
assure its access to the people. To ensure food security at the
household or individual level, the access part needs to be addressed.
This led the World Food Summit in 1996 to redefine the term as
'food security exists when all people, at all times, have physical
and economic access to sufficient safe and nutritious food to meet their
dietary needs and food preferences for a healthy and active life'.
This definition encompasses five fundamental aspects: availability,
access, stability, nutritional status and preferences of food. All of
these components are influenced by physical, economic, political and
other conditions within communities and even within households, and are
often destabilised by shocks such as natural disasters and conflicts [UK
Parliament (2006)].
The availability and access are two important dimensions of food
security. The availability refers to sufficient quantities of
quality/nutritious food available to every individuals in the country.
However, even with sufficient availability of food at the country level,
food availability is a serious concern in areas having armed conflicts,
non-availability of arable lands, and existence of prolonged
droughts--this is true for many areas in Pakistan. The distribution of
food stuff in these areas is also faulty.
The access refers to the capacity to produce, buy and/or acquire
appropriate nutritious food by the households and the individuals
[Timmer (2000)]. Having access requires that sufficient food is
consistently available in the market. But, the availability of
sufficient food at country/local level does not guarantee that all
people are food secure, since low incomes, lack of roads and
infrastructure could deny access to desired quantities of quality food
[UK Parliament (2006)]. Therefore, both availability and access parts of
food security are inseparably inter-linked [Pinstrup-Andersen (2009)].
The access entails both physical access and economic access--the
former refers to a place where food is available and the latter denotes
'entitlement' to food [Sen (1982)]. The former requires
efficient market infrastructure to have access of people at low cost.
The entitlement can be ensured either by own production or having food
buying capacity or having access/right to other sources of getting
desired food [Staaz, et al. (2009)]. Therefore, there is direct
relationship between poverty and food insecurity since the very poor
cannot take precautionary measures against food insecurity and thus,
they would be the most vulnerable [Cullet (2003); Herrmann (2006)].
Stability refers to consistent supply of nutritious food at the
national level as well as stability in access to food at the household
and individuals levels. It is therefore directly affected by the
performance of the agriculture sector. Only a small proportion of
consumers in developing countries can afford to store food for the whole
year. Therefore, besides production, stability requires better
management of domestic production, food markets integration, and
rational use of buffer stocks and trade [FAO (2002)].
Fluctuations/shortages in food grains production have been very
common in Pakistan. At times, the government has to import significant
quantities of food items to meet the shortages. In order to meet the
shortages in deficit/urban areas and save consumers from high food
prices, the government has been actively pursuing the policies of
support/procurement prices, storage and distribution though at a very
high cost. Therefore, market infrastructure has a much more role to
play.
The definition of food security also alludes to 'safe and
nutritious food' that is required for an active and healthy life.
For an active and healthy life, the human body has to effectively
utilise the available nutrients in the food consumed [Staaz, et al.
(2009)]. Biological food absorption is affected by food preparation and
health condition of an individual--influenced by sanitation, clean
drinking water, and knowledge of the households regarding proper food
storage, processing and basic nutrition. (7) Furthermore, the
preferences for food add another dimension to food security that relate
to the social and religious norms. People with equal access to food but
having different food preferences based on religion, society norms,
taste etc could demonstrate totally a different nature of food security.
The foods are to be socially and culturally acceptable and consistent
with religious and ethical values [Pinstrup-Andersen (2009)].
The above discussion wrapped around various dimensions of food
security--availability, accessibility, stability, nutritional status and
preferences, in general and in Pakistan in particular, highlights the
fact that achieving food security is difficult, complex and challenging
phenomenon. In view of the recent surges in food prices and policy
shifts in response by various countries in panic further sparked off
uncertainty that even led to the developed nations to think of
"whether their own food security is in peril" [Fullbrook
(2010), p. 5]. Moreover, the countries lacking food production potential
and could afford to import their food needs started looking for chunk of
agricultural lands across the borders to ensure uninterrupted food
supply--overlooking a fundamental reality that when the locals of the
host country are short of food who would guard the supply off to them?
The considerations of the world are mainly confined to assuring steady
supply of affordable nutritious food, but are missing the fundamental
issue of 'security'--food is basically energy for humans
without which "we are all dead" and thus should be viewed as a
"security good" [Fullbrook (2010), p. 6].
3. FOOD SECURITY SITUATION IN PAKISTAN
3.1. Trends in Food Production, Availability and Food Security
Agricultural production is the foundation of food availability,
especially for calories and proteins. Adequate food supply at affordable
prices is the cornerstone of food security policy of all nations of the
world including Pakistan. Pakistan has made significant progress in
terms of increasing food supplies. Per capita availability of cereals
increased from 120 kilograms in 1961 to 137 kilograms 1990-91 and
further increased to 154 kilograms in 2008-9 [Ahmad, et al. (2010) and
Table 1]; of which, more than 80 percent is accounted for by wheat
alone. The government of Pakistan has tried to maintain per capita daily
availability at the level of 2400 calories since early 1990s--that
increased from 1754 calories in 1961 (Table 2). However, this daily
average calories availability is substantially lower than the average of
other developing and developed countries by 10 percent and 26 percent,
respectively. The changes overtime in the composition of food intake
show a shrinking share of wheat in total calories availability and a
rising share of animals and other sources (Table 2). The share of wheat
declined from 48 percent in 1990 to 38 percent in 2006, while the share
of other cereals declined more prominently from 20 percent in 1970 to 6
percent in 2006. The share of livestock products in calorie intake
increased from 12 percent in 1970 to 18 percent in 2002, which
marginally declined to 15 percent in 2006. The share of other
items--vegetable oil, vegetable, fruit and sweeteners, has substantially
increased from 20 percent in 1970 to 37 percent in 2006.
Domestic production, net trade and food aid are the main
constituents of food availability at the national level. Despite more
than 3 1/2 times increase in cereals and pulses production since early
the 1960s, Pakistan has been importing significant quantities of wheat,
pulses and edible oil to meet domestic needs. The share of imports in
wheat consumption during the 1961-2006 has varied from 26 percent in
1961 to less than 1 percent in 2004 (Table 3). The huge food deficit
during early 1960s largely reduced during 1970s as a result of Green
Revolution technologies. The dependence on wheat imports however,
re-emerged later because of stagnation in wheat productivity. In
contrast, Pakistan has been successfully producing enough rice for
domestic consumption and even its significant quantities are also
exported [Ahmad, et al. (2010)].
One of the important indicators of economic access to food is the
proportion of people below the poverty line [FAO (1998)]. The historical
evidences show that: poverty increased during the 1960s despite rapid
economic growth; it declined during 1970 through 1987-88 in spite of the
growth being relatively slower; the declining poverty trends got
reversed in 1990s albeit with reasonable rate of economic growth; and
during 2000s poverty continued to rise in the face of uncertain economic
growth. Nevertheless, the daily average availability of calories per
person progressively increased over the last five decade--even though
this availability has not been consistently reflected in declining
poverty.
Despite significant improvement in aggregate food supply,
malnutrition is a widespread phenomenon in Pakistan [Ahmad, et al.
(2010)]. Rather, it has been argued that per capita food intake in the
country has been higher than the recommended average at the national
level [Khan (2003)]. Nevertheless, one third of all pregnant women were
malnourished and over 25 percent babies had low birth weight in 2001-2.
Malnutrition was a major problem responsible for more than 30 percent of
all infant and child deaths in the country in 2001-02. The incidence of
moderate to severe underweight, stunting, and wasting among children of
less than 5 years of age was about 38 percent, 37 percent and 13
percent, respectively in 2001-02 [Planning Commission and UNICEF
(2004)]. Malnourishment among mothers as reflected in body mass index
was 21 percent in 2001-02 [Khan (2003)]. The overall undernourishment
reported by FAO (2008) was about 24 percent in 2004, which is not only
worst in South Asia after Bangladesh but this has been observed to be
increasing over time. Micronutrient deficiency is pervasive in Pakistan,
which is regarded as 'hidden hunger' reflecting a combination
of dietary deficiency, poor maternal health and nutrition, high burden
of morbidity and low micronutrient content of the soil especially for
iodine and zinc [Pakistan (2010)]. The deficiency in most of these
micronutrients affects the immunity, growth and mental development and
may underlie the high burden of morbidity and mortality among women and
children in Pakistan. This indicates that despite having sufficient food
available at the national level, a large chunk of our population mostly
the children and the women lack access to nutritiously balanced food.
The foregoing discussion highlights the fact that enhanced food
security on its own cannot guarantee good nutrition status at the
household level [Fullbrook (2010)]. Thus, greater national level food
availability in Pakistan has not been translated into actual increase in
calorie-rich food intake at the regional or household level reflecting
reduced access to nutritious food. This could be due to worsening income
and landholdings inequality in the country. A rising calorie-based
poverty implies that most people had declining access to nutritious
food. In addition, disparities in access to education and health may
also be crucial. Therefore, simply emphasising on increasing food
supplies cannot ensure food security. In such circumstances stable
nutritious food supply and its distribution is considered to be critical
issue [Pinstrup-Andersen (2009)].
3.2. Nature of Future Food Insecurity
In view of continuously rising population, the food demand in the
country shall naturally increase. However, it is worth mentioning that
future food demand would be different from today's because of the
factors like: (a) increased proportion of older people due to age
longevity; (b) greater urbanisation and emergence of big cities; (c)
changes in family composition and structure; (d) changes in food
consumption patterns and habits; (e) prevalence of diseases like
Cardiac, Diabetic and Hepatitis etc. having special food requirements;
and (f) rapid penetration of Super Markets and international Food Chains
in developing countries. To target such diversions in food consumption
in future, the major focus should be to incentivise the agricultural
production to future needs. Thus, production system needs to be
channelised towards higher production of fruit, vegetable and other high
value commodities.
In Pakistan, about 68 percent of population earns their livelihood
from agriculture sector to a varying extent. Livestock and crops
sub-sectors contribute up to 28 percent and 24 percent towards rural
households overall income, respectively. The non-farm enterprises, wages
and services, remittances and other sources contribute 20 percent, 18
percent, 7 percent, and 3 percent, respectively. In rural Pakistan the
economic access to food is mainly influenced by household level
differences in land holding, education and employment. Decreasing size
of land holdings besides inability of the economy to generate new
employment limits productivity growth and rise in farm incomes.
Even though the food is predominantly produced in rural areas of
Pakistan, yet a majority of the poor have lower economic access to food
as compared to urban areas [World Bank (2008); Staatz, et al. (2009)].
Reliance on markets to obtain food for most of the food insecure people
both in urban and rural areas is a common feature. The dependence of the
urban poor on food markets is very well-known and documented, while the
reliance of most of the rural food insecure among landless, marginal and
small sized farmers' classes is rarely acknowledged [Staatz, et al.
(2009)]. In addition to landless rural inhabitant (45 percent) more than
30 percent of the cultivators are net buyers of food staples--accounting
62 percent of the rural population who are either partially or totally
dependent on market for food needs [Ahmad (2010)].
Unfortunately, the government efforts in providing relief to
consumers and the subsidy involved in food staples are rarely meant for
these rural households. Furthermore, the access to factors affecting the
biological food absorption including sanitation, clean drinking water,
and knowledge regarding proper food storage, processing, basic
nutrition, and health facilities, infrastructure etc. is very poor in
rural areas. The access to these indicators in food insecure rural areas
is even overwhelming shocking. Therefore, improving market
infrastructure, arranging safety net programs, provision of better
education and health facilities could be the central elements of any
strategy to reduce chronic food insecurity in both rural and urban areas
in future.
4. FOOD SECURITY POLICIES AND THEIR IMPLICATIONS
It is generally believed that there are two major policy failures
that lead to uncertainty in food security and increase in poverty in the
developing countries including Pakistan. These policy failures include
hasty withdrawal of state from the agriculture sector under the
structural adjustment programs and paying no attention to setting up
essential institutional infrastructure to exploit farm-nonfarm
sectors' nexus. This chaotic move resulted into reduced investment
in research and development not only by the national governments of the
developing countries but international donor agencies also withdrew
their support [Zezza, et al. (2007)]. As a result of non realisation of
intrinsically interlinked sectors and simultaneous policy moves--retreating from support without providing alternative pathways,
agricultural productivity declined and incidence of rural poverty
increased leading to greater reduction in access to food. That
perpetuated further into poverty-food insecurity helix. Pakistan never
had any national food policy except launching a few food security
programs at the regional levels [Mittal and Sethi (2009)].
Social protection covers both the safety nets and social security
programs. World Banks in its recent publication has classified the total
spending on social protection in Pakistan in two broad groups: (i)
safety nets which include cash transfers, social welfare services, human
capital accumulation and wheat subsidies; and (ii) social security
comprising public sector spending on civil services pensions, and
private sector sponsored welfare fund and cost of employees social
security institutions. Asian Development Bank (9) decomposed the social
protection spending in Pakistan into the following categories: (i)
labour market programmes; (ii) social insurance programmes; (iii) social
assistance and welfare programmes; (iv) micro and area based schemes
(community based); and (v) child protection programmes. Detailed
discussion regarding these programs is beyond the scope of this paper.
However, we would touch upon briefly the safety nets in Pakistan.
Pakistan has a number of safety nets programmes implemented by
various Ministries. The main two cash transfer programmes are: (i)
Pakistan Bait-ul-Mal (10) working under the Ministry of Social Welfare
and Special Education; (11) and (ii) Zakat (12) and Usher schemes
administered by the Ministry of Religious Affairs (13) [Pakistan (2010a,
b]. Other programmes including school feeding, safe motherhood and child
nutrition, etc are providing assistance to about 2 million households.
These programmes are being implemented by the provincial education and
health departments with the assistance of WFP, WHO, UNICEF and UNESCO.
Recently, Government has introduced Benazir Income Support Programme
(BISP) to cater the needs of the "poorest of the poor"
sections of the society. Under this program, Rs 46 billion rupees were
disbursed in 2009-10, while Rs 50 billion is allocated under this scheme
for the year 2010-11 [Pakistan (2010b)].
The above mentioned cash transfer programmes follow different
modalities for identification of beneficiaries, targeting mechanism,
coverage and outreach, due diligence and monitoring mechanism. A number
of issues worth noting in these programs include: (i) most programmes
are fragmented, duplicative and disjoint with no coordination mechanism;
(ii) they are thinly spread and have poor coverage, and often exclude
marginal and people in remote areas; (iii) at present, the main
criterion used for identification of recipients is poverty which exclude
transitory poverty and vulnerable shocks particularly people having low
human capital and access to productive assets; (iv) absence of
standardised eligibility criteria (operational definition) and lack of
transparency in identification ultimately leading to inclusion of
ineligible and exclusion of needy and deserving one; (v) the payments
are small as they represent 10 percent to 20 percent of the consumption
need of the household; (vi) the disbursements are irregular and lumpy;
and (vii) the annual payments are not adjusted for inflation or cost of
living [FAO (2008)].
On the supply side, various agricultural projects have been
undertaken by the government of Pakistan resulting into a significant
increase in the productivity of food crops. These programs include
development of irrigation, roads, market infrastructure, and investment
in agricultural research and extension. The empirical studies has shown
that investment in research and development has paid off in terms of
increasing agricultural productivity, raising family earning, nutrition
which in turn supported rise in labour productivity, and better health
and well being of people. Keeping in view the importance of agriculture
and ensuring food security on sustainable basis, the government of
Pakistan started a Special Program for Food Security (SPFS) with major
support from FAO. The SPFS project was piloted initially in three
villages including two sites in Punjab and one in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
with twin objectives: (1) to ensure the adequacy and access to food
supply; and (2) to maintain the stability in agricultural production.
The major focus of this program was on enhancing agricultural
productivity and profitability of the major food crops--wheat, rice,
maize and oilseeds, on a sustainable basis. The project was first up
scaled to 109 villages in May 2002 under the name of Crop Maximisation
Program (CMP-I) and then extended to 1012 villages all over Pakistan in
2008 (called CMP-II), totally sponsored by the Government of Pakistan.
The results of the SPFS were encouraging at two sites in Punjab on the
basis of which 109 villages brought under this net in the name of CMP-I.
The performance of CMP-I was dismal [Ahmad and Iqbal (2006)]. Despite
that the CMP-II was initiated in 1012 villages in Pakistan with a target
to extend it to 13000 villages. The success of this program is also
being seriously questioned by the stakeholders and professionals.
The major focus of Pakistan's food security has remained on
supply side that mainly revolved around maintaining wheat
self-sufficiency only. The production and marketing of other food crops
is left on market forces. Government procures and maintains operational
as strategic reserves of wheat and resells through flour mills after
covering the cost of storage, handling, and other incidentals. The
annual cost of subsidising wheat is massive as the leakages in
procurement system, storage and the milling sector have significant
hidden costs. Given these leakages, the benefits accrued to intended
beneficiaries do not commensurate with the subsidy involved. Other food
related subsidies were also provided for addressing the food security of
poor urban sections of the society include food items sold through
Utility Stores Corporation (USC) at subsidised prices. Rs 36.9 billions
were spent on various food related subsidies in 2009-10, while Rs 27.044
billions are allocated for the current fiscal year [Pakistan (2010c)].
Ahmad, et al. (2006) evaluated various seasonal phases of wheat
marketing over the period 1996-97 to 1999-2000. Using partial
equilibrium analysis (14) the study showed that total producer welfare
loss was Rs 37.96 billion including policy cost to government amounted
to Rs 11.05 billion. The overall financial loss was about Rs 3.37
billion, reflecting mainly the difference between gain to the millers,
and the subsidy provided by the government--a gap apparently unaccounted
for in the system. The study also highlights the fact that the consumers
are subsidised at the expense of the farmers, and the millers absorb
almost all the subsidy provided by the government to implement wheat
policy.
Ahmad, et al. (2010) concluded that marketing costs incurred by
government-owned departments are significantly higher than that of
incurred by the private traders. Corruption is pervasive in commodity
marketing, particularly in the public sector. Rent-seeking activities
increase transaction costs and uncertainty, discourage marketing
investment and participation--ultimately leading to negative fiscal
impact for the government.
To supplement the above conclusions, we analyse the current
government intervention in food marketing where government tried to
achieve wheat self-sufficiency in 2008-09. The support price for wheat
was raised from Rs 650/40-kg to Rs 950/40-kg besides providing heavy
subsidy on fertiliser. As a result, Pakistan has been enjoying
self-sufficiency in wheat for the last two years. The country also has a
history of carrying-over high wheat stocks: 3.552 million tons in
2000-01; 3.683 million tons in 2001-02; and 4.223 million tons during
2009-10 while procured another 6 million tons slot from 2009-10 wheat
crop--resulting into a stock of 10 million tons with the public stores.
Historically, the government of Pakistan has been releasing wheat on
average more than 5 million tons of annually from its stocks. This
indicates that the carryover stock for 2010-11 shall be more than 5
million tones.
Managing nearly half of national wheat production procured by the
government heavily costs to the national exchequer (about Rs 30 Billion
per annum). Government borrowing for maintaining wheat reserves accounts
more than Rs 414 billion--Punjab and PASSCO are major credit takers.
What monetary damage has been done due to this poor food stocks
management policy is a question which an ordinary student of development
studies can ask. A simple comparison of the value of wheat lying in
public sector stores and the amount of bank loans shows that the credit
amount is much higher than the value of wheat stored, i.e., total value
of wheat is equal to Rs 262.5 billion vis-a-vis bank loan of Rs 414
billion. It means the provincial and federal governments would not be
able to pay the loan from the stored wheat even if they export its each
and every grain (Table 4).
The above discussion clearly indicates the following major flaws in
the existing wheat policies: (a) producers hardly benefit from these
policies both in terms of sustainable increase in production and better
marketing opportunities; (b) benefits to consumers were also partial, as
the major chunk of benefit goes into the pockets of the flour millers;
(c) serious distortions in wheat and wheat flour prices through undue
government interventions in terms of un-targeted subsidies; (d)
considerable inefficiencies in managing wheat surpluses as the
quantities procured were beyond the storage capacities available with
the government departments--hiring private storage facilities at a huge
cost to the nation; (e) exchequer being additionally burdened by
providing highly subsidised wheat flour to the public and schemes
like "cheap bread"; (f) generated massive inefficiency in
flour milling sector; and (g) target population is generally not
effectively being dealt with and in particular the rural poor lack
access to most of the safety nets.
5. FUTURE CHALLENGES
As discussed above, both supply- and demand-side issues of food
security need to be addressed to achieve sustainable food security.
Pakistan has enormous potential to further develop its agriculture
sector upon which about 2/3rd of population is directly or indirectly
depends for their livelihood. However, Pakistan economy is experiencing
structural transformations and the role agriculture in economic
development is changing fast--its share in national GDP is declining
faster than proportion of labour seeking livelihood from this sector,
and a very small proportion of farms experiencing fast modernisation,
while majority of the farmers are resource poor and operate in
low-input, low-output scenario. Therefore, Pakistan has to adapt
three-prong strategy--developing farm and non-farm sectors as well as
reducing polarisation within agriculture sector either by helping the
inefficient farmer to approach the frontier or helping them to finding
alternative livelihood in the non-farm sector. However, in this section
we shall mainly discuss the production side challenges.
At current rate of population growth, Pakistan needs to increase
substantial food production to feed a growing population with some
modest surpluses for export. Substantial increase in crop productivity
has to be targeted using lesser land and water resources than are
available for agriculture today. One is not sure of achieving individual
milestones in the fast changing dynamic world, but one thing is to be
believed that agriculture must maintain a growth rate of more than 5
percent in order to ensure a rapid growth of national income, attaining
macroeconomic stability, effective employment of growing labour force,
securing improvement in distributive justice and a reduction in rural
poverty in Pakistan.
"Food security is possible well into the future. Science
provides the tools, agricultural research the modality, intellectual
insight the design of the next revolutions that will help smallholder farmers improve their square yard of earth, and help the world to keep
pace with population growth "(Austin, undated).
5.1. Sources of Growth in Agriculture
Three major factors that influence the supply side of food include:
(1) the higher use of conventional inputs; (15) (2) increase in total
factor productivity (TFP); (16) and (3) the targeted transformations in
the institutional setup that assist the agriculture sector. These
sources of growth are interrelated and the contribution of one is
dependent on the effectiveness of the other.
Higher Use of Inputs and Farm Size: Two major inputs in agriculture
are land and water. The prospects of allocating more of these vital
inputs are limited. Rather, both land and water resources are facing
declining trend in supply caused by land degradation (17) and fast
expansion of cities. The chances for bringing unused or marginal lands
under cultivation are also meager because the quality of such lands is
poor and the investment to increase productivity in these lands may be
uneconomical and unsustainable [Fullbrook (2010)]. The intensive use of
land (cropping intensity) is another source of increasing agricultural
output that too has reached even in the vicinity of 200 percent in
certain irrigated areas indicating no chance of going beyond that.
Similarly, the use of inputs like fertilisers and pesticides cannot be
increased beyond certain limits because of national health and
environmental concerns. Furthermore, due to increasing prices of
fertiliser, energy and declining water availability the already
declining rate of growth in use of chemicals has turned into negative in
recent years. However, alternative sources of nutrients need to be
explored and popularised. The use of biocides is observed to be
declining in a number of countries and a few of them are even returning
to organic farming.
The other inputs include farm machinery--tube-wells, tractors and
implements, the supply of which once increased significantly is now
facing the declining rate of change in growth. The available farm
machinery is more suited to large farms, and thus the farm machinery
research has to be redirected to explore and improvise mechanisation
suited to small farmers (i.e. reverse mechanisation favouring small
farmers). The machines required for harvesting and post-harvest handling
and small scale value addition are yet to be developed and popularised.
As regards the farm size, Pakistan has a highly skewed distribution of farm lands. (18) Basically the ownership of this major factor of
production determines the access to input and output markets. Therefore,
the benefits of agricultural development are also shared rather more
unequally. The poor small farmers use 30 percent to 50 percent less of
various factors of production than the use at rich farmers--leading to
lower land productivity, greater poverty and food insecurity. All inputs
combined have been contributing towards agricultural output growth
ranging from 25 percent-50 percent during 1990s in Punjab [see Ahmad
(2003); and Ali and Byerlee (2000)]. Thus in future, there are only
limited chances of inputs intensification and increasing the
agricultural output--approaching upper bound through these resources.
Increase in Total Factor Productivity (TFP): TFP refers to shifting
of the production frontier upwards in case of progress, and downwards as
a result of regress. Research and development (R&D) efforts, flow of
information, better infrastructure, availability of funds and
farmers' managerial capabilities are the prime movers of TFP.
Empirical studies show that the TFP estimates differ widely and range
from 0.37 percent to 2.3 percent dominating the share of TFP in output
growth. The studies have also shown the signs of declining TFP growth
because of deteriorating land and water resources [Ahmad (2003); Ali and
Byerlee (2000)]. There is strong empirical evidence that high levels of
research and development (R&D) investments lead to high productivity
and eventually to increased economic performance. A strong relationship
between agricultural output and outlays on agricultural research and
extension exists in Pakistan--about 32 percent rate of returns on such
investment has been observed [Khan and Akbari (1986)]. Another recent
study by Kiani, et al. (2008) found that investment in agricultural
research resulted in attractive returns in Pakistan ranging from 49-78
percent--highest returns of 57-88 percent in Punjab province followed by
that in Sindh (24-48 percent). While R&D activities are important,
these must be supported by favourable policy instruments, human resource
development, necessary physical and institutional infrastructure etc.
"No country has been able to sustain a rapid transition out of
poverty without raising productivity in its agriculture sector"
Timmer (2005).
Targeted Transformations and Institutional Setup Assisting the
Agriculture Sector: The third major factor contributing towards
agricultural growth is the policy targeted institutional reforms
including agricultural extension, education and credit, and improvement
in the functioning of input and output markets [Saris (2001)]. The
existing institutions have further deteriorated the disparity between
the rich/large and the poor/small farmers in rural Pakistan by offering
greater access to influential and well-off farmers. Moreover, the
agricultural price policies in Pakistan remained anti-producers and
tended to slow down the growth. Under the Structural Adjustment and
Stabilisation Programmes (SAP) the government of Pakistan removed all
the input subsidies during the 1990s resulting into many fold increase
in input prices and thus greater cost of production--squeezing the
profitability of the a sector in general and of poor farmers in
particular. While implementing the directives from IFIs the state's
role was quickly reduced/withdrawn without redirecting enhanced public
sector focus on rural development to neutralise the policy effects on
agriculture. The negative effects became more pronounced when the
private sector investments lagged behind as well.
5.2. Constraints
The major hurdle to develop the agriculture sector of Pakistan in
general and food grains production in particular is the lack of holistic
policy approach--intervening in one or more commodities leaving others
on the behest of market forces used to result in frequent supply and
demand imbalances in other commodities. Efforts in correcting these
divergences turned often bad for the others. Such partial policy
dynamics reduced the process of commercialisation and specialisation in
agriculture and also decelerated the growth in agricultural
productivity, particularly in food grains. The analysis of a recently
published study by Falkenmark, Rockstrom and Karlberg (2009) presents a
very bleak picture for Pakistan in terms of water shortage and potential
of increasing food production through area expansion by 2050. In terms
of area, very low potential left since most arable land is already in
use, while freshwater will be the most fundamental constraint in food
production in coming decades--Pakistan is shown in dark brown in Figure
1. The study further concludes that Pakistan is among those countries
that are "approaching the end of the road unless income growth in
the meantime allows them to import the food required" (p. 65).
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
Figure 1 Countries colour coded according to water availability for
food self-sufficiency. Those with <1,300 m3/capita/year are in
deficit. Details can be seen from Rockstrom, et al. (2008) cities in
Falkenmark, etc. (2009).
Other factors influencing the food security in Pakistan are the
outcomes of both partial policies and the neglect of R&D activities
including: (a) fluctuating food grains production--generally below the
domestic requirements; (b) the slow pace of varietal development in
pulses, oilseeds and fodder crops with non-existence of seed marketing
system for these crop groups; (c) the almost dependence of vegetables
sector on imported seed; (d) poor marketing infrastructure unable to
insure timely availability of quality inputs; (19) (e) low genetic
potential of available varieties and slow varietal replacement because
of unaffordable high prices of certified seed; (f) presence of serious
governance issues in food procurement, marketing and distribution
system; and, (g) inability of poor farmers to respond to food price
hikes due to simultaneous rise in input prices and having no or very
small marketable surplus available with them on output side to finance
to. (20)
6. WAY FORWARD
"A precautionary approach would put food first because if it
is not secure, even sovereign, then the security of society is put at
risk. Putting food first, will require the reordering of priorities and
recognition of the fundamental value of food in securing life and
supporting society. As food secures life and the mission of national
security is to secure society and defend its existence, it follows that
food forms an intrinsic element of national security but one that is
generally overlooked.... Putting food first will strengthen the security
in food security, thereby contributing to the comprehensive, sustainable
security and well-being of citizens and society" [Fullbrook (2010),
p. 7].
The major hindrance in achieving food security in developing
countries including Pakistan is the high levels of poverty, and thus
poverty reduction is a most powerful tool to improve food security that
can be achieved through equitable economic growth [Smith, et al.
(2000)]. Smith, et al. (2000) further suggests various ways to achieve
pro-poor growth: (1) by enabling the poor to participate in the growth
process and increasing their access financial and productive resources
and providing them physical and market infrastructure; (2) investing in
human capital of the poor--provision of health and education that
enables them to take advantage of new opportunities; and, (3) investing
in the social capital of the poor--network, norms, and trust among
members of communities that help coordinate and cooperate for
members' mutual benefit in the community [Moser (1996)]. In
Pakistan most of the poor live in rural areas and are directly and/or
indirectly dependent on the performance of agriculture sector. Besides
improving food security of urban population, food security of rural
households can be improved by increasing agricultural productivity,
For increasing agricultural productivity, a number of services and
support institutions need to be either strengthened or to be created
including developing IPRs (Intellectual Property Rights) for promoting
R&D in private sector. The goals and priorities of the research have
to be reformed both at the federal and provincial levels. An
infrastructure of experiment stations in various ecological zones in
partnership with the progressive farmers (small, medium and large, to
evaluate the adaptability/applicability of the innovations under local
conditions) need to be developed. Also, the same stations should be used
as hub of trainings of extension people and farmers. The focus of
commodity research needs to be shifted to system perspectives in order
to enhance research impacts and income of the farming community.
Research policies have to be focused on cropping zones and their
development to increase systems profitability. No egalitarian approach
of one-size-fits-all shall apply. Basic and applied research including
social sciences has to be focused on cropping systems/zones, since the
zones are heterogeneous in socioeconomic, resource endowments and
agronomic characteristics and the issues/problems differ significantly
from each other. Moreover, the focus of commodity research needs to be
shifted to system perspectives in order to enhance research impacts and
income of the farming communities. In order to effectively implement
this strategy, we have to reassess human resource requirements, research
and extension infrastructure, and more importantly the academic
curricula in the universities.
New programme interventions particularly in remote areas for
training technicians in agriculture and non-agriculture enterprises also
need to be initiated. Trained technicians can bring revolution in
agriculture as well as in non-agriculture sectors. This is expected to
increase access to food and help reduce food insecurity. In addition to
human development, a well organised food assistance program in food
insecure and low agricultural potential areas would enormously help
reduce poverty and enhance access to food [Smith, et al. (2000)].
For all this to happen, the federal and provincial Ministries have
to redefine their boundaries since these issues are provincial subject.
The policy-makers need to think and establish system perspectives
linking agriculture and non-agriculture sectors. This requires a close
cooperation in policy, program formulation and implementation between
Agriculture and other Ministries to foster rural and agriculture
development in general and food sector in" particular. For example,
for proper programme planning, formulation and implementation the
Ministries of agriculture, local government, water and power, labour and
manpower, commerce and industry, and the environment cannot work in
isolation.
All national policy initiatives must be scrutinised for their
impacts on private sector investment as well as on rural wellbeing
including farm and non-farm sectors. (21) Realising the farm-nonfarm
nexus, appropriate institutional set up for coordination has to be set
in place. Further, the financial institutions providing agricultural
credit and microfinance need to be geared in favour of resource poor
farmers and landless dominating not only the agricultural production
system but also most of them are extremely poor and food insecure.
Socio-economic research could play a vital role in putting research
on track for delivering specific outputs that are expected from the
agricultural research system. For this purpose social sciences may be
strengthened to assess research outputs in terms of sustainability,
relevance/equity, quality, comparative advantage, competitiveness, value
addition potentials, resource conservation and profitability.
Agricultural research system is still deficient in quickly aligning
itself to the changing market situations and achieving sustainable
higher quality production levels--particularly food commodities.
Research planning lacks focuses on prioritising research, strategic
planning, implementing demand driven research, independent assessment of
research outcomes, planned promotion of viable research outcomes and
developing public-private partnerships to promote/upscale technologies.
Following are the priority research areas to be focused on:
* developing technologies both in terms of genetic modifications of
crops that improve water productivity and bring breakthroughs in the use
of saline water;
* improving systems' productivity by devising new practices
for better soil fertility management, soil and water conservation, water
harvesting, and integrated pest management, etc;
* cropping system based research to adjust to the climate change
processes and combating natural resources degradation and improving
system productivity;
* identification of factors responsible behind yield gaps and
finding solutions to resolve stagnating productivity in different
production systems;
* research in human food-safety issues in plant and animal origin
food chain;
* developing technological packages to achieve low-cost and high
quality products;
* enhancing balanced use of fertiliser and increasing organic
matter availabilities; and
* encouraging small farmers' oriented corporate farming.
A few institutional initiatives may be undertaken immediately
including:
* strengthening and reorganising Agricultural Policy Institute
(API) so that besides farm economic analysis, I can handle macro level
issues, particularly trade and policy analysis;
* strengthening the existing (or establishing new if not existed)
provincial Economic Research Institutes with bestowing additional
mandate of food policy analysis; and
* establishing "'National Commission on Farmers (NCF).
Role of the Government:
* Government should be proactive to the commodity crisis rather
than act when the crisis already happened.
* There should be systematic commodity forecasting mechanism so
that food demand-supply mechanism could more effectively be managed.
* A separate food security fund should be created, rather than
diverting development resources in case the food production is below the
national demands.
* Government may protect price bands in between import and export
parity prices, rather than pan-territorial pricing that crowed out
private sector.
7. CONCLUDING REMARKS
Reducing poverty, hunger and food insecurity are essential part of
Millennium Development Goals. Pakistan is a low income developing
country and agriculture is its most important sector due to its primary
commitment of providing healthy food to her fast growing population. In
past 60 years Pakistan, the total cultivated area has increased by just
40 percent, while there was more than 4 times increase in population
with urban expansion of over seven-fold causing rising population
pressure on cultivated land. Despite that wheat production has increased
by five-fold, the country is still its marginal importer. Tremendous
efforts are needed to narrow the gap between food demand due to
population growth and domestic food production. Managing food security
in Pakistan requires an understanding about how agricultural policies
affect food supply and incomes, the poor vulnerable in rural and urban
areas. The main focus of this paper is to trace the pathways to
achieve/maintain food and nutritional security in Pakistan.
Unfortunately, the policy makers are only concentrating on
attaining and maintaining self sufficiency in wheat production.
Periodically, strong interventions are made in terms of significant
increase in wheat support prices along with subsidising fertiliser
prices to achieve bumper wheat crop. Such interventions seriously
distort relatively profitability of cultivation of other rabi season
food crops, e.g. other coarse grains, pulses and oilseeds.
On the other hand, the way government is managing procurement and
distribution of food crops for low prices of wheat flour like offering
wheat flour at subsidised prices, income support, cheap bread on tandurs
etc., which has heavily burdened the national exchequer as well as
encouraged development of different cartels and mafias, e.g. wheat flour
industry, poultry hatchery and feed industry, etc. The recently adopted
wheat procurement and private storage policy has heavily cost to
national exchequer as only Rs 262.5 billion worth of wheat has been
stored while Rs 414 billion are payable to banks.
A number of real world challenges and constraints have been
highlighted for facilitating policy makers in designing a comprehensive
food security policy for this country. In the way forward, some
recommendations are made along with highlighting the need of new
institutions for developing a R&D based infrastructure as well as
defining the role of the government in food sector of Pakistan.
REFERENCES
Ahmad, Munir (2003) Agricultural Productivity and Rural Poverty in
Irrigated Pakistan: A Stochastic Production Frontier Analysis. The
Pakistan Development Review 42:3.
Ahmad, Munir (2010) Should Government be in the Business of Fixing
Agricultural Prices? If Yes Then How? A Presentation at the Panel
Discussion on "Should Government be in the Business of Fixing
Agricultural Prices? If Yes Then How?" held at Planning Commission
of Pakistan, May 2010. http://www.pide.org.pk/
pdf/foodsecurity/activities/Munir.pdf
Ahmad, Munir and M. Iqbal (2006) Impact Evaluation of Special
Program for Food Security (SPFS) in Pakistan. Pakistan Institute of
Development Economics, Islamabad.
Ahmad, Munir, C. Croraton, A. Qayyum, and M. Iqbal (2006) Impact of
Domestic Policies towards Agricultural Trade Liberalisation and Market
Reform on Food Security in Pakistan. Paper presented at joint
IGIDR/PIDE/IFPRI International Conference on Trade Liberalisation and
Food Security in South Asia: The Lessons Learnt. New Delhi, India, June
8-9.
Ahmad, Munir, C. Croraton, A. Qayyum, M. Iqbal, and P. Dorosh
(2010) Impact of Domestic Agricultural Trade Liberalisation and Market
Reform Policies on Food Security in Pakistan. Chapter 5 In Kumar, et al.
(eds.) Liberalising Food Grains Markets: Experiences, Impact, and
Lessons from South Asia. Oxford University Press.
Ali, M. and D. Byerlee (2000) Productivity Growth and Resource
Degradation in Pakistan's Punjab: A Decomposition Analysis. World
Bank, Washington, DC. (Policy Research Working Paper No. 2480).
Austin, N. R. (n.d.) The Science of Food Security.
www.abare.gov.au/ outlook/download/food_austin.pdf
Benson, T. (2004) Africa's Food and Nutrition Security
Situation: Where Are We and How Did We Get Here? Washington, DC: IFPRI.
(IFPRI 20/20 Discussion Paper 37).
Bouis, H. and J. Hunt (1999) Linking Food and Nutrition Security:
Past Lessons and Future Opportunities. Asian Development Review 17,
168-213.
Chung, K., L. Haddad, J. Ramakrishna, and F. Riely (1997)
Identifying the Food Insecure: The Application of Mixed-Method
Approaches in India. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research
Institute.
Cullet, P. (2003) Food Security and Intellectual Property Rights in
Developing Countries. Geneva. (IELRC Working Paper 2003-3).
Evans, A. (2009) The Feeding of the Nine Billion: Global Food
Security for the 21st Century. London: Royal Institute for International
Affairs.
Falkenmark, M., J. Rockstrom, and L. Karlberg (2009) Present and
Future Water Requirements for Feeding Humanity. Food Security 1, 59-69.
FAO (2010) Presentation by FAO Representative about Flood Damages
and Coping Strategies in WFP/SDC/SDPI one day joint seminar on
"Post Flood Food Security in Pakistan", held at ILO office in
Islamabad on 8th September.
FAO (Food and Agriculture Organisation) (1998) Poverty Alleviation
and Food Security in Asia: Lessons and Challenges. Rome: Food and
Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations.
FAO (Food and Agriculture Organisation) (1998) The State of Food
and Agriculture 1998. Rome: Food and Agriculture Organisation of the
United Nations.
FAO (Food and Agriculture Organisation) (2002) The Sate of Food
Insecurity in the World 2001. Rome: Food and Agriculture Organisation of
the United Nations.
FAO (Food and Agriculture Organisation) (2008) The State of Food
Insecurity in the World: High Food Prices and Food Security--Threats and
Opportunities. Rome: Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United
Nations.
Farooq, Umar, Munir Ahmad, and Z. Altaf (2009) Agflation and Food
Security: Stimuli, Causes, Linkages and Implications for Pakistan.
Social Sciences Division, Pakistan Agricultural Research Council,
Islamabad. (SSD Working Paper No. 09-01).
Fullbrook, D. (2010) Food as Security. Food Security 2, 5-20.
Herrmann, M. (2006) Agricultural Support Measures of Advanced
Countries and Food Insecurity in Developing Countries. (UNU-WIDER
Research Paper No. 2006/141).
Hoddinott, J. (1999) Choosing Outcome Indicators of Food Security.
Washington, DC. International Food Policy Research Institute. (Technical
Guide No. 7).
Khan, M. (2003) Nutrition: A Factor for Poverty Eradication and
Human Development. In Pakistan Human Condition Report 2003. Islamabad:
Centre for Research on Poverty Reduction and Income Distribution,
Planning Commission of Pakistan.
Khan, M. H., and A. H. Akbari (1986) Impact of Agricultural
Research and Extension on Crop Productivity in Pakistan: A Production
Function Approach. World Development 14:6.
Kiani, A. K., M. Iqbal, and T. Javed (2008) Total Factor
Productivity and Agricultural Research Relationship: Evidence from Crop
Sub-Sector of Pakistan's Punjab. European Journal of Scientific
Research 23:1, 87-97.
Maplecroft (2010) Commodity Price Hikes Due to Climate Events Will
Hit the Neediest Countries.
http://www.maplecroft.com/about/news/food-security.html
Maxwell, S. and T. Frankenberger (1992) Household Food Security:
Concepts, Indicators, Measurements. New York: IFAD, Italy and UNICEF.
MinLDD (Ministry of Livestock and Dairy Development) (2010)
Preliminary Estimates on Livestock Damages due to Floods.
Mittal, S. D. Sethi (2009) Food Security in South Asia: Issues and
Opportunities. Indian Council for Research on International Economic
Relations. (Working Paper No. 240).
Moser, C. (1996) Confronting Crisis: A Comparative Study of
Household Responses to Poverty and Vulnerability in Four Poor Urban
Communities. The World Bank, Washington, DC. CESD Monographs Series No.
8).
OECD (2009) OECD Rural Policy Review. Germany.
http://books.google.com. pk/books?
Pakistan, Government of (2010) National Nutrition Programme.
Ministry of Heath Website:
http://202.83.164.261wps/portal/Moh/!ut/p/c0/04_SB8K8xLLM9MSSzPy8x
Bz9CP0os3h_Nx9_SzcPIwP_MAsDA6MQL3NXtxBvlwNzA_2CbEdFAOW90ZM !/
?WCM_GLOBAL_CONTEXT=/wps/wcm/connect/MohCL/ministry/home/sahomege
neral/sageneralleft/j_nutrition+program
Pakistan, Government of (2010a) Pakistan Economic Survey 2009-10.
Islamabad: [ Economic Advisor's Wing, Finance Division, Islamabad.
Pakistan, Government of (2010b) Budget Speech 2010-11. Federal
Budget Speech of Dr Abdul Hafeez Sheikh, Minister for Finance, Finance
Division, Islamabad.
Pakistan, Government of (2010c) Budget in Brief2010-11. Islamabad:
Finance Division, Islamabad.
Pinstrup-Andersen, Per (2009) Food Security: Definition and
Measurement. Food Security 1, 5-7. DOI 10.1007/s12571-008-0002-y
Planning Commission and UNICEF (2004) National Nutrition Survey
2001-2002. Islamabad: Planning Commission, Government of Pakistan.
POSTnote (December 2006) Number 274 Food Security in Developing
Countries. Parliament Office of Science and Technology.
www.parliament.uk/post
Reutlinger, S. (1988) Food Security and Poverty in Developing
Countries. In J. P.
Gittinger, J. Leslie, and C. Hoisington (eds.) Food Policy:
Integrating Supply, Distribution, and Consumption. Baltimore: Johns
Hopkins University Press.
Riley, F. and N. Moock (1995) Inventory of Food Security Impact
Indicators. In Food Security Indicators and Framework: A Handbook for
Monitoring and Evaluation of Food Aid Programmes. IMPACT, Arlington,
Va., U.S.A. Draft.
Saris, A. (2001) The Role of Agriculture in Economic Development
and Poverty Reduction: An Empirical and Conceptual Foundation, Rural
Development Department, World Bank, Washington, D.C. (Rural Strategy
Background Paper No. 2.)
Sen, A. K. (1982) Poverty and Famines: An Essay on Entitlement and
Deprivation. New York: Clarendon Press.
Smith, et al. (2000) The Geography and Causes of Food Insecurity in
Developing Countries. Agricultural Economics 22, 199-215.
Staatz, J. M., D. H. Boughton, and C. Donovan (2009) Food Security
in Developing Countries. Department of Agricultural, Food and Resource
Economics, MSU, East Lansing, Michigan. (Staff Paper 2009-03).
Timmer, C. P. (2000) The Macro Dimensions of Food Security:
Economic Growth, Equitable Distribution, and Food Price Stability. Food
Policy 25, 283-295.
Timmer, C. P. (2004) Food Security and Economic Growth: Asian
Perspective. Asian-Pacific Economic Literature, November.
Timmer, C. P. (2005) Agriculture and Pro-poor Growth: An Asian
Perspective. Centre for Global Development. (Working Paper 63).
WFP (2010) Pakistan Flood Impact Assessment: September 2010.
http://documents. wfp.org/stellent/groups/public/documents/ena/wfp225987.pdf
World Bank (2008) World Development Report 2008. Washington, DC:
World Bank.
Zezza, A., G. Carletto, B. Davis, K. Stamoulis, and P. Winters
(2007) Rural Income Generating Activities: Whatever Happened to the
Institutional Vacuum? Evidence from Ghana, Guatemala, Nicaragua and
Vietnam. FAO. (ESA Working Paper No. 07-24).
(2a) Currently, Pakistan is the most urbanised nation in South Asia
where 36 percent of the country's population is living in cities.
The rate of urbanisation in Pakistan during 2005-2010 was 3 percent per
annum. In 2005, more than half of the total urban population was living
in urban areas of 8 big cities, i.e., Karachi, Lahore, Faisalabad,
Rawalpindi, Multan, Hyderabad, Gujranwala, and Peshawar. It is expected
that by 2030, the ruralurban population ratio will be 50:50 [Government
of Pakistan (2010)].
(1) At the time of independence, Pakistan's population was
only 32.5 million. It is around 170 million presently. Pakistan is still
counted among the high fertility countries having a large proportion of
young adults and children. The median age of population has increased
from about 18 years in 1998 to 22 years in 2008.
(2) Currently, Pakistan is most urbanised nation in South Asia
where 36 percent of country population is living in cities. The rate of
urbanisation in Pakistan during 2005-2010 was 3 percent per annum, in
2005, more than half of the total urban population was living in urban
areas of 8 big cities, i.e. Karachi, Lahore, Faisalabad, Rawalpindi,
Multan, Hyderabad, Gujranwala and Peshawar. It is expected that by 2030,
the rural-urban population ratio shall be 50:50 [Pakistan (2010)].
(3) MDG-1 calls for halving hunger and poverty by 2015 in relation
to 1990.
(4) Final Declaration of World Forum on Food Sovereignty, 2001.
(5) Maxwell and Frankenberger (1992) listed 25 broadly defined
indicators. Riely and Moock (1995) listed 73 indicators, somewhat more
disaggregated than those mentioned in Maxwell and Frankenberger (1992).
Chung, et al. (1997) note that even a simple indicator such as a
dependency ratio can be used with many different permutations. They list
some 450 indicators [Hoddinott (1999)].
(6) The term food is meant as dietary energy.
(7) For example, in Hyderabad, contaminated water took 10 lives and
1000 people were hospitalised over the course of two months in 2004.
Khan, et al. (2002) reported that 51 percent of the vegetable produce
was unsuitable for human consumption due to excess chemical residues.
(8) Social Protection in Pakistan: Managing Household Risks and
Vulnerability. World Bank, October 2007.
(9) Scaling Up of the Social Protection Index for Committed Poverty
Reduction. Final Report. Volume 1. Multi Country Report, Halcrow China
Limited. Prepared for Asian Development Bank, November 2007.
(10) Pakistan Bait-ul-Mal (PBM) disburses to the destitute, needy,
widows, orphans, invalids and infirm irrespective of their gender,
caste, greed or race. PBM provide assistance under different programs
and schemes, such as Food Support Programme (FSP) carrying major share
followed by Individual Financial Assistance (IFA), International
Rehabilitation through civil society wing, National Center for
Rehabilitation of Child Labour (NCRCL), Vocational Training
Institutes/Dastkari Schools (VTIs) [Pakistan (2010)].
(11) In July-March period, Pakistan incurred Rs 2.7 billion to
1.438 million beneficiaries in 2008-09. Rs 1.65 billion to 1.11 million
beneficiaries in 2009-10 financial year and allocated Rs 2 billion for
2010-11 [Pakistan (2010a,b)].
(12) Zakat provides financial assistance such as Guzara allowance,
educational stipends, health care, social welfare/rehabilitation, Eid
grans and marriage assistance through regular and other Zakat progammes
and national level schemes [Pakistan (2010)].
(13) In July-March period, Pakistan disbursed Rs 1.421 million to
0.538 million beneficiaries during 2008-09, Rs 0.404 million to 0.538
million beneficiaries in 2009-10 financial year. More than half of the
Zakat fund is disbursed through regular Zakat progammes [Pakistan
(2010a,b)].
(14) They analysed quantities--production, home consumption, feed,
seed, and wastage; government procurement and open market sales; imports
and marketed consumption; prices--government support, issue price,
wholesale price, import parity price, government's import price;
and costs--government storage cost and private storage cost.
(15) This pertains to the economies of size and indicates the
movement of the producer along the best practice production frontier.
(16) That refers to shifting of the production frontier upwards by
R&D efforts.
(17) Because of poor response towards inputs applied in such lands,
the farmers use lower doses of inputs as compared to normal healthy
lands. Reduced levels of inputs use on such lands vary from 12 percent
to 80 percent, and as a result from slight to moderately affected patchy
lands agricultural output declined by more than 30 percent [see Ahmad
(2003)].
(18) In 2000, about 58 percent of total farmer had less than 5
acres land and operating only 16 percent of total available cultivated
area In contrast, only 6 percent farms having more than 25 acres of land
were operating 32 percent of the total cultivated area. The situation in
some provinces is rather more serious.
(19) Major area of wheat now falls in rotation of various kharif
crops like cotton, rice, sugarcane. A period of 1-4 weeks is available
to the farmers between harvesting kharif crops and wheat planting.
During this period farmer is pretty busy in disposing off previous crops
as well as struggling for procuring inputs for wheat while market
intermediaries (commission agents) do not clear their accounts on
previous crops or delay the payments of their sale proceeds. Shortages
in the availability of inputs like seed and phosphatic fertiliser
finally converge at using low quality and levels of these vital inputs.
(20) Most of the food marketable surplus is generated by medium and
large farmers. This is because 58 percent of farming population operates
<5 acres of land and they are cultivating only 18 percent of total
cultivated area. The farmers having 5 to 12.5 acres represent 28 percent
of farming population and operate 30 percent of total cultivated area.
In this way, farmers operating <12.5 acres represent 86 percent
farmers and are cultivating 48 percent of total cultivated area in the
country.
(21) This is called rural lens approach in Canada and in UK rural
proofing [OECD (2007)].
Munir Ahmad <
[email protected]> is Chief of Research,
Pakistan Institute of Development Economics, Islamabad. Umar Farooq
<
[email protected]> is Chief Scientific Officer, Pakistan
Agricultural Research Council, Islamabad.
Table 1
Per Capita Availability of Food in Pakistan
Per Capita Annual Availability (kg/person/annum)
Food E.Oil/
Years Grains Ghee Meat Milk
1990-91 137.44 9.99 13.90 60.93
1991-92 144.18 13.07 14.38 62.26
1992-93 149.93 12.50 15.48 63.09
1993-94 158.80 10.50 16.07 64.60
1994-95 138.20 12.19 16.51 66.07
1995-96 148.55 11.42 17.25 67.16
1996-97 153.95 10.46 17.87 68.58
1997-98 161.07 11.59 14.00 81.45
1998-99 167.25 12.38 14.13 81.72
1999-00 158.83 11.08 14.19 82.15
2000-01 136.51 11.48 14.42 82.92
2001-02 135.53 10.67 14.50 83.45
2002-03 142.38 10.77 14.65 84.28
2003-04 143.83 11.16 14.74 84.42
2004-05 142.58 12.35 15.19 85.50
2005-06 140.98 12.75 16.33 90.30
2006-07 144.79 12.81 16.70 94.54
2007-08 155.04 13.29 17.00 93.93
2008-09 153.99 13.45 17.50 94.81
Per Capita Annual Availability Per
(kg/person/annum) Capita
Daily
Avail.
Years Fruits Vegetable Total (Grams)
1990-91 47.73 23.49 293.48 804.06
1991-92 48.30 27.70 309.90 849.03
1992-93 49.06 24.45 314.51 861.68
1993-94 53.65 27.20 330.82 906.35
1994-95 55.63 28.84 317.45 869.72
1995-96 56.23 27.03 327.64 897.64
1996-97 55.34 29.98 336.19 921.06
1997-98 56.48 31.11 355.70 974.53
1998-99 56.07 29.04 360.59 987.93
1999-00 52.23 24.55 343.03 939.80
2000-01 51.31 28.65 325.29 891.20
2001-02 51.29 25.35 320.78 878.85
2002-03 50.36 26.65 329.09 901.61
2003-04 47.82 28.23 330.20 904.66
2004-05 52.64 26.17 334.42 916.23
2005-06 51.25 31.18 342.79 939.14
2006-07 50.04 29.79 348.67 955.26
2007-08 53.71 31.23 364.20 997.79
2008-09 52.88 24.06 356.69 977.22
Source: Farooq, et al. (2009).
Table 2
Per Capita Availability of Calories and Shares of Various Sources
Total Wheat Other Grains
Year Calories % Calories % Calories %
1961 1754 100 742 42 342 19
1970 2203 100 984 45 438 20
1980 2124 100 967 46 304 14
1990 2410 100 1153 48 274 11
1995 2345 100 1048 45 212 9
2000 2447 100 1000 41 244 10
2001 2426 100 1000 41 256 11
2002 2419 100 999 41 275 I1
2003 2320 100 945 41 108 5
2004 2231 100 897 40 107 5
2005 2271 100 914 40 108 5
2006 2423 100 930 38 110 6
Pulses Animal Others
Year Calories % Calories % Calories %
1961 114 6 260 15 296 17
1970 77 3 257 12 447 20
1980 49 2 261 12 543 26
1990 58 2 309 13 616 26
1995 59 3 353 15 673 29
2000 68 3 436 18 699 29
2001 58 2 436 18 676 28
2002 59 2 437 18 649 27
2003 61 3 322 14 886 37
2004 62 3 321 14 844 38
2005 63 3 325 14 861 38
2006 65 3 330 15 888 37
Source: Ahmad, et al. (2010) (Table 5.7 updated).
Table 3
Food Balance-Sheet for Wheat (Quantity in '000' tones)
Stock
Year Production Imports Change Exports
1961 3814 1080 -308 0
1970 7294 229 336 108
1980 10856 604 -1217 3
1990 14316 2047 -691 2
1995 17002 2500 -1399 0
1996 16907 2500 -2539 0
1997 16650 4088 -3487 0
1998 18694 2023 -2181 0-
1999 17856 2006 -2061 0
2000 21079 80 3045 80
2007 23295 1820 -936 530
2008 20959 3188 -1867 142
2009 24033 0 5000 0
Feed, Seed
and others
@ 10% of Avail- Import
Year Total Production ability Share
1961 4586 385 4205 25.69
1970 7751 729 7022 3.26
1980 10240 1086 9154 6.60
1990 15670 1432 14238 14.38
1995 18103 1700 16403 15.24
1996 16868 1691 15177 16.47
1997 17251 1665 15586 26.23
1998 18536 1869 16667 12.14
1999 17801 1786 16015 12.53
2000 24124 2108 22016 0.36
2007 23649 2330 21320 8.54
2008 22138 2096 20042 15.91
2009 29033 2403 26630 0.00
Sourre: Ahmad, et al. (2010) (Table 5.8 updated).
Table 4
Policy Decision Regarding Export of Wheat from Pakistan 2010-11
Items Punjab Sindh
Wheat procurement price paid by the 950 950
government (Rs/40-kg)
Incidental charges (Rs/40-kg) 70 70
Annual wheat storage charges paid 250 250
by the government (Rs/40-kg) (Based
on Rs 2 billion per month for
storing 10 million tons of wheat)
Wheat cost at PASSCO/Provincial 1270 1270
Food Department's Stores (Rs/40kg)
Export parity price at Karachi in 1070 (26750) 1170 (25500)
f.o.b. terms (Rs/40-kg or Rs/ton)
Government release price for export 1000 (25000) 1000 (25000)
purposes (Rs/40-kg or Rs/ton)
Loss to the government at release 270 (6750) 270 (6750)
price (Rs/40-kg or Rs/ton)
Loss to national exchequer by 6.75 Billion 6.75 Billion
allowing export of 1 million ton
(Rs)
Loss to Punjab government by 23.625 Billion Not
allowing export of 3.5 million ton Applicable
(Rs)
Total value of wheat lying in 262.5 Billion
government stores at its release
price (Rs)
Total amount of credit payable by 414 Billion
provinces, PASSCO and TCP (Rs)
Total government earning by 75 Billion
exporting 3.5 million ton (Rs)
Note: Figures in parentheses are on per ton basis.