Introduction
In the last article poverty was defined and its relation to food security explained. This article explains the relationship between economic growth and food security as a pre-requisite to enhancing food security. Interventions that promote food security at different levels require financial.
Human and material resources for implementation and these resources can only be generated through increased economic growth. The article recognises the fact that economic increase alone would not automatically ensure food security for all people but that other mechanisms have to be put in place to ensure redistribution of resources arising from economic growth.
Definition of Economic Growth
Economic growth is the incremental value in monetary berms of the wealth of a nation. The total value of goods and services produced by a nation are measured using a compound index called Gross Domestic Product or GDP.
The growth of GDP from one year to the other is measured in percentage terms which may be positive, static or negative depending on the performance of the economy. The higher the economic development rate the higher the amount of financial resources that a country can have available for further investment in various sectors of the economy.
Economic Growth and Food Security
When a country achieves higher levels of economy relative to the size of the economy and population size, potential is created for increased resources to flow towards interventions that address food insecurity both in the short term and long term.
However, it is also possible for the wealth from accelerated economy to be concentrated in a small section of society such that deliberate strategies and incentive mechanisms have to be put in place in order to facilitate the flow of resources from economic increase towards attainment of food security.