UNITED NATIONS
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The object of this desk study is to describe consumption patterns in rural households in Ethiopia. Normally, relief assistance is provided in a manner concerned with the physical survival of people, meaning that first priority is given to ensuring minimum required calorie intake as well as medical support.
Besides food there are a lot of other basic needs a household faces. People have to live somewhere, have to buy clothes and meet social obligations. This fact is sometimes forgotten when dealing with aid. To enlighten the structures of essential expenditures in rural Ethiopia the following questions are of interest:
Data used in this study
The main source of this study is data obtained over the period of one year by the Central Statistical Authorityof Ethiopia. During this period, data was collected from household all over rural Ethiopia through conducting personal interviews. Each household was visited once every quarter of the year, spending a period of one month to obtain a broad spectrum of information.
Unfortunately the data is almost 15 years old and therefore the reliability of the figures for present day analysis cannot be completely relied upon. On the other hand, there has probably not been a big change in the habits of people in rural Ethiopia over the past years; relative figures can therefore still be relevant sources of information.
Another problem detected with this data is the fact that the survey
covers the entire rural Ethiopia, where food intake patterns vary from
region to region. In these areas cultural habits and per capita income
is also different. Therefore, this desk study can only provide an overall
general impression regarding consumption patterns in rural Ethiopia.
Percentages of different food intakes
The information obtained on the quantities of various food commodities
consumed by households shows that rural Ethiopians depend primarily on
cereals. Cereals together with Kocho (Ensete) and vegetables
contribute 85 percent of the total food intake per person, per day.
Commodity | % of intake | Commodity | % of gram |
Cereals | 54 | Spices | 1.1 |
Kocho | 17.5 | Meat | 0.8 |
Vegetables | 14.5 | Fruits | 0.4 |
Pulses unmilled | 3.9 | Oil seeds | 0.15 |
Dairy products | 3.2 | Fish | 0.5 |
Pulses milled and split | 1.7 | others | 2.2 |
The following table shows how food intake percentages change among different income groups. As the data in this study was collected between 1981and 1982 it is not possible to evalauate income groups classes by amount but rather by "high", "medium" and "low income".
"High income" represents the average of the seven highest income groups mentioned in the report issued by the Central Statistic Authority. "Medium income" refers to an average of the eight medium income groups, and "low income" stands for the average of the seven lowest income classes.
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In all three income groups cereals, Kocho and vegetables contribute 85 percent of the daily intake. With raising income people seem to substitude Kocho and vegetables with cereals. Kocho and vegetables cover 55% of the daily intake in the low income group, whereas theses commodities go down to 15 % in the high income group.
The intake of cereals more than doubles from low to high income. This corresponds with the common knowledge that Kocho is the food of the poor.
The pattern of protein rich food intake also changes with different purchasing power. In the low income group dairy products, meat and fish contribute 2.8 % of the daily diet, in the medium income group they account for 4.8 % and in the high income group 4.6%.
Surprising is the intake pattern in different income groups of unmilled pulses, meat and fruits. The intake of these commodities does not seem to follow any one particular pattern. The reason for this may be the fact that figures in Table 2 are relative, whereas absolute figures would show an increase of consumption from the medium to high income groups.
The consumption of meat increase from low to high income groups, and
even doubles; the total, however, remains under one percent of the daily
diet. This shows that meat is still a luxury item for the relatively higher
income groups; in this regard the expression high income is slightly misleading.
Essential Expenditures besides food
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Clothing and footwear |
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Services |
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Housing |
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Other consumption expenditure |
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Household equipment |
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Household non-consumption exp. |
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Household operations |
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Drinks and stimulants |
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The most important part of non-food expenditures is housing; almost one third is spent on household requirements. Among the expenditures for housing the biggest is spent on energy (90%), and the remaining 10% on rent and water.
An indicator of household vulnerability may be "household non-consumption expenditures". It covers almost one fifth of the non food expenditures. According to the report of the Central Statistical Authority the households which spent more than their income over the time of the survey was 36.4 per cent. Moreover, it seems that loans are an important part of the rural economy and are often utilised. If theses depts are mainly seasonal (as a coping strategy) or regular can not be concluded from the survey.
The expenditure for drinks and stimulants seem to be rather high, even more than that on clothing and footwear. However, taking in account how important coffee and tella are for social life, especially when people are helping out on the farm or to build a house (self-help groups like wonfel, debo and jigi,) the percentage is not that astonishing anymore.
The following table gives a breakdown of the non-food expenditures by different income classes.
Items | Low Income | Medium Income | High Income |
Clothing and footwear |
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Housing |
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Household equipment |
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Household operation |
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Services |
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Other consumption expenditures |
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Non-consumption expenditures |
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Drinks an stimulants |
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Households with higher income tend to spend more on clothes, whereas the expenditures for housing (mainly energy) effects their budget a lot less in comparison to the medium and low income classes.
Drinks and stimulants remain a main expense of all the income classes; this is again an indicator of the social relevance of these expenditures.
Table 5 shows the ratio between food and non-food expenditures. This ratio does not vary a lot among different income classes. Conventional wisdom would suggest that with a higher income the percentage of expenditure for food would decline. An answer might be that the higher income groups consume more food and subsidize cheaper with more expensive food.
Average Income | Low Income | Medium Income | High Income | |
Food |
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Non food |
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Total |
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It is assumed that the per capita food intake of 1,900 calories a day is sufficient for the long term sustenance of a population with light physical activity living in a warm climate. In Ethiopia the recommended level of energy intake has been increased to 2,000 Kcal per person per day (according to the Government's relief distribution plan). This adjustment is mainly due to the fact that the average Ethiopian beneficiary has a higher physical activity (i.e. agricultural work) and lives in a colder climate. In order to reach this 2,000 calories a day, a person needs between 550 and 600 gram of cereal equivalents. (Over a one year period sufficient calorie intake of cereal equivalents is covered with 210 kgs of cereals per person.) According to Table 5 a household covers its food need with 60% of the income regardless of the purchasing power. Considering a medium price for a quintal of cereals (100 Birr/ Qunital), a household has to generate an extra income of 140 Birr per household member, per year in order to cover the essential non food expenditures.
Disclaimer
The designations employed and the presentation of material in this document do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever of the UN concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries.
UN-EUE | Tel.: (251) (1) 51-10-28/29 |
PO Box : 5580 | Fax: (251) (1) 51-12-92 |
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia | Email: undp-eue@telecom.net.et |