Across Africa, conversations around hunger now focus on whether food is nutritious, affordable, and accessible. Rising prices, climate shocks, and market disruptions weaken diet quality, especially for low-income households. The Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) and World Food Programme (WFP) warn that current trends are placing Africa on a fragile path toward a deeper nutrition crisis.
This is not a sudden emergency. It is a slow-moving risk built from policy choices, market dynamics, and production constraints. Nutrition security sits at the intersection of agriculture, health, and economic stability. For Africa’s growing population, the stakes are high.
Nutrition security goes beyond enough calories. It means all people, at all times, have physical, social, and economic access to sufficient, safe, and nutritious food that meets dietary needs for an active and healthy life.
Nutrition security requires diet diversity, including proteins, fruits, vegetables, and micronutrient-rich foods.
Households may consume enough calories while still suffering hidden hunger, deficiencies in iron, zinc, vitamin A, and protein that affect child development, immunity, and productivity.
Across Africa, this gap between calorie sufficiency and nutritional adequacy has widened. Prices of healthier foods rise faster than staples.
Recent price movements show a clear pattern: nutritious foods have become less affordable for millions of African households. Data from national statistics offices, including Nigeria’s National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), alongside FAO and World Bank food price monitoring, reveal three major trends.
In Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country, food inflation consistently outpaces general inflation. Similar trends appear in East and Southern Africa, where climate shocks and currency pressures push nutritious foods out of reach for urban and rural poor.
What’s Driving the Nutrition Gap?
These factors disproportionately affect nutrient-rich foods, widening the nutrition gap even where staples remain adequate.
Nigerian agribusiness leader Ndidi Okonkwo Nwuneli, co-founder of AACE Foods, argues local processing and value addition are critical. In public forums, she stresses reducing import dependence and post-harvest losses to make nutritious foods accessible. Her view reflects industry calls for profitable markets that reward farmers and deliver affordable, diverse foods
What Can Consumers and Off-Takers Do?
Africa’s nutrition challenge is serious but not inevitable. Timely policies, smarter markets, and investments can protect diets amid pressure. Nutrition security measures resilience, 2026 can be a turning point.