1st Edition

Food Aid and the Developing World Four African Case Studies

By Christopher Stevens Copyright 1979
    228 Pages
    by Routledge

    228 Pages
    by Routledge

    Food aid is a controversial form of development assistance and this book, first published in 1979, seeks to counter allegations from critics by taking account of both direct and indirect affects.

    Based on field research in Tunisia, Botswana, Upper Volta and Lesotho, it considers aid from the UK, EEC, USAID, the World Food Programme, Canada and France, and draws a number of policy-orientated conclusions about the impact of food aid on nutrition, consumer prices and agricultural production. In the light of the evidence from field studies it is shown that many of the claims advanced by food aid supporters and by critics cannot be sustained, and that the real impact of food aid is rather different from that assumed by the conventional wisdom on the subject.

    Part I: Introduction  1. Whys and Wherefores  2. The Donors  3. The Recipients  Part II: The Uses of Food Aid  4. Food for Cash  5. Food for Nutrition  6. Food for Wages  Part III: The Impact of Food Aid  7. The Impact of Food Aid on Nutrition  8. Consumer Prices  9. Food Aid and Agricultural Production  10: Food Aid: A Curate’s Egg

    Biography

    Christopher Stevens