Economic impact of aflatoxin contamination in SubSaharan Africa

Globalization, including new international tr ade standards and regulations, has placed sig- nificant constraints on competitiveness in a nd access to international markets for develop- ing countries, especially those in Sub-Sahara n Africa. Agricultural commodities from these...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Coulibaly, O., Hell, K., Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit, Hounkponou, S., Leslie, John F.
Formato: Capítulo de libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90783
_version_ 1855528991649169408
author Coulibaly, O.
Hell, K.
Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit
Hounkponou, S.
Leslie, John F.
author_browse Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit
Coulibaly, O.
Hell, K.
Hounkponou, S.
Leslie, John F.
author_facet Coulibaly, O.
Hell, K.
Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit
Hounkponou, S.
Leslie, John F.
author_sort Coulibaly, O.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Globalization, including new international tr ade standards and regulations, has placed sig- nificant constraints on competitiveness in a nd access to international markets for develop- ing countries, especially those in Sub-Sahara n Africa. Agricultural commodities from these regions must overcome problems ranging from lower productivity and product quality to higher per unit transportation costs, and lo wer capacity to manage product flow from sup- pliers to end-users (value chain management). The competitiveness of African commodities also is impeded by poor policy and institutional en vironments that result in high transaction costs. One factor reducing African agricultu ral commodity competitiveness for export is aflatoxin contamination. Aflatoxin lowers product quality and discounts export values, which may lead to significant economic losses for the countries and the agents in commodi- ty value chains. Losses from rejected export sh ipments and lower prices due to poor quality may exceed 100% if the product is destroyed a nd the exporter is paying for the shipping. Negative impacts on human health and househol d include mortality, loss of productivity and reduced income due to lower productive capacity, and related health costs. In this con- text, the cost of complying with food safety and agricultural health standards has been a major source of concern in the international development community and for African econ- omies, but without increased food quality, ne ither competitiveness nor more revenue from exports will result. We address the problem of access of African commodities to interna- tional markets by recommending an increase in public awareness of the costs and ill effects incurred due to mycotoxins, and the diffusion of aflatoxin control technology and related capacity building to improve food quality in Sub-Saharan Africa. We also recommend strengthening the capacity for conducting im pact assessments and collecting the data needed to make optimal decisions amongst possible aflatoxin control measures.
format Book Chapter
id CGSpace90783
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2008
publishDateRange 2008
publishDateSort 2008
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace907832023-12-08T19:25:22Z Economic impact of aflatoxin contamination in SubSaharan Africa Coulibaly, O. Hell, K. Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit Hounkponou, S. Leslie, John F. international markets african commodities aflatoxin control post-harvest technologies aflatoxin contamination Globalization, including new international tr ade standards and regulations, has placed sig- nificant constraints on competitiveness in a nd access to international markets for develop- ing countries, especially those in Sub-Sahara n Africa. Agricultural commodities from these regions must overcome problems ranging from lower productivity and product quality to higher per unit transportation costs, and lo wer capacity to manage product flow from sup- pliers to end-users (value chain management). The competitiveness of African commodities also is impeded by poor policy and institutional en vironments that result in high transaction costs. One factor reducing African agricultu ral commodity competitiveness for export is aflatoxin contamination. Aflatoxin lowers product quality and discounts export values, which may lead to significant economic losses for the countries and the agents in commodi- ty value chains. Losses from rejected export sh ipments and lower prices due to poor quality may exceed 100% if the product is destroyed a nd the exporter is paying for the shipping. Negative impacts on human health and househol d include mortality, loss of productivity and reduced income due to lower productive capacity, and related health costs. In this con- text, the cost of complying with food safety and agricultural health standards has been a major source of concern in the international development community and for African econ- omies, but without increased food quality, ne ither competitiveness nor more revenue from exports will result. We address the problem of access of African commodities to interna- tional markets by recommending an increase in public awareness of the costs and ill effects incurred due to mycotoxins, and the diffusion of aflatoxin control technology and related capacity building to improve food quality in Sub-Saharan Africa. We also recommend strengthening the capacity for conducting im pact assessments and collecting the data needed to make optimal decisions amongst possible aflatoxin control measures. 2008 2018-02-06T12:14:44Z 2018-02-06T12:14:44Z Book Chapter https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90783 en Limited Access Coulibaly, O., Hell, K., Bandyopadhyay, R., Hounkponou, S. & Leslie, J.F. (2008). Economic impact of aflatoxin contamination in Sub-Saharan Africa. In J. Leslie, R. Bandyopadhyay, and A. Visconti, Mycotoxins detection methods, management, public health and agricultural trade (1st ed., p. 67-76). Cambridge: CABI Publishing.
spellingShingle international markets
african commodities
aflatoxin control
post-harvest technologies
aflatoxin contamination
Coulibaly, O.
Hell, K.
Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit
Hounkponou, S.
Leslie, John F.
Economic impact of aflatoxin contamination in SubSaharan Africa
title Economic impact of aflatoxin contamination in SubSaharan Africa
title_full Economic impact of aflatoxin contamination in SubSaharan Africa
title_fullStr Economic impact of aflatoxin contamination in SubSaharan Africa
title_full_unstemmed Economic impact of aflatoxin contamination in SubSaharan Africa
title_short Economic impact of aflatoxin contamination in SubSaharan Africa
title_sort economic impact of aflatoxin contamination in subsaharan africa
topic international markets
african commodities
aflatoxin control
post-harvest technologies
aflatoxin contamination
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90783
work_keys_str_mv AT coulibalyo economicimpactofaflatoxincontaminationinsubsaharanafrica
AT hellk economicimpactofaflatoxincontaminationinsubsaharanafrica
AT bandyopadhyayranajit economicimpactofaflatoxincontaminationinsubsaharanafrica
AT hounkponous economicimpactofaflatoxincontaminationinsubsaharanafrica
AT lesliejohnf economicimpactofaflatoxincontaminationinsubsaharanafrica