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Investing in human development and building state resilience in fragile contexts: a case study of early nutrition investments in Burkina Faso

Investing in human development and building state resilience in fragile contexts: a case study of early nutrition investments in Burkina Faso
Investing in human development and building state resilience in fragile contexts: a case study of early nutrition investments in Burkina Faso

Maternal and early malnutrition have negative health and developmental impacts over the life-course. Consequently, early nutrition support can provide significant benefits into later life, provided the later life contexts allow. This study examines the limits of siloed investments in nutrition and illustrates how ignoring life-course contextual constraints limits human development benefits and exacerbates inequality, particularly in fragile contexts. This case study focuses on Burkina Faso, a country with high rates of early malnutrition and a fragile state. We modelled the impact of scaling up 10 nutrition interventions to 80% coverage for a single year cohort on stunting, nationally and sub-nationally, using the Lives Saved Tool (LiST), and the consequent impact on earnings, without and with a complementary cash-transfer in later life. The impact on earnings was modelled utilising the well-established pathway between early nutrition, years of completed schooling and, consequent adult earnings. Productivity returns were estimated as the present value of increased income over individuals' working lives, then compared to estimates of the present value of providing the cost of nutrition interventions and cash-transfers. The cost benefit ratio at the national level for scaled nutrition alone is 1:1. Sub-nationally the worst-off region yields the lowest ratio < 0.2 for every dollar spent. The combination of nutrition and cash-transfers national cost benefit is 1:12, still with regional variation but with great improvement in the poorest region. This study shows that early nutrition support alone may not be enough to address inequality and may add to state fragility. Taking a life-course perspective when priority-setting in contexts with multiple constraints on development can help to identify interventions that maximizing returns, without worsening inequality.

2767-3375
e0001737
Desmond, Chris
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Watt, Kathryn
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Boua, Palwendé R.
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Moore, Candice
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Erzse, Agnes
817251b4-544e-4535-8ceb-4d1126fe0102
Sorgho, Hermann
a8891940-5da3-42ad-b486-9504c0c53804
Hofman, Karen
29fcd194-0248-4bce-914e-9812ec4d3243
Roumba, Toussaint
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Tinto, Halidou
8f149b48-e65f-4ae7-9e4e-5d7923e61c85
Ward, Kate A.
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INPreP group
Desmond, Chris
ea386a5f-c492-452d-9bde-6fec77d1c65c
Watt, Kathryn
a8aa5445-c7ed-49d3-8bd0-ca2aa268d833
Boua, Palwendé R.
3134b898-f460-497d-b0a1-4a7adb7f9347
Moore, Candice
16244fb0-baf2-4c03-ad0f-3d32d2579053
Erzse, Agnes
817251b4-544e-4535-8ceb-4d1126fe0102
Sorgho, Hermann
a8891940-5da3-42ad-b486-9504c0c53804
Hofman, Karen
29fcd194-0248-4bce-914e-9812ec4d3243
Roumba, Toussaint
f42484b2-ae86-4a9f-ab76-8b1346887724
Tinto, Halidou
8f149b48-e65f-4ae7-9e4e-5d7923e61c85
Ward, Kate A.
39bd4db1-c948-4e32-930e-7bec8deb54c7

Desmond, Chris, Watt, Kathryn, Boua, Palwendé R., Erzse, Agnes, Sorgho, Hermann, Hofman, Karen, Roumba, Toussaint, Tinto, Halidou and Ward, Kate A. , INPreP group (2023) Investing in human development and building state resilience in fragile contexts: a case study of early nutrition investments in Burkina Faso. PLOS Global Public Health, 3 (3), e0001737. (doi:10.1371/journal.pgph.0001737).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Maternal and early malnutrition have negative health and developmental impacts over the life-course. Consequently, early nutrition support can provide significant benefits into later life, provided the later life contexts allow. This study examines the limits of siloed investments in nutrition and illustrates how ignoring life-course contextual constraints limits human development benefits and exacerbates inequality, particularly in fragile contexts. This case study focuses on Burkina Faso, a country with high rates of early malnutrition and a fragile state. We modelled the impact of scaling up 10 nutrition interventions to 80% coverage for a single year cohort on stunting, nationally and sub-nationally, using the Lives Saved Tool (LiST), and the consequent impact on earnings, without and with a complementary cash-transfer in later life. The impact on earnings was modelled utilising the well-established pathway between early nutrition, years of completed schooling and, consequent adult earnings. Productivity returns were estimated as the present value of increased income over individuals' working lives, then compared to estimates of the present value of providing the cost of nutrition interventions and cash-transfers. The cost benefit ratio at the national level for scaled nutrition alone is 1:1. Sub-nationally the worst-off region yields the lowest ratio < 0.2 for every dollar spent. The combination of nutrition and cash-transfers national cost benefit is 1:12, still with regional variation but with great improvement in the poorest region. This study shows that early nutrition support alone may not be enough to address inequality and may add to state fragility. Taking a life-course perspective when priority-setting in contexts with multiple constraints on development can help to identify interventions that maximizing returns, without worsening inequality.

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Accepted/In Press date: 27 February 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 29 March 2023

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 477649
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/477649
ISSN: 2767-3375
PURE UUID: 7eda3c9a-e7ab-4c54-88cc-08152e0227c7
ORCID for Kate A. Ward: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7034-6750

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Date deposited: 12 Jun 2023 16:40
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:40

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Contributors

Author: Chris Desmond
Author: Kathryn Watt
Author: Palwendé R. Boua
Author: Candice Moore
Author: Agnes Erzse
Author: Hermann Sorgho
Author: Karen Hofman
Author: Toussaint Roumba
Author: Halidou Tinto
Author: Kate A. Ward ORCID iD
Corporate Author: INPreP group

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