- 3 million Ghanaians Remain Vulnerable to Food Insecurity Despite Stable National Averages
Ghana’s national food consumption picture may look broadly stable, but the apparent calm is masking a deeper vulnerability: about three (3) million people remain at risk of food insecurity even though most households still report acceptable food consumption levels.
That is the central warning from the latest Mobile Vulnerability Analysis and Mapping Food Insecurity Vulnerability Report, released in Accra by the Ghana Statistical Service. The report, which covers October to December 2025, found that about 91 per cent of households, representing nearly 30 million people, recorded acceptable food consumption. But the Government Statistician, Dr Alhassan Iddrisu, said that national average conceals serious pockets of distress.
“Beneath this national average, about three million people remain vulnerable, facing poor or borderline food consumption,” he said.
That distinction matters. Food security is often judged by national averages, but averages can be comforting in ways reality is not. A country can appear stable at the top line while large groups of households quietly slide into hardship underneath it. Ghana’s latest food data suggest that this tension is indeed present.
The survey covered about 9,000 households across all 16 regions, conducted with the World Food Programme and supported by the Korea International Cooperation Agency. It found that many families are increasingly relying on coping strategies to manage food needs, even where outright collapse in consumption has not yet occurred.
According to Dr. Iddrisu, about one in three households is already using medium- to high- coping strategies, while nearly one in four households is in crisis or emergency coping. These measures include cutting meal quality, borrowing, selling productive assets, and reducing spending on health and education.
“This is not sustainable. It means many households are managing today by sacrificing tomorrow,” he said.
That may be the most important line in the report’s public presentation. It suggests the food challenge is not only about current hunger, but about the economic damage households are inflicting on themselves simply to stay afloat. When families begin selling assets or cutting health and education spending, food insecurity stops being a short-term welfare issue and becomes a long-term development risk.
The burden is also not evenly distributed. The report points to the northern belt as the most exposed part of the country, with nearly 40 per cent of households in the Northern, North East, Upper East and Upper West regions recording poor or borderline food consumption.
The data also show that vulnerability is closely tied to education and livelihoods. Households with no formal education are said to be up to ten times more vulnerable than those with tertiary education, while families dependent on smallholder agriculture face risks around six times higher than households engaged in trading or savings-based activities.
Those findings point to a broader structural issue. Food insecurity in Ghana is not just about food supply. It is also about income quality, resilience, education and the uneven ability of households to absorb shocks.
Perhaps most troubling is the weakness of social support reaching affected families. The report found that only about 1.5 per cent of households said they had received any form of assistance, raising questions about the reach and effectiveness of existing interventions.
Dr Iddrisu said support must be better targeted. “Targeting must improve. We must focus on high-risk regions and vulnerable groups with precision,” he said, warning that early intervention is critical because “if we wait until consumption collapses, we are already late.”
Former Government Statistician Dr Philomena Efua Nyarko, who chaired the event, reinforced that point, arguing that data-driven policy is essential because households that appear stable may still be vulnerable beneath the surface. “Many households that appear stable remain vulnerable, often relying on coping strategies to sustain that stability,” she said.
The report stops short of describing the situation as a nationwide food crisis. But its warning is more subtle and, in some ways, more serious: Ghana is not yet facing broad collapse in food consumption, but the country may be allowing hidden vulnerability to deepen until it becomes much harder to reverse.
“The real danger is not just what the data shows today, but what happens if we delay and fail to act with precision,” Dr Iddrisu said. “Food security is not just about feeding people today. It is about protecting livelihoods, preserving dignity and securing the future of this country.”
