Call for proposals for a firm to conduct a survey on measuring markets and consumer access to fruits and vegetables in Sri Lanka
Background
Poor diets are a primary cause of malnutrition and the leading cause of diseases worldwide. Improving diets, including increasing fruit and vegetable intake, could save one in five lives lost annually. Micronutrients and dietary fiber are essential for health; micronutrients obtained from fruit and vegetables have a lower environmental footprint than from other foods, making fruit and vegetables essential to healthy and sustainable diets. Globally, fruit and vegetable intake is far below recommended levels, however, the extent and nature of the problem is poorly understood due to insufficient dietary and food environment-related data, especially in low- and middle-income countries.
Increasing fruit and vegetable intake will require starting with consumers, understanding dietary patterns, and addressing barriers to access. In Sri Lanka, barriers to food access are thought to have increased considerably due to the economic crisis that took hold in 2020, exacerbated by the Covid-19 crisis, which eventually led to the country declaring bankruptcy in 2022. The crisis had broad impacts on the food system, affecting both supply and demand, and in particular the affordability of food, but specific impacts on fruit and vegetables are still unknown.
The CGIAR Research Initiative on Fruit and Vegetables for Sustainable Healthy Diets (FRESH), aims to use an end-to-end approach to increase fruits and vegetables intake, improve diet quality, nutrition and health while also improving livelihoods, empowering women and youth, and mitigating negative environmental impacts. In Sri Lanka, one of four FRESH focus countries, such an end-to-end approach needs to be informed by up-to-date contextual evidence on how the economic crisis has altered marketing and consumers’ access to fruit and vegetables.
Under the FRESH initiative, IFPRI will examine the impacts of the economic crisis on marketing and consumers’ access to fruit and vegetables, including by exploring impacts on the cost of a healthy diet, and margins for different supply chain actors, which could drive retail prices that consumers are exposed to. Additionally, the project would put in place regular monitoring of the cost of a healthy diet moving forward and pilot new approaches for assessing retail-level fruit and vegetable losses.
The proposed study will utilize primary data—including producer, wholesale, and retail food prices—which would be collected by the collaborator, to carry out new analyses into the impacts of Sri Lanka’s economic crisis on marketing and consumers’ access to fruit and vegetables, as well as the cost and affordability of a healthy diet.
Overview of the study
The study under this consultancy will take place from November 2023 through December 2024.
This study will include the examination of the marketing of fruit and vegetables will be a margin analysis, focusing on two main vegetables (tomatoes and beans) and three main fruits (banana, mango, and papaya), which will compare the margins captured by different actors along the supply chain, including farmers, collectors, wholesalers, and retailers, before and after the economic crisis. The study will also examine whether temporal retail price fluctuations in the selected fruit and vegetables have changed due to the economic crisis, and whether the spatial integration of prices across the retail markets has changed. Lastly, the study will pilot a new method for assessing the quantities of fruit (bananas only) and vegetables (tomatoes and beans) lost at retail level, which may include markets as well as stores and/or wholesale markets.
Changes in consumers’ access to fruit and vegetables will be analyzed through calculation of the cost of a healthy diet, which considers the cost of adhering to Sri Lanka’s national recommendations for daily fruit and vegetable intake, among other healthy food groups. The study will analyze cost of a healthy diet in the aftermath of the crisis relative to income and wage-levels to provide evidence on the affordability of a healthy diet, including fruits and vegetables.
Activities
The collaborator will coordinate the activities that will be conducted as part of the project, including all necessary supplies and services for data collection, data processing, and data analysis. These activities will include the following:
A. Data collection preparation
B. Data collection, data entry, and data cleaning
C. Data analysis
D. Dissemination
Timeline of activities
The proposed timetable for the work is as below:
Tasks | Period |
Share a field plan for collection of primary data, including food price and loss data | November 2023 |
Share standard operating procedures and protocols for food price data collection | November – December 2023 |
Conduct cost of diet analysis for 3rd and 4th quarters of 2023. | December 2023 |
Write research report documenting trends in the cost of a healthy diet and affordability for the second half of 2023 | January – February 2024 |
Conduct margin analysis, temporal price fluctuation analysis, and spatial co-integration analysis, comparing before and after economic shock. | January – June 2024 |
Pilot new data collection method for assessing fruit and vegetable losses | March 2024 |
Conduct cost of diet analysis for 1st and 2nd quarters of 2024. | July 2024 |
Write research report documenting trends in the cost of a healthy diet and affordability for 1st and 2nd quarters of 2024. | July – August 2024 |
Interpretation of findings from margin analysis, temporal price fluctuation analysis, and spatial co-integration analysis and research report writing | August – October 2024 |
Writing of policy brief and journal article | November – December 2024 |
Deliverables (due dates to be determined)
Required qualifications
Technical and financial offer
The following items must be included in the technical offer: