Publication:
Diet quality rather than caloric intake associated with labour wages in Kenya

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Identifiers

Publication date

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publishers

Metrics
Google Scholar
Export

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

Malnutrition, in all its forms, poses a significant threat to human development and economic growth. Consequently, enhancing food security and consumption is a moral and social imperative for fostering development. Despite the substantial evidence on the relationship between caloric intake and labour productivity, research on the connection between labour productivity and diet quality, measured by micronutrient intake, is scarce. This paper, focusing on Kenya, estimates the linkages between micronutrient intake and labour productivity, measured by household labour income. The daily intakes of energy and micronutrients per adult male equivalent at the household level is computed employing food consumption data collected in the 2015–2016 Kenya Integrated Household Budget Survey. Econometric results show that daily micronutrient (haem iron, zinc, folate, calcium, vitamins B2 and A) intakes are significantly and positively correlated with labour productivity. The quality of diets, reflected by micronutrient intakes, has a bigger impact on labour productivity than the daily energy consumed, measured by caloric intake. This paper contributes to the nutrition–productivity literature and provides a basis for designing policies to improve the nutritional quality of diets.

Description

MeSH Terms

DeCS Terms

Bibliographic citation

Custodio, E., Jiménez, S., Ramos, M.P. et al. Diet quality rather than caloric intake associated with labour wages in Kenya. Food Sec. 2025. 17:345-361.

Related dataset

Related publication

Document type