- Chicken is an essential part of South African culture and the economy.
- The country has seen a 20% rise in the cost of chicken, with higher prices on the way.
- More than half of South Africa's adults live below the poverty line.
CAPE TOWN, South Africa — Food insecurity is not new to South Africans, and the soaring prices of mainstay ingredients like chicken will make it even harder for people to access basic foods.
Chicken is an essential part of South African culture and economy. A Google search beginning with "nearest …" often automatically offers choices such as "KFC," "Nandos," or "Chicken Licken."
Not only are there almost 1,000 KFC locations in the country, but South Africans use the entire bird when cooking — including the heads and feet, known as "walkie talkies" and "runaways." Chicken is the biggest source of protein in the country of 60.1 million people.
The average per capita consumption of chicken in South Africa in 2020 was nearly 39 kilograms a year, more than double the beef consumption of 16 kilograms a year, and more than four times the 9 kilograms a year of egg consumption, according to the South African Poultry Association.
As of the beginning of July, the price for a whole frozen chicken has risen 20% year-over-year to 33.65 rand, or about $1.96, according to research by the banking group Absa's "Agri Trends: Livestock Report."
And poultry prices will continue to climb, according to the report.
"We expect chicken prices to follow an upward trend over the coming weeks, supported by a weaker exchange rate, sustained high input costs, and firm consumer demand for affordable sources of meat protein," the report says.
In a country where more than half of adults are living below the national poverty line, and 27% of children in the country have stunted growth, according to UNICEF, a 20% rise in the cost of a food staple like chicken means fewer people will be able to afford a major source of protein. Rising prices are causing stress for consumers, poultry farmers, and small-scale fast-food outlets.
Aamir Shahzad, the owner of Aysha's Take Aways in Lotus River, Cape Town, said that in the past year, he has seen the price of his main ingredients rise significantly, citing the cost of staples like butter, which has jumped from R12 to R22; the price of 1 kilogram of chili powder rose from R35 to R90; and the price of chicken has nearly doubled, from R24 to R45 a kilogram.
Shahzad is feeling the strain — he said he has very little leeway to increase prices, and since he did earlier this year, sales are down. He had to lay off four of his five employees, and his small business incurred a loss of R22,000, or about $1,940, in June.
"There is not a lot of money," he said.
Everything costs more in this impoverished economy
Economic hardships are hitting South Africa's residents from many angles, including higher fuel and electricity prices and rising interest rates.
South Africa already faces sharp inequality in who can access goods and services, and the COVID-19 pandemic deepened the divide. And it led to a sharp jump in unemployment, from 27.6% in the first quarter of 2019 to 34.5% in the first quarter of 2022.
"The rising cost of chicken does not show the whole picture, as the situation for South Africa's poor is a lot worse than this one indicator," said Mervyn Abrahams, the program coordinator at the Pietermaritzburg Economic Justice and Dignity Group, an organization that monitors the cost of food prices for South Africa's poor.
The PEJDG tracks a basic basket of groceries, containing 44 essential foods, in its Household Affordability Index, and it found that in June the cost of a basic nutritional food basket had risen 11.5% year-over-year, to R3,187 for a family of four.
Abrahams said about half the country's workers earn R3,500, or $211.65, a month, the country's basic minimum wage.
"This basket has become totally unaffordable. We are in terrible trouble," Abrahams said.
The South African economy was struggling even before the arrival of COVID-19. It entered a recession in the latter half of 2019, and the pandemic caused the economy to shrink even further, with GDP contracting 5% by the end of 2020.
Throughout 2021, the economy made a steady recovery, reaching its pre-pandemic levels in the first quarter of 2022. Growth came to a halt, though, with the ongoing war in Ukraine, which has put enormous pressure on an already-strained food supply.
Even though food prices are rising, experts say the grocery bill is not even the spending priority for the country's poor.
"People prioritize transport costs, electricity, and servicing of debt. Only then do people start buying food," Abrahams said.
The cost of feeding a family
All of this means that chicken, which is a mainstay in many homes and businesses, is becoming less affordable, though it's still cheaper than red meat and other protein options.
And it's becoming harder for chicken farmers and producers to sustain a livelihood, given the rising costs of growing, feeding, and selling the bird.
"It's putting a lot of strain on smaller producers," said Joandra Cloete, the director of Our Poultry Place Farm, a broiler farm outside of Cape Town that also offers mentoring and sells feed and other poultry products to other small-scale farmers.
The difficult times are pushing farmers to make desperate choices.
"At times it's even forced the small producers to quit their projects. Others try to mix their own feed, but it just results in huge death tolls of their chickens," Cloete said. While mixing or buying less feed might seem like a cost saving, it can cause slow growth in chickens and other health problems.
Cloete said that it was inevitable that Our Poultry Place Farm had to increase its prices.
"We had no choice when it came to passing on the pricing, otherwise we will have to close our farms, leaving many without jobs and children and households suffering," she said.
Though the steep rise in food prices is putting poor households under pressure, they are getting some government stipends, which started during the height of COVID-19.
The government has been paying out a monthly grant of R350 to 10.5 million people since March 2020, to ease the rising cost of food.
"It seems like that R350, most of it is going towards chicken," said Chris Shutter, the CEO Astral Foods, the largest chicken producer in South Africa.
While the grants have helped in the short term, South Africans are now grappling with more price increases, with food and nonalcoholic beverages rising 7.6% year-over-year in June — that's up from the 6.2% rise in March, before the start of the war in Ukraine.
Cheaper cuts and odd spikes
Shahzad, the owner of Aysha's Take Aways, said he knows of several fast-food chicken shops that are for sale because the owners are struggling to earn a living running the establishments. In his five years of running his business, this is the worst drop in sales he's experienced.
From what the PEJDG's Abrahams has seen, people are not giving up chicken entirely but are shifting to eating the less desirable parts of the chicken like the gizzard, liver, and feet.
That shift has increased demand so much, it's resulted in a noticeable spike for some of these parts. The price for 2 kilograms of chicken liver, for example, rose 24% year-over-year to about R68 in June.
Abrahams said that global supply-chain issues have made an already difficult situation worse.
According to PEJDG, a 10-kilogram bag of frozen chicken parts rose 14% year-over-year, to R384, in June.
The National Agricultural Marketing Council noted this concern in its March 2022 issue of the South African Poultry Products Prices Monitor.
"South Africa's current economic challenges are likely to exacerbate consumers' inability to afford poultry, which is one of the most affordable and most consumed source of animal protein by the country's household majority," the council said.
For her part, Our Poultry Place Farm's Cloete sees no easy way for South Africans to get around the spike in food prices.
"I guess consumers just have to roll with the punches, and mommies have to try to feed their families with tighter budgets," she said.