Key data for Cape Verde

NCI19th HRCI2nd HANCI7th
HANCI-Africa compares 45 African countries for their performance on 22 indicators of political commitment to reduce hunger and undernutrition. All the countries compared in the index have high rates of hunger and undernutrition. The comparative approach of the index means that country scores are calculated in relation to the political commitment of the other countries in the index.
Existing rates of: Stunting: 21.4% Wasting: 6.9% Proportion of population underweight: 6.9% Source: Government of Cabo Verde (Ministry of Health,1994)

Strong Performance

  • The Government of Cape Verde has ensured tenure security for rural populations. Land titling is common and land markets function well. Policy promotes equitable access to common property resources.
  • The Government encourages varied agricultural research and extension services, and local farmer organisations are involved in setting policy priorities. The extension system is effective and properly reaches out to poor farmers. Government policies, strategies and mechanisms seek to ensure gender equity in access to extension services.
  • In Cape Verde, the law gives women equal access to agricultural land as men and these rights are upheld in practice. This reduces women’s vulnerability to hunger and undernutrition.
  • Cape Verde has devised a National Nutrition Policy/Strategy.
  • The Government has fully enshrined the International Code of Marketing of Breastmilk Substitutes into domestic law.
  • The Government of Cape Verde promotes complementary feeding practices and has achieved two high doses of vitamin A supplementation for 98% of children in 1996.
  • 96.2% of the population of Cape Verde in 2017 has access to an improved drinking water source.
  • In Cape Verde, constitutional protection of the right to social security is strong.
  • Strong civil registration rates (91% in 2010) potentially enable children’s access to critical public services such as health and education.

Areas for improvement

  • Spending on agriculture (5.9% of public spending in 2018), does not meet government commitments set out in the African Union’s Maputo Declaration (10% of public spending).
  • Cape Verde’s spending in its health sector (9.9% of public spending in 2017) does not fully meet (15%) commitments set out in the Abuja Declaration.
  • In Cape Verde, the law gives women and men equal economic rights. However, these laws are not effectively enforced and discriminatory practices against women continue, increasing their vulnerability to hunger and undernutrition.
  • Relative to other HANCI countries, Cape Verde’s medium/long term national development policy (Plano Estratégico de Desenvolvimento Sustentável (PEDS)) places weak importance to nutrition.
  • Even though Cape Verde has developed a National Nutrition Policy/Strategy and clear time-bound nutrition targets, a multisectoral and multistakeholder policy coordination mechanism is still lacking.
  • Policymakers in Cape Verde do not benefit from regular nutrition surveys that are statistically representative at national level. The last survey was published in 2005.
  • Social safety nets in Cape Verde are basic and only cover few risks for a limited number of beneficiaries.

Hunger Reduction Commitment Index (HRCI)

Public Spending Score Year HRCI rank of 45
Public spending on agriculture as share of total public spending
?
5.9%201817th
Public spending on health as share of total public spending
?
9.9%201712th
Policies Score Year HRCI rank of 45
Access to land (security of tenure)
?
Strong2016Joint 11th
Access to agricultural research and extension services
?
Strong201316th
Civil registration system — coverage of live births
?
91%20107th
Functioning of social protection systems
?
Weak2018Joint 8th
Laws Score Year HRCI rank of 45
Level of constitutional protection of the right to food
?
Moderate2014Joint 8th
Equality of women’s access to agricultural land
?
In Law & Practice2015Joint 1st
Equality of women’s economic rights
?
In Law, not in Practice2019Joint 3rd
Constitutional right to social security
?
Yes2014Joint 1st

Nutrition Commitment Index (NCI)

Public Spending Score Year NCI rank of 45
Separate budget for nutrition
?
Sectoral only2019Joint 16th
Policies Score Year NCI rank of 45
Vitamin A supplementation coverage for children
?
98%19966th
Government promotes complementary feeding
?
Yes2012Joint 1st
Population with access to an improved water source
?
96.2%20176th
Population with access to improved sanitation
?
73.9%20177th
Health care visits for pregnant women
?
87.4%201031st
Nutrition features in national development policy
?
Weak2017-202136th
National Nutrition Policy/Strategy
?
Yes2019Joint 1st
Multisector and multistakeholder policy coordination
?
No2019Joint 36th
Time bound nutrition targets
?
Yes2019Joint 1st
National nutrition survey in last 3 years
?
No2005Joint 37th
Laws Score Year NCI rank of 45
Enshrine ICBMS in domestic law
?
Fully Enshrined2019Joint 1st