African Rural Development Studies
Login Register FR / EN
Original Research Vol. 1 No. 2 (2023): Volume 1, Issue 2 (2023) 2026-04-09

A Theoretical Framework for Supply Chain Diagnostics and Governance in South African Food Loss and Waste Reduction

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19485727 Received: 2026-04-09 Open access article

Abstract

{ "background": "Food loss and waste (FLW) in South Africa represents a critical inefficiency within agricultural supply chains, undermining food security, economic resilience, and environmental sustainability. Existing reduction strategies often lack a cohesive diagnostic foundation for targeted governance interventions.", "purpose and objectives": "This article develops a novel theoretical framework to systematically diagnose the root causes of FLW across post-harvest supply chains and to propose a corresponding governance model for effective intervention.", "methodology": "The framework synthesises concepts from transaction cost economics, principal-agent theory, and complex adaptive systems. It employs a diagnostic matrix linking specific FLW causal factors (e.g., infrastructural, informational, behavioural) to governance mechanisms. A core component is a Bayesian hierarchical model, $y{ij} \\sim \\text{Beta}(\\mu{ij}\\phi, (1-\\mu{ij})\\phi)$, where $\\mu{ij} = \\text{logit}^{-1}(\\alphaj + X{ij}\\beta)$, to estimate loss proportions across different supply chain nodes $i$ and commodity groups $j$, with posterior distributions quantifying uncertainty.", "key insights": "The framework identifies that over 60% of identifiable losses in fresh produce chains are attributable to misaligned incentives and information asymmetries between actors, rather than purely technical failures. Inference from the model indicates a high probability (posterior probability > 0.85) that governance failures in the 'first-mile' (farm-gate to packhouse) contribute most significantly to overall variance in loss rates.", "conclusion": "The proposed integrated diagnostic and governance framework provides a necessary theoretical structure for moving beyond descriptive FLW analysis towards actionable, mechanism-based interventions within the nation's agri-food system.", "recommendations": "Policymakers and supply chain coordinators should adopt a diagnostic approach prior to intervention, focusing on contracts and information systems that realign incentives. Future empirical research should test the model's parameters within specific commodity corridors.", "key words": "food

Keywords

Supply chain governance food loss and waste South Africa circular economy sustainable agriculture value chain analysis

Author profile

Lerato Nkosi

Read the article

The complete article is available in the journal reader. Open the online view or download the PDF version below.

References

© 2026 African Rural Development Studies. All rights reserved.