Agri-food markets in Qatar: Drivers, trends, and policy responses
Author | Ben Hassen, Tarek |
Author | El Bilali, Hamid |
Author | Al-Maadeed, Mohammed |
Available date | 2023-11-21T05:49:53Z |
Publication Date | 2020 |
Publication Name | Sustainability (Switzerland) |
Resource | Scopus |
ISSN | 20711050 |
Abstract | Agri-food markets are vital in achieving food security, especially for resource-poor, food-importing countries such as Qatar. The paper provides an overview of the evolution of agri-food markets in Qatar and explores the implications of past and ongoing changes in terms of food security and food system sustainability. In particular, the review analyzes drivers of changes, trends, and challenges as well as policy responses to address the emerging challenges while ensuring the country's food security. It draws upon a systematic review of scholarly literature indexed in the Web of Science as well as data from gray literature (e.g., reports) and databases (e.g., FAOSTAT). Different drivers (e.g., population growth with huge expatriate inflow, urbanization, income increase) affected the functioning of agri-food markets as well as the structure of the food chain (viz. production, processing, distribution, consumption) in Qatar. In addition to drivers, the food-related trends were also shaped by numerous environmental (e.g., land/water scarcity), economic, health, and trade challenges. To ensure long-term food and nutrition security for its population, Qatar implemented various policies and strategies (e.g., National Food Security Strategy 2018-2023). In this context, agri-food markets, as functional links between production and consumption, can foster transition towards sustainable food consumption and production patterns in Qatar. |
Language | en |
Publisher | MDPI |
Subject | Agricultural market Agriculture Climate change Environmental footprints Food import Food market Food policy Food security Gulf Cooperation Council Nutrition Qatar |
Type | Article Review |
Issue Number | 9 |
Volume Number | 12 |
Files in this item
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
-
Gulf Studies Center Research [109 items ]
-
International Affairs [160 items ]