Reading these articles inspires us to keep selling fairly traded handicrafts to help people maintain positive sources of income.
Uganda: Alcohol in Times of Instability
Alcohol and Culture
Alcohol is an important part of Ugandan culture. It is served at events such as death, birth, marriage, and circumcision ceremonies. And alcohol is readily available: about 10 percent of state revenue comes from beer factories, and household alcohol production is a valued skill, handed down from generation to generation. There are many drinking clubs where these home brews are shared and which charge membership fees. But Uganda's history of political instability and poverty has also been a contributor to heavy drinking. Protracted war in Uganda has demoralized many, likely leading some to drink more heavily. And the problem is cyclical--drinking contributes to low economic productivity and more poverty.
And alcohol is tightly woven into the economy of many regions. Home-brewing and distilling alcohol is not only a cultural activity but a large part of many families' incomes, which families use to pay school fees and household expenses. Women and children are often involved in the sale of home-brewed alcohol, due to a lack of income-generating alternatives. Research has indicated that economic involvement of women and children increases their alcohol consumption, and that some children begin drinking as early as age 8.
Health and Social Costs
Such widespread use is not without costs. An estimated 5-10 percent of the population of Uganda is dependent on alcohol. This contributes to a number of social and public health problems, dividing families, contributing to disease, and playing a role in Uganda's high number of traffic deaths--the fourth-highest in Africa. Worldwide, alcohol directly contributes to 3.2 percent of all deaths and 4 percent of diseases, according to the WHO. About half of the deaths are by injury. In developing countries with low mortality, alcohol use is the number one risk factor for disability and lost years of life, contributing to heart disease, injuries, depression, and alcoholism.
And though the amount of alcohol consumed per capita worldwide has been relatively constant, it has been increasing in developing countries.
Alcohol is thus a major public health issue in developing countries, and with these trends, of growing concern for the future. Later this week we'll examine the case of India, a rapidly developing country with a very different alcohol culture from Uganda's.
Information taken from: www.earthtrends.wri.org/updates/node/302
RELATED LINKS:
Uganda Alcohol Country Profile, WHO
WHO Global Alcohol Database
"Alcohol, Gender and Drinking Problems"
EarthTrends
Alcohol Consumption per capita, by country
Uganda: Population, Health, and Human Well-Being
Uganda: Economic Indicators