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The modern spaza: how can e-commerce support spaza shops in achieving the six dimensions of food security in a low-income area?

South Africa (SA) is facing a food insecurity crisis, with those in low-income areas severely affected by multiple forms of malnutrition. Low-income communities rely on neighbourhood spaza shops to meet their shopping needs, yet they are also sources of obesogenic, highly processed foods. The emerge...

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Main Author: Konz, Jade Carey
Other Authors: Battersby, Jane
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Department of Environmental and Geographical Science 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Konz, Jade Carey
author2 Battersby, Jane
author_browse Battersby, Jane
Konz, Jade Carey
author_facet Battersby, Jane
Konz, Jade Carey
author_sort Konz, Jade Carey
collection Thesis
description South Africa (SA) is facing a food insecurity crisis, with those in low-income areas severely affected by multiple forms of malnutrition. Low-income communities rely on neighbourhood spaza shops to meet their shopping needs, yet they are also sources of obesogenic, highly processed foods. The emergence of e-commerce as a new component of the food system, driven by increased internet and smartphone access in low-income communities, presents an opportunity to explore its potential impact on food security. This research therefore examines how e-commerce can support spaza shops in achieving the six dimensions of food security. A case study was undertaken in Mitchells Plain with a spaza shop e-commerce provider – ‘The Company'. Interviews were conducted with nine foreign owned spaza shops, two employees of The Company on multiple occasions, and field notes were taken to evaluate the role of spaza shops in both supporting and undermining food security. The findings indicate that despite retailing high levels of processed foods, spaza shops contribute in varying degrees to all the food security dimensions, but the current impact of e-commerce in this sphere is minimal. The research highlights challenges faced by The Company, such as high levels of competition in the wholesaler market, limited access to economies of scale, as well as the significance of competitive pricing and product range availability on spaza shops' purchasing decisions. Serving the foreign spaza sector presents additional challenges related to the digital divide, language barriers, and the nature of informality. The thesis finds that The Company supports the spaza shop industry however it does not directly improve the spaza's ability to meet the existing six dimensions of food security. Further investigation is required to evaluate the potential benefits of e-commerce for South African owned spaza shops.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:21.255Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Department of Environmental and Geographical Science
publisherStr Department of Environmental and Geographical Science
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40992 The modern spaza: how can e-commerce support spaza shops in achieving the six dimensions of food security in a low-income area? Konz, Jade Carey Battersby, Jane South Africa food insecurity crisis low-income communities spaza shops South Africa (SA) is facing a food insecurity crisis, with those in low-income areas severely affected by multiple forms of malnutrition. Low-income communities rely on neighbourhood spaza shops to meet their shopping needs, yet they are also sources of obesogenic, highly processed foods. The emergence of e-commerce as a new component of the food system, driven by increased internet and smartphone access in low-income communities, presents an opportunity to explore its potential impact on food security. This research therefore examines how e-commerce can support spaza shops in achieving the six dimensions of food security. A case study was undertaken in Mitchells Plain with a spaza shop e-commerce provider – ‘The Company'. Interviews were conducted with nine foreign owned spaza shops, two employees of The Company on multiple occasions, and field notes were taken to evaluate the role of spaza shops in both supporting and undermining food security. The findings indicate that despite retailing high levels of processed foods, spaza shops contribute in varying degrees to all the food security dimensions, but the current impact of e-commerce in this sphere is minimal. The research highlights challenges faced by The Company, such as high levels of competition in the wholesaler market, limited access to economies of scale, as well as the significance of competitive pricing and product range availability on spaza shops' purchasing decisions. Serving the foreign spaza sector presents additional challenges related to the digital divide, language barriers, and the nature of informality. The thesis finds that The Company supports the spaza shop industry however it does not directly improve the spaza's ability to meet the existing six dimensions of food security. Further investigation is required to evaluate the potential benefits of e-commerce for South African owned spaza shops. 2025-02-20T11:08:44Z 2025-02-20T11:08:44Z 2024 2025-02-20T11:03:59Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40992 en eng application/pdf Department of Environmental and Geographical Science Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle South Africa
food insecurity crisis
low-income communities
spaza shops
Konz, Jade Carey
The modern spaza: how can e-commerce support spaza shops in achieving the six dimensions of food security in a low-income area?
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The modern spaza: how can e-commerce support spaza shops in achieving the six dimensions of food security in a low-income area?
title_full The modern spaza: how can e-commerce support spaza shops in achieving the six dimensions of food security in a low-income area?
title_fullStr The modern spaza: how can e-commerce support spaza shops in achieving the six dimensions of food security in a low-income area?
title_full_unstemmed The modern spaza: how can e-commerce support spaza shops in achieving the six dimensions of food security in a low-income area?
title_short The modern spaza: how can e-commerce support spaza shops in achieving the six dimensions of food security in a low-income area?
title_sort modern spaza how can e commerce support spaza shops in achieving the six dimensions of food security in a low income area
topic South Africa
food insecurity crisis
low-income communities
spaza shops
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40992
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