Ethiopia
The education system in Ethiopia is rapidly expanding. With a primary level net enrolment of 100% in 2019/2020, education accessibility has become a top priority for the government. The government-owned school feeding program was initiated in Addis Ababa in 2019 after initial piloting in SNNP and Oromia regions (2012-2014). Afterwards, the government owned school feeding programme was adopted by all other regional states and Dire Dawa city administration. The target group for school feeding in Ethiopia is all school children from pre-primary to primary (grade 1-8) level. The long-term target coverage of pre-primary, primary and middle level school children with the school feeding program is 100% by 2030. In 2027, the government of Ethiopia is targeting to reach 21 million school children. click here to learn more
School Meals
Number of primary school children receiving school meal
Enrolment
Children enrolled in primary schools in Ethiopia
Jobs
Jobs created as a result of school feeding
Funding
Annual financial investment in school meals
Policy Frameworks
Has Ethiopia adopted a school meals policy?
Complementary Activities
Implemented in conjunction with school meals
SDG4
Proportion of school-attending children receiving school meals (coverage).
Coming Soon
Emerging Research on School Health and Nutrition

Value for money
This indicator aims to quantify the returns of national school meal programmes across multiple sectors, including education, health, social protection, and agriculture. The economic methodology and analyses build upon the global model previously developed jointly by World Food Programme, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, and the Research Consortium for School Health and Nutrition. The study is currently being finalised in eight African countries that is, Malawi, Niger, Cote D’Ivoire, Ethiopia, Burundi, Namibia, Sierra Leone, and Mozambique.

BOND-KIDS
Biomarkers of Nutrition for Development-Knowledge Indicating Dietary Sufficiency (BOND-KIDS)
School-age (between 5 and 19 years) represents a range of critical stages in both physical and neurological development. Each developmental stage is nutritionally sensitive and demands food security, ensuring stable access to and availability of a high-quality diet to meet nutritional requirements. The BOND programme, an international collaboration led by the Paediatric Growth and Nutrition Branch of the US Department of Health and Human Services, began in 2010 with a focus on discovery, development, and implementation of reliable and valid biomarkers to assess nutrient exposure, status, function, and effect. The BOND-KIDS project continues the effort to understand and harmonize biomarkers with a focus on school-age children, to address a range of issues impacting the domestic and global food and nutrition enterprise, including food insecurity.
