There is no clean linear relationship between GDP per capita and food waste. South Africa ($6,829 GDP/cap) produces just 54 kg โ the lowest in the dataset โ while Nigeria ($2,787) produces 201 kg โ the highest. Ireland ($103,783) wastes 111 kg while Singapore ($80,056) wastes 124 kg. Wealth alone explains very little.
One of the most common assumptions about food waste is that richer countries waste more โ either because abundance leads to carelessness, or because lower-income countries lack the infrastructure to generate large recorded waste streams. Our dataset [1] [3] challenges both parts of this story.
Among high-income countries, Ireland ($103,783 GDP/cap) and Singapore ($80,056 GDP/cap) have nearly identical wealth tiers yet very different waste outcomes: Ireland at 111 kg/cap vs Singapore at 124 kg/cap. This variability persists within the same income bracket.
The low-income outliers are equally striking. South Africa ($6,829 GDP/cap) achieves the lowest total waste in the dataset at just 54 kg/cap. Nigeria ($2,787 GDP/cap) generates the highest waste at 201 kg/cap. Both are lower-middle or lower income countries โ yet their outcomes are separated by a factor of nearly four.
The disruption of the GDPโwaste assumption points to factors that national income cannot capture: food system infrastructure (cold chain quality, storage, logistics), cultural norms around food (attitudes toward leftovers, portion sizes, expiry dates), and urbanization patterns (how food moves from farm to plate). These variables operate independently of wealth and require targeted, locally-sensitive interventions.
The table below highlights four notable country pairs that demonstrate this disruption clearly:
| Country | GDP / Capita | Total Waste (kg/cap) | Policy Score | Income Group |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ๐ฎ๐ช Ireland | $103,783 | 111 kg | 13 / 18 | High |
| ๐ธ๐ฌ Singapore | $80,056 | 124 kg | 7 / 18 | High |
| ๐ฟ๐ฆ South Africa | $6,829 | 54 kg | 8 / 18 | Upper-mid |
| ๐ณ๐ฌ Nigeria | $2,787 | 201 kg | 6 / 18 | Lower-mid |
On the globe, switch to the ๐ฐ GDP / Capita tab and compare the heatmap to the ๐๏ธ Total Waste map โ the color patterns shift considerably, confirming there's no simple geographic correlation. The data table lets you sort by GDP and Total Waste simultaneously to confirm this across all 28 countries.