Forced Gifts The Burden Of Being A Friend

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Forced gifts: The burden of being a friend

Author : Bulte, Erwin,Wang, Ruixin,Zhang, Xiaobo
Publisher : Intl Food Policy Res Inst
Page : 40 pages
File Size : 55,5 Mb
Release : 2017-03-09
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 8210379456XXX

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Forced gifts: The burden of being a friend by Bulte, Erwin,Wang, Ruixin,Zhang, Xiaobo Pdf

In many developing countries, gift expenses account for a substantial share of total household expenditures. As incomes rise, gift expenses are escalating in several developing countries. We develop a theoretical model to demonstrate how (unequal) income growth may trigger “gift competition” and drive up the financial burden associated with gift exchange. We use unique census-type panel data from rural China to test our model predictions and demonstrate that (1) the value of gifts responds to the average gift in the community, (2) the escalation of gift giving may have adverse welfare implications (especially for the poor), and (3) escalating gift expenses crowd out expenditures on other consumption items.

Existing data to measure African trade

Author : Mitaritonna, Cristina,Traoré, Fousseini
Publisher : Intl Food Policy Res Inst
Page : 32 pages
File Size : 42,8 Mb
Release : 2017-03-10
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 8210379456XXX

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Existing data to measure African trade by Mitaritonna, Cristina,Traoré, Fousseini Pdf

One finds a broad consensus in the literature regarding the lack of good information on trade in Africa, particularly intraregional trade. This paper attempts to identify gaps and remedies in measuring and tracking trade in Africa. We review the major international and regional databases that track trade in Africa, identifying the gaps therein. We also review the studies that have attempted to track informal trade between African countries, and we look at the major ongoing initiatives to track such informal trade. It appears that both international and regional databases suffer from a lack of reporting or from faulty reporting of African trade statistics. Informal trade flows pose an ongoing problem when measuring intraregional trade, although actual border-monitoring initiatives ongoing in selected countries constitute an interesting option for their quantification. When no direct monitoring method is available, estimating gravity equations represents an alternative with which to measure the potential trade between two partner countries, giving us an estimate of missing trade. A final avenue consists of estimating unregistered trade via national accounts data by comparing consumption, production, and declared trade.

Agricultural diversification in Nepal: Status, determinants, and its impact on rural poverty

Author : Thapa, Ganesh,Kumar, Anjani,Joshi, Pramod Kumar
Publisher : Intl Food Policy Res Inst
Page : 56 pages
File Size : 42,6 Mb
Release : 2017-04-28
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 8210379456XXX

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Agricultural diversification in Nepal: Status, determinants, and its impact on rural poverty by Thapa, Ganesh,Kumar, Anjani,Joshi, Pramod Kumar Pdf

As in many parts of the developing world, the share of high value crops in agricultural gross domestic product (AgGDP) has increased substantially in Nepal. We contribute to the literature on trends in agricultural development in the poorest countries by answering the research question on “Does transition from traditional to high-value agriculture reduce rural poverty in poor developing countries”? We also identified the drivers leading to this transition. The study uses survey data from three rounds of the nationally representative Nepal Living Standard Surveys: NLSS I (1994/1995), NLSS II (2004/2005) and NLSS III (2010/2011). Multi-level model was used to study the determinants of agricultural diversification. To estimate the causal impact of agricultural diversification on welfare measures, propensity score matching and instrumental variable techniques were used. Results indicate that there has been a rightward shift in the distribution of the share (percent) of high-value crops between 1995 and 2004 and between 2004 and 2010, respectively. The area as well as the shared by major cereals (paddy, maize, and wheat) is declining over years. However, it is increasing for high-value crops (potato, vegetables, spices/condiments, and fruits). The percentage increase in share of the high-value crops was higher in or adjacent to urbanized districts between 1995 and 2010. The factors positively associated with the agricultural diversification are female-headed households, caste, mother's education, net-buyer status, urban region, remittance, farm size, kitchen garden, improved seeds, telephone and refrigerator. We found positive impact of agricultural diversification towards high-value crops on rural poverty and monthly per capita consumption expenditure. However, for cereal crops grower, we find the negative impact on poverty and monthly per capita consumption expenditure.

Smog in our brains: Gender differences in the impact of exposure to air pollution on cognitive performance in China

Author : Chen, Xi,Zhang, Xiaobo,Zhang, Xin
Publisher : Intl Food Policy Res Inst
Page : 43 pages
File Size : 43,7 Mb
Release : 2017-03-11
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 8210379456XXX

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Smog in our brains: Gender differences in the impact of exposure to air pollution on cognitive performance in China by Chen, Xi,Zhang, Xiaobo,Zhang, Xin Pdf

While there is a large body of literature on the negative health effects of air pollution, there is much less written about its effects on cognitive performance for the whole population. This paper studies the effects of contemporaneous and cumulative exposure to air pollution on cognitive performance based on a nationally representative survey in China. By merging a longitudinal sample at the individual level with local air-quality data according to the exact dates and counties of interviews, we find that contemporaneous and cumulative exposure to air pollution impedes both verbal and math scores of survey subjects. Interestingly, the negative effect is stronger for men than for women. Specifically, the gender difference is more salient among the old and less educated in both verbal and math tests.

Farmers’ quality assessment of their crops and its impact on commercialization behavior: A field experiment in Ethiopia

Author : Abate, Gashaw T.,Bernard, Tanguy
Publisher : Intl Food Policy Res Inst
Page : 44 pages
File Size : 47,6 Mb
Release : 2017-03-24
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 8210379456XXX

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Farmers’ quality assessment of their crops and its impact on commercialization behavior: A field experiment in Ethiopia by Abate, Gashaw T.,Bernard, Tanguy Pdf

Adoption of quality-enhancing technologies is often driven largely by farmers’ expected returns from these technologies. Without proper grades, standards, and certification systems, however, farmers may remain uncertain about the actual financial return associated with their quality-enhancing investments. This report summarizes the outcomes of a short video-based randomized training intervention on wheat quality measurement and collective marketing among 15,000 wheat farmers in Ethiopia. Our results suggest that the intervention led to significant changes in farmers’ commercialization behaviors—namely, it prompted farmers to adopt behaviors geared toward assessing their wheat’s quality using easily implementable test-weight measures, assessing the accuracy of the equipment used by buyers in their kebeles (scales, in particular), and contacting more than one buyer before concluding a sale. The training also led to improvements in share of output sold, price received, and collective marketing, albeit with important limitations. First, farmers who measured their wheat quality received a higher price, but only if their wheat was of higher quality. Second, farmers who found that their wheat was of higher quality were more reluctant to aggregate their wheat (that is, sell their products through local cooperatives) than those who found that their wheat was of lower quality. Lastly, the training intervention led to better use of fertilizer in the following season. Our discovery that a short training intervention can significantly change farmers’ marketing and production behavior should encourage the development of further interventions aimed at enhancing farmers’ adoption of improved technologies and commercialization.

Misreporting month of birth: Implications for nutrition research

Author : Larsen, Anna Folke,Headey, Derek D.,Masters, William A.
Publisher : Intl Food Policy Res Inst
Page : 52 pages
File Size : 47,8 Mb
Release : 2017-03-09
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 8210379456XXX

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Misreporting month of birth: Implications for nutrition research by Larsen, Anna Folke,Headey, Derek D.,Masters, William A. Pdf

Height-for-age z-scores (HAZs) and stunting status (HAZ<−2) are widely used to measure child nutrition and population health. However, accurate measurement of age is nontrivial in populations with low levels of literacy and numeracy, limited use of formal birth records, and weak cultural norms surrounding birthdays and calendar use. In this paper we use Demographic and Health Surveys data from 62 countries over the period 1990–2014 to describe two statistical artifacts indicative of misreporting of age. The first artifact consists of lower HAZs for children reported to be born earlier in each calendar year (resulting in implausibly large HAZ gaps between January- and December-born children), which is consistent with some degree of randomness in month of birth reporting. The second artifact consists of lower HAZs for children with a reported age just below a round age (and hence implausibly large HAZ gaps between children with reported ages just below and just above round ages), which is consistent with survey respondents rounding ages down more than they round ages up. Using simulations, we show how these forms of misreporting child age can replicate observed patterns in the data, and that they have small impacts on estimated rates of stunting but important implications for research that relies on birth timing to identify exposure to various risks, particularly seasonal shocks. Moreover, the misreporting we identify differs from conventional age-heaping concerns, implying that the metrics described above could constitute useful markers of measurement error in nutrition surveys. Future research should also investigate ways to reduce these errors.

Measuring postharvest losses at the farm level in Malawi

Author : Ambler, Kate,de Brauw, Alan,Godlonton, Susan
Publisher : Intl Food Policy Res Inst
Page : 36 pages
File Size : 45,7 Mb
Release : 2017-04-14
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 8210379456XXX

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Measuring postharvest losses at the farm level in Malawi by Ambler, Kate,de Brauw, Alan,Godlonton, Susan Pdf

Reducing food loss and waste are important policy objectives prominently featured in the United Nation’s Sustainable Development Goals. To optimally design interventions targeted at reducing losses, it is important to know where losses are concentrated between the farm and fork. This paper measures farmlevel postharvest losses for three main crops—maize, soy, and groundnuts—among 1,200 households in Malawi. Farmers answered a detailed questionnaire designed to learn about losses during harvest and transport, processing, and storage and which measures both total losses and reductions in crop quality. The findings indicate that fewer than half of households report suffering losses conditional on growing each crop. In addition, conditional on losses occurring, the loss averages between 5 and 12 percent of the farmer’s total harvest. Compared to nationally representative data that measure losses using a single survey question, this study documents a far greater percentage of farmers experiencing losses, though the unconditional proportion lost is similar. We find that losses are concentrated in harvest and processing activities for groundnuts and maize; for soy, they are highest during processing. Existing interventions have primarily targeted storage activities; however, these results suggest that targeting other activities may be worthwhile.

Impact of India’s National Food Security Act on domestic and international rice markets

Author : Debnath, Deepayan,Babu, Suresh Chandra,Ghosh, Parijat,Helmer, Michael
Publisher : Intl Food Policy Res Inst
Page : 32 pages
File Size : 44,7 Mb
Release : 2017-04-28
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 8210379456XXX

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Impact of India’s National Food Security Act on domestic and international rice markets by Debnath, Deepayan,Babu, Suresh Chandra,Ghosh, Parijat,Helmer, Michael Pdf

Policy making in food security is at a crossroads in India, particularly for the rice crop. Whereas India has emerged has a leading rice exporter over the last two years, the government has also introduced a large food subsidy program called the National Food Security Act. The program requires that 33.6 million metric tons of rice per year be distributed to the marginalized rural and urban populations of the country. In this study, we analyze the long-term impact of India’s Food Security Act on its domestic rice market and the international market for rice. We specify and apply a structural demand-and-supply model to India’s rice market and link it with the world rice market, as part of a broad partial equilibrium modeling system of international agriculture commodity markets. We specifically focus on three different scenarios—subsidy as a price effect, subsidy as an inelastic income effect, and subsidy as an elastic income effect—under the broader framework of the National Food Security Act. We find that at the end of the projection period (the 2024/2025 crop year), as a result of the rice subsidy program, the consumption of rice increases significantly by 6,831 thousand metric ton (MT) in the case of the price effect while the inelastic income effect has little on production, consumption which increase by 265 thousand MT and 269 thousand MT, respectively and no impact on rice export of India.

Can agricultural aspirations influence preferences for new technologies?

Author : Bell, Andrew R.,Ward, Patrick S.,Ashfaq, Muhammad,Davies, Stephen
Publisher : Intl Food Policy Res Inst
Page : 36 pages
File Size : 42,5 Mb
Release : 2017-05-03
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 8210379456XXX

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Can agricultural aspirations influence preferences for new technologies? by Bell, Andrew R.,Ward, Patrick S.,Ashfaq, Muhammad,Davies, Stephen Pdf

In the face of increasing environmental stresses, there is a critical need to improve water-use efficiency in many arid and semiarid agroclimatic zones. Drip irrigation is a high-efficiency irrigation technology that can improve water-use efficiency in currently irrigated areas and transform areas that are not otherwise irrigable in practice. Although adoption of drip irrigation is growing rapidly in India, adoption is low in neighboring Pakistan. The authors of this paper undertook a discrete choice experiment framed around the hypothetical subsidized purchase of a drip irrigation system in four districts of Punjab, Pakistan. The nonrepresentative sample of adopters and nonadopters in the study districts identified a clear increase in the valuation of drip systems in the first several years following adoption. This finding suggests that farmers may be unaware of the opportunities for the use of drip irrigation on their farms or the benefits that may accrue from such use. In addition, farmers’ aspirations for cropping systems under drip were better predictors of the valuation of drip systems than were current cropping patterns, implying that a different agricultural landscape might reasonably emerge under improved adoption of drip. Aspirations differed across the different agroecological zones and water regimes captured by this study. Aspirations to substitute wheat crops for fruits and vegetables were associated with a higher appreciation of the subsidy level, whereas aspirations to expand wheat were associated with a higher appreciation of the area covered by the drip initiative; together, these findings imply a degree of control over the extent of wheat production in the landscape via careful design of the drip subsidy program. Although the penetration of drip irrigation is not yet sufficient to draw inferences from a representative sample, these results suggest a number of ways in which drip irrigation may transform Pakistan’s agricultural landscape

The “Discouraged Worker Effect” in public works programs: Evidence from the MGNREGA in India

Author : Narayanan, Sudha,Das, Upasak,Liu, Yanyan,Barrett, Christopher B.
Publisher : Intl Food Policy Res Inst
Page : 68 pages
File Size : 47,7 Mb
Release : 2017-04-28
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 8210379456XXX

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The “Discouraged Worker Effect” in public works programs: Evidence from the MGNREGA in India by Narayanan, Sudha,Das, Upasak,Liu, Yanyan,Barrett, Christopher B. Pdf

This study investigates the consequences of poor implementation in public workfare programs, focusing on the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA) in India. Using nationally representative data, we test empirically for a discouraged worker effect arising from either of two mechanisms: administrative rationing of jobs among those who seek work and delays in wage payments. We find strong evidence at the household and district levels that administrative rationing discourages subsequent demand for work. Delayed wage payments seem to matter significantly during rainfall shocks. We find further that rationing is strongly associated with indicators of implementation ability such as staff capacity. Politics appears to play only a limited role. The findings suggest that assessments of the relevance of public programs over their lifecycle need to factor in implementation quality.

Chinese investment in Ghana’s manufacturing sector

Author : Tang, Xiaoyang
Publisher : Intl Food Policy Res Inst
Page : 32 pages
File Size : 51,5 Mb
Release : 2017-03-31
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 8210379456XXX

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Chinese investment in Ghana’s manufacturing sector by Tang, Xiaoyang Pdf

This paper uses Ghana as a case study to illustrate the extent to which Chinese manufacturing firms are driving manufacturing in an African country. Through a combination of desktop and field research, the author finds that the total number of Chinese manufacturing investments in Ghana indeed increased during past decade, but quite a few projects have been abandoned or not implemented because of the unfavorable investment environment. Small and large manufacturing projects can be found in different sectors, such as plastics, steel, pharmaceuticals, and others. All of the manufacturing investments target local or regional markets, either taking advantage of local raw materials or seeing opportunities in a market with little competition. Transitioning from trading to manufacturing investment and clustering are identified as the main patterns by which Chinese investors establish themselves in Ghana. Chinese firms source simple raw materials from local suppliers but import industrial supplies from abroad. Learning from Chinese business models, a few local businessmen have started their own manufacturing projects, mostly in the plastics recycling sector, but a lack of capital appears to keep some local players from moving up the value chain. Ghana’s weak economy itself is limiting technology transfer and local linkages between Chinese firms and Ghanaians.

Participation, learning, and equity in education: Can we have it all?

Author : Delavallade, Clara,Griffith, Alan,Shukla, Gaurav,Thornton, Rebecca
Publisher : Intl Food Policy Res Inst
Page : 48 pages
File Size : 50,9 Mb
Release : 2017-03-30
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 8210379456XXX

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Participation, learning, and equity in education: Can we have it all? by Delavallade, Clara,Griffith, Alan,Shukla, Gaurav,Thornton, Rebecca Pdf

The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals have set a triple educational objective: improving access to, quality of, and gender equity in education. This study is the first to document the effectiveness of policies targeting all these objectives simultaneously. We examine the impact of a multifaceted educational program—delivered to 230 randomly selected primary schools in rural India—on students’ participation and performance. We also study the heterogeneity of this impact across gender and initial school performance, and its sustainability over two years. Although the program specifically targeted outof-school girls for enrollment, the learning component of the program targeted boys and girls equally. We find that the program reduced gender gaps in school retention and improved learning during the first year of implementation. However, targeting different educational goals (access, quality, and equity) did not yield sustained effects on school attendance or learning, nor did it bridge gender inequalities in school performance over the two-year period.

Nutrition transition and the structure of global food demand

Author : Gouel, Christophe,Guimbard, Houssein
Publisher : Intl Food Policy Res Inst
Page : 34 pages
File Size : 48,7 Mb
Release : 2017-04-07
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 8210379456XXX

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Nutrition transition and the structure of global food demand by Gouel, Christophe,Guimbard, Houssein Pdf

Estimating future demand for food is a critical aspect of global food security analyses. The process linking dietary changes to wealth is known as the nutrition transition and presents well-identified features that help to predict consumption changes in poor countries. This study proposes to represent the nutrition transition with a nonhomothetic, flexible-in-income, demand system, known as the Modified Implicitly Directly Additive Demand System (MAIDADS). The resulting model is transparent and estimated statistically based on cross-sectional information from FAOSTAT the statistical database of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. It captures the main features of the nutrition transition: rise in demand for calories associated with income growth; diversification of diets away from starchy staples; and a large increase in caloric demand for animal-based products, fats, and sweeteners. The estimated model is used to project food demand between 2010 and 2050 based on a set of plausible futures (trend projections and Shared Socioeconomic Pathways scenarios). The main results of these projections are as follows: (1) global food demand will increase by 46 percent, less than half the growth in the previous four decades; (2) this growth will be attributable mainly to lower-middle-income and low-income countries; (3) the structure of global food demand will change over the period, with a 95 percent increase in demand for animal-based calories and a much smaller 18 percent increase in demand for starchy staples; and (4) the analysis of a range of population and income projections reveals important uncertainties depending on the scenario, the projected increases in demand for animal-based and vegetal-based calories range from 78 to 109 percent and from 20 to 42 percent, respectively.

Insuring against droughts: Evidence on agricultural intensification and index insurance demand from a randomized evaluation in rural Bangladesh

Author : Hill, Ruth Vargas,Kumar, Neha,Magnan, Nicholas,Makhija, Simrin,de Nicola, Francesca,Spielman, David J.,Ward, Patrick S.
Publisher : Intl Food Policy Res Inst
Page : 40 pages
File Size : 44,5 Mb
Release : 2017-04-07
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 8210379456XXX

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Insuring against droughts: Evidence on agricultural intensification and index insurance demand from a randomized evaluation in rural Bangladesh by Hill, Ruth Vargas,Kumar, Neha,Magnan, Nicholas,Makhija, Simrin,de Nicola, Francesca,Spielman, David J.,Ward, Patrick S. Pdf

It is widely acknowledged that unmitigated risks provide a disincentive for otherwise optimal investments in modern farm inputs. Index insurance provides a means for managing risk without the burdens of asymmetric information and high transaction costs that plague traditional indemnity-based crop insurance programs. Yet many index insurance programs that have been piloted around the world have met with rather limited success, so the potential for insurance to foster more intensive agricultural production has yet to be realized. This study assesses both the demand for and the effectiveness of an innovative index insurance product designed to help smallholder farmers in Bangladesh manage risk to crop yields and the increased production costs associated with drought. Villages were randomized into either an insurance treatment or a comparison group, and discounts and rebates were randomly allocated across treatment villages to encourage insurance take-up and to allow for the estimation of the price elasticity of insurance demand. Among those offered insurance, we find insurance demand to be moderately price elastic, with discounts significantly more successful in stimulating demand than rebates. Farmers who are highly risk averse or sensitive to basis risk prefer a rebate to a discount, suggesting that the rebate may partially offset some of the implicit costs associated with insurance contract nonperformance. Having insurance yields both ex ante risk management effects and ex post income effects on agricultural input use. The risk management effects lead to increased expenditures on inputs during the aman rice-growing season, including expenditures for risky inputs such as fertilizers, as well as those for irrigation and pesticides. The income effects lead to increased seed expenditures during the boro rice-growing season, which may signal insured farmers’ higher rates of seed replacement, which broadens their access to technological improvements embodied in newer seeds as well as enhancing the genetic purity of cultivated seeds.

Limitations of contract farming as a pro-poor strategy: The case of maize outgrower schemes in upper West Ghana

Author : Ragasa, Catherine,Lambrecht, Isabel,Kufoalor, Doreen S.
Publisher : Intl Food Policy Res Inst
Page : 54 pages
File Size : 54,6 Mb
Release : 2017-03-30
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 8210379456XXX

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Limitations of contract farming as a pro-poor strategy: The case of maize outgrower schemes in upper West Ghana by Ragasa, Catherine,Lambrecht, Isabel,Kufoalor, Doreen S. Pdf

The focus in this paper is on two relatively large maize-based contract farming (CF) schemes with fixed input packages (Masara and Akate) and a number of smaller and more flexible CF schemes in a remote region in Ghana (Upper West). Results show that these schemes led to improved technology adoption and yield increases. In addition, a subset of maize farmers with high yield improvements due to CF participation had high gross margins. However, on average, yields were not high enough to compensate for higher input requirements and cost of capital. On average, households harvest 29–30 bags (100 kg each), or 2.9–3.0 metric tons, of maize per hectare, and the required repayment for fertilizer, seed, herbicide, and materials provided under the average CF scheme is 21–25 bags (50 kg each) per acre, or 2.6–3.0 tons per hectare, which leaves almost none for home consumption or for sale. Despite higher yields, the costs to produce 1 ton of maize under CF schemes remain high on average—higher than on maize farms without CF schemes, more than twice that of several countries in Africa, and more than seven times higher than that of major maize-exporting countries (the United States, Brazil, and Argentina). Sustainability of these CF schemes will depend on, from the firms’ perspective, minimizing the costs to run and monitor them, and from the farmers’ perspective, developing and promoting much-improved varieties and technologies that may lead to a jump in yields and gross margins to compensate for the high cost of credit.