Title: Livelihood protection and promotion in agriculture: making the connection
1Livelihood protection and promotion in
agriculture making the connection
- John Farrington
- Department for International Development
- London
2 Impacts of agricultural growthon poverty
in theory
- Through
- profitability gains for farmers
- labour market gains for labourers
- product prices for consumers
- knock-on effects on demand (inputs,
processing, marketing), leading to second round
investments - increase in tax yields and formal transfers
- Increased informal transfers to those
chronically unable to engage in the productive
economy
3 Impacts - evidence
- Large body of evidence on impacts of agricultural
productivity growth - Irz et al, 2003 each 1 growth in agricultural
productivity generates a decrease of between 0.6
and 1.2 in those living on less than 1/day - Hazell and Haddad, 2001 including discussion of
pro-poor agricultural research prioritisation - Dorosh and Haggblade, 2003 investments in
agriculture generate the highest impacts on the
poor in sub-Saharan Africa
4Transmission mechanisms through growth and
markets - questions and issues
- How well do markets work? For whom? market
failure is the norm, not the exception, in many
parts of Africa (Omamo, 2003) - conventional features of market failure
transaction costs raised through lack of
transport and communications infrastructure, weak
contract enforcement, moral hazard, inadequate
insurance markets, high risks which cannot be
insured against, externalities, increasing
economies of scale, highly imperfect
competition.. - overall overhasty liberalisation in SSA
neoliberal facilitating and regulating not
enough - not enough attention given to segmentation and
interlocking
5Impeded transmission via markets segmentation
- any form of non-economic discrimination does
not include discrimination by skills,
productivity, actuarial risk (in finance and
insurance markets), but does include - Gender discrimination paying less to women than
can be justified on productivity grounds
intra-household constraints on womens choice - Discrimination on basis of religion or ethnicity
(e.g. against tribals in India) - Discrimination on basis of social status (e.g.
caste system in India)
6Improving transmission by reducing
entrepreneurial risk trampolines
Risks are shocks and stresses either external or
internal to the HH vulnerability is the HHs
capacity to withstand or cope with these World
Bank Social Risk Management Framework as a means
of reducing risk and vulnerability, covers
covariate and idiosyncratic risk covers
prevention, mitigation and coping. Covers
different policy levels, stressing that even the
highest level policies (fiscal, investment.),
and sector-based policies (e.g. agriculture) can
combine growth and protection
7SRM framework suggestedmodifications
- Needs first to insist on mainstreaming of risk
reduction in high-level economic management
and.. - .in the identification of appropriate
trade-offs between growth and protection within
the productive sectors - This then defines the scope for additional
measures such as insurance, or pure SP via
Welfare Depts to cover the residual - Even then, there may be trade-offs within SP
that are more or less growth promoting - Need to be explicit about treating
entrepreneurial and domestic shocks and stresses
coherently - Needs to differentiate responses by type of rural
household
8Transmission via transfers to the chronically poor
- Many examples food for work, pensions,
allowances. - transfers in food or in cash?
- cash transfers have advantage of enhancing
demand in local markets food transfers may
diminish it even the chronically poor engage as
consumers - robust transfer mechanisms involve automated
payment of small amounts with minimal scope for
discretion by local officials - evidence that some transfers (e.g. social
pensions in S Africa) are used in part for
productive purposes (investment in ag investment
in grandchildrens education.) AND release
informal transfers for productive investment
9 Operationalising SRM 1
- 12 Guidelines
- Identify how far is impact on R and V considered
in high-level policy (fiscal, trade, MTEFs,
infrastructure)? - Ditto re policies in the productive sectors
- Identify how/how far can e.g. insurance
complement production-focused measures? - Ask who is covered by the above? Who is not, and
what do they need? Transfers? - Ask how does risk, and the factors affecting it,
vary across provinces (consider agro-ecological
conditions, market integration, ethnicity, social
networks) - Ask how and how far do gender, age, marital
status, asset status etc influence vulnerability?
10Operationalising SRM 2
- Identify how coherence in reducing risk and
vulnerability between domestic and
entrepreneurial spheres can be achieved? - Use donor fora and PRSPs to discuss options
- Experiment with new ways of making growth
policies more protecting and SP policies more
growth promoting - Generate new knowledge (eg on changing role of
informal transfers) - Build capacity
- Identify policy processes (windows, pegs,
champions) in relation to all the above
11Conclusions
- Agricultural growth is important for poverty
reduction, BUT facilitating and regulating not
enough, AND. - Market imperfections are pervasive and need to be
addressed to enhance the poverty-reducing impacts
of agriculture. High risk is paramount among
these - New ways of managing risk and vulnerability
(across domestic and entrepreneurial spheres)
need to be found. - Efforts in this direction need to be
differentiated according to type of rural
household
12 - References
- Deshingkar, P and Farrington, J (forthcoming)
Market segmentation and interlocking in Andhra
Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh, India. Natural
Resource Perspectives Paper. London ODI - Dorosh, P and Haggblade, S (2003) Gropwth
linkages, price effects and income distribution
in sub-Saharan Africa. Journal of African
Economies, 12 (2) 207-235 - Duncan, A et al (2003) Drivers of Change
reflections on experience to date. Paper for DFID
workshop, Oxford, June 23 2003. DFID Drivers of
Change Team - Farrington, J (2004) Social protection and
livelihood promotion in agriculture towards
operational guidelines. Paper for OECD Povnet.
DFID NR and Agriculture Team, London - Hazell, P and Haddad, L (2001) Agricultural
research and poverty reduction. 2020 Brief 70.
Washington DC IFPRI. - Hess, U (2003) Innovative Financial Services for
Rural India Monsoon indexed lending and
insurance for smallholders. Agriculture and Rural
Development Department Working Paper 9,
Washington DC World Bank - Irz, X, Lin Lin, Thirtle, C and S Wiggins (2001)
Agricultural productivity growth and poverty
alleviation. Development Policy Review 19(4)
449-466. - Omamo, SW and Farrington, J (2004) Policy
research and African agriculture time for a dose
of reality? Natural Resource Perspectives No. 90.
London ODI