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The (Evolving) Role of Agriculture in Poverty Reduction

The (Evolving) Role of Agriculture in Poverty Reduction. Luc Christiaensen (UNU-WIDER), Lionel Demery (Development Consultant), Jesper Kuhl (Development Consultant) Presentation at UN-HQ New York, 2 June, 2010. Four questions.

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The (Evolving) Role of Agriculture in Poverty Reduction

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  1. The (Evolving) Role of Agriculture in Poverty Reduction Luc Christiaensen (UNU-WIDER), Lionel Demery (Development Consultant), JesperKuhl (Development Consultant) Presentation at UN-HQ New York, 2 June, 2010

  2. Four questions • Does a focus on agriculture lead to more economic growth than a focus on non-agriculture? • Do the poor participate more in growth from agriculture than in growth from non-agriculture? • Does potentially greater participation by the poor in aggrowth offset potentially slower growth from ag, and under which circumstances? • Do the results differ depending on the poor groups considered ($1-day vs $2-day)

  3. Findings • Agriculture better at reducing $1-day poverty; non-agriculture better at reducing $2-day poverty • High inequality reduces poverty reducing power of agriculture and presence of extractive industries reduces poverty reducing effects of non-agriculture • Results driven by larger participation of poor in growth from agriculture • Boosting agricultural performance critical important to reduce poverty especially in low inc countries

  4. What follows? • A conceptual framework • Growth potential across sectors–direct growth effects? • Agriculture and the rest of the economy–indirect growth effects? • Benefiting from growth – participation effects • The (evolving) role of agriculture in poverty reduction - a synthesizing perspective • Concluding remarks

  5. Conceptual Framework

  6. Growth and Poverty reduction dlnPi ≡ εidlnYi Poverty change = elasticity of poverty to GDP *GDP growth Call the elasticity (ε ), the participation component  Two components: a participation and a growth component

  7. Poverty reducing effect of growth in a sector depends on four components • The elasticity of overall poverty to sectoral GDP depends • on 2 components: participation and share component piaisai yai + nisni yni Participation Share Growth • The growth effects depends on 2 components: • direct and indirect growth effect pitaitsait-1 yait(ynait-k) + nitsnit-1 ynit(yait-k) participation share direct and indirect growth participation share direct and indirect growth

  8. The Role of Agriculture in Poverty Reduction - schematically Growth component Participation and share components yait Direct effect of a aitsait-1 Indirect effect yait(ynait-k) &ynait(yait-k) Pit nitsnit-1 ynait Direct effect of n pitaitsait-1 yait(ynait-k) + nitsnit-1 ynit(yait-k)

  9. Growth component Participation and share component yait Direct effect aitsait Indirect effect yait(ynait-k) &ynait(yait-k) Pit nitsnit ynait Direct effect The Role of Agriculture in Poverty Reduction – direct growth effect pitaitsait yait(ynait-k) + nitsnit ynit(yait-k)

  10. Growth potential across sectors - direct growth effects • AG-a lagging sector incapable of producing rapid growth? • Over past 40 years ag growth has lagged nag growth by about 1.6 percentage points (1.2 in SSA) • Growth = change in productivity + change in input use + change in prices • Lower growth = lower productivity growth? • Adam Smith: lower growth potential for AG b/c spatial impediments to labour division and capital accumulation • Decompose the growth numbers into their productivity and population growth components

  11. Slower growth in agriculture (1960-2003) largely associated with migration of workers from AG to NAG, not because of slower labor productivity growth Striking antidote to prevailing thinking, but not conclusive

  12. Industrial pull or agricultural push? • Industrial pull – wage equilibrating labor movements in response to higher marginal productivity outside AG • Agricultural push – productivity growth in ag leads to deterioration of TOT against ag and thus declining remuneration of factors (labor and capital) in agric, inducing migration • Empirical evidence (manufacturing/industrial and TFP) • Szirmai (2009) aglabor productivity growing faster in 12/16 developing countries (Latin America and Asia) bw 1973-2005 • from industrial countries suggests TFP growth in ag larger than in nonag sector (Bernard and Jones,1996) • Recent evidence from developing countries confirms this (Martin and Mitra, 2001)

  13. Emerging insights on agriculture’sgrowth potential • No superiority in agricultural TFP growth, but debunk the notion that agriculture is a backward sector. • Globally AG will grow slower than NAG due to Engel’s Law, not b/c inferior productivity growth. • Important growth opportunities for some countries given high income elasticity for non-staple food and where international trading opportunities exist (Brazil, Chile) • Recovery in ag TFP in SSA over past decade holds promise and expected higher agricultural commodity prices in medium term provide opportunities , though many challenges remain,

  14. Growth components Participation and share components yait Direct effect aitsait Indirect effect labor yait(ynait-k) &ynait(yait-k) Pit nitsnit ynait Direct effect The Role of Agriculture in Poverty Reduction - schematically pitaitsait yait(ynait-k) + nitsnit ynit(yait-k)

  15. Agriculture and the rest of the economy – indirect growth effects • Production linkages • forward (agro processing) and backward (input demand, marketing services) • Consumption linkages • increased agric productivity –> direct income effect if tradables; • indirect effect if non-tradables/food lower food prices, higher real incomes, higher demand for locally produced goods and services, off-farm employment generation • Real product wage effects • lower food prices, lower real wages in non-agriculture, higher profits and investment

  16. Common wisdom so far • Consumption linkages four times as important as production linkages at early stages of development • Size of consumption linkages depends on: • how broad based growth process; • income propensity for locally produced goods and services; • supply of locally produced goods and services sufficiently elastic. • In SSA, linkage effects situated in the 1.3-1.5 range • one dollar generated in agriculture generates another 30 to 50 cents in the rest of the economy • Linkages at least as strong from agriculture to nonagriculture than the reverse, with linkage effects declining as countries develop (even though production linkages tend to increase)

  17. New realities • Much of existing evidence is based on structural models, and therefore questioned • Increasing urban-rural subcontracting as countries develop  growth in agriculture no longer engine of growth? • Globalization reduces non-tradability of food, also in SSA  lower linkage effects?

  18. The Tradability of Food?

  19. Reduced form evidence  Granger causality using GMM dynamic panel estimation Non-agricultural growth (and vice versa for ag growth): Granger causality - does lagged ag growth affects current nonag growth? Estimation: system GMM with share of mining and precipitation acting as additional external instruments

  20. Growth linkages from AG to NAG largely limited to low-income SSA countries

  21. No linkage effect from NAG to AG in SSA, but noticeable reverse linkage effects in other low income countries

  22. Indirect growth effects – concluding remarks • Evidence from structural and reduced form models suggests: • Continuing linkage effects from agriculture to non-agriculture in SSA, but no longer when countries develop (see also Henderson, Storeygard and Weil, 2009) • In SSA these indirect effects are at least as large the reverse linkages, though not in other low income countries (also consistent with the declining share of agriculture in total GDP) • Variation in exact magnitudes likely depending on agro-ecological conditions, institutions, agrarian structures

  23. Growth components Participation and share components yait Direct effect aitsait Indirect effect yait(ynait-k) &ynait(yait-k) Pit nitsnit ynait Direct effect The Participation Effect

  24. Three main reasons why poverty reducing impact differs across sectors • Difficulties in transferring income across sectors or locations e.g. due to market segmentations or considerations of political economy • Differences in labor intensity across sectors • Differences in inequality in distribution of relevant assets (land in agriculture and capital in non-agriculture)

  25. Estimating the participation effect - – empirical methodology • Test π at=πnt if not, source of growth matters • Country fixed effects protect against bias from unobserved • country heterogeneity  within country estimates • But heterogeneity in poverty reducing effects still possible (inequality and importance of extractive industry)

  26. Estimating the participation effect - – empirical methodology (2) • Augment previous equation with interaction terms: With Xit-1=Gini coeff (GN), share in GDP of extractive industry (M), and initial income per capita (z/Y) Similar test of equality (for different values of X variables) If equality not rejected, then the equation collapses to a simple regression of the rate of poverty reduction on the rate of growth of GDP and source of growth would not matter.

  27. Estimating the participation effect - - data • Model estimated using World Bank PovCal data base for poverty episodes, and World Development Indicators for sectoral growth rates • Altogether 265 poverty spells in sample, drawn from 80 countries across the different continents over 1980-2002; 70 % of countries with more than one spell • About 1/3 of the poverty spells from 1980s; and 2/3 from 1990s (globalization and liberalization) • OLS with country fixed effects • Four poverty measures: $1-day poverty gap squared; $1-day poverty HC; $2-day poverty gap squared; $2-day HC

  28. On average, growth from agriculture more poverty reducing

  29. Agriculture more poverty reducing $1-day; Nonagriculture more poverty reducing $2-day

  30. Participating in growth – differences across sectors and degrees of poverty • Agriculture more powerful in reducing $1-day poverty, with its advantage declining as inequality increases • Non-agriculture has the edge when it comes to $2-day poverty, but not if driven by extractive industries and also less effective in poorer countries

  31. Growth components Participation and share components yait Direct effect aitsait Indirect effect yait(ynait-k) &ynait(yait-k) Pit nitsnit ynait Direct effect The Role of Agriculture in Poverty Reduction – towards a synthesis pitaitsait yait(ynait-k) + nitsnit ynit(yait-k)

  32. Overall poverty reducing effect from growth across sectors – direct and indirect effects • Direct effect: • effects differ depending on level of Gini and presence of extractive industry • Indirect effect: • Settings – stage of development: linkage effects evolve and so do sectoral shares: middle income, low income (excl SSA), low income SSA  with and w/o extractive industries effects differ for middle & low income countries & SSA

  33. Alternative definitions of sectoral growth • Comparing effects of one percent sectoral growth (as above)  penalizes agriculture • AG largest individual sector, but smaller than rest of economy  much less likely 1% ag GDP growth yielding similar amount of OVERALL poverty reduction as 1% nag GDP growth  resources needed to achieve 1% ag GDP growth hike likely much less than resources needed to achieve 1% nag GDP growth; • Lower bound! • effects differ depending on level of Gini and presence of extractive industry

  34. Alternative definitions of sectoral growth (2) • Alternative  control for size of sector and explore effect of one percent aggregate GDP growth coming from a sector (as done in the literature) • Implicitly assumes that it is as easy for a small sector to generate 1% aggregate GDP growth than for a larger sector  upper bound

  35. Four key insights from combined effects • Irrespective of setting, AG > 5 times more powerful in reducing poverty among poorest of the poor, as long as inequality not too high • Non-agriculture more powerful in reducing $2-day poverty HC if extractive industry <10% of GDP • Agriculture 0.45 times (resource poor middle income) to 3.4 times as powerful in reducing $1-day poverty depending on sectoral or aggregate growth simulations; in SSA going from 1.7 to 3 times as powerful (Gini< 0.45) • Extractive industry substantially reduces poverty reducing power from nag growth and agriculture loses its edge at high levels of inequality 

  36. Concluding Remarks (1) • Contributions of a sector to poverty reduction : • direct growth component – growth potential • Indirect growth component – interlinkage effects • Participation by poor in growth in the sector – inequality/mining • Size of the sector in the economy – stage of development • Insights by component • Slower agricultural growth follows from Engel’s Law and is not to be equated with inherently lower productivity • Large interlinkage effects from agriculture decline as countries develop, but have not yet disappeared in SSA • Much larger participation by the very poor in growth from agriculture, but not by the $2-day poor and not in fundamentally unequal societies

  37. Concluding Remarks (2) • Simultaneous considerations of indirect growth, participation, and share components shows that growth: • in agriculture at least five times more powerful in reducing poverty among the poorest of the poor ($1-day poverty gap squared) • In non-agriculture more powerful among better off poor ($2-day headcount) • In agriculture up to 3.2 times more effective in low income countries, when accounting for sector size, with the advantage diminishing as countries become richer and inequality becomes high • Poverty reducing effects from nonagricultural growth decline substantially in the presence of extractive industries

  38. Concluding Remarks (3) • Implications for agricultural sector strategies in light of global food supply challenge • Most countries increased investment in agriculture as trust in market mediated food security has eroded • Enhancing agricultural productivity indeed a valid entry point also to enhance growth and poverty reduction in most low income countries, especially in SSA and in mineral rich countries • To maximize the poverty reducing effects, smallholder agriculture appears to have an edge Jean Paul Remanoby selected by his village peers in sourthern Madagascar to be the first paricipant in a new programme offering improved farming techniques and modern inputs; IRIN Photo by Tomas de Mul

  39. Thank you! UNU-WIDER WP 36 – The (Evolving) Role of Agriculture in Poverty Reduction – An Empirical Perspective, http://www.wider.unu.edu/

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