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Explore the role of nutrition, population dynamics, and farm productivity in addressing trade and poverty challenges in rural Africa. Learn how African farmers respond to shocks and the impact of investment rates, consumption levels, and child undernutrition. Discover the link between poverty, institutions, and social capital, and the need to improve food-crop output to combat undernutrition. Uncover strategies to boost food-crop productivity and support public R&D investments to drive agricultural growth.
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Trade and Poverty in Rural AfricaThe role of nutrition, population dynamics, and farm productivityWilliam A. MastersPurdue Universitywww.agecon.purdue.edu/staff/mastersWoodrow Wilson Center -- April 15, 2005
How do African farmers respond to shocks? • physical capital • livestock • soils! • human capital • nutrition • children • social capital • networks (as opposed to markets) • conflict (as opposed to cooperation)
Consumption levels have fallen to be among the world’s lowest Data and projections on childhood underweight, 1995-2015
Undernutrition is the developing world’s leading cause of ill-health Attribution of disease burden to major risk factors (estimates for high-mortality developing countries, 2000)
The rural poor are particularly undernourished Stunting by residence and wealth Source: FAO (2004), The State of Food Insecurity in the World 2004. Rome, FAO.
Poverty is closely linked to institutions and social capital
Food-crop output has been a key difference between Africa and Asia
To raise food-crop productivity, Africa has a lot of catch-up to do
The pace of farm productivity growth is driven by new-variety adoption
R&D levels vary across countries but have not grown over time
R&D has varied but high payoffs Estimated return to agricultural research and extension (%/year) Source: Alston, J.M., M.C. Marra, P.G. Pardey, and TJ Wyatt. 2000. "Research returns redux: A meta-analysis of the returns to agricultural R&D." Australian Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics, 44(2): 185-215.
…and sustaining sufficient public investment has been difficult!
New funding mechanismsmay be helpful • The value of successful food-crop techniques spreads widely among low-income people • Private firms can’t recover costs • Donors have difficulty contracting for appropriate R&D or dissemination efforts • …but welfare gains can be measured, so donors could pay innovators after adoption • payments can be proportional to gains • innovators can choose what data to submit • secretariat can spot-check and certify accuracy
Conclusions • To facilitate trade for the poorest people, local food-crop productivity must rise • To improve nutrition, health and schooling • To free resources for other things • African farmers face unusual obstacles • Including much less of the public R&D needed to generate appropriate new varieties • Donors can and do fund R&D programs directly, but contracting is difficult • A proposd way to facilitate investment is at: www.earth.columbia.edu/cgsd/prizes • .