An approach for assessing whether agricultural projects help smallholders transition to better livelihood strategies: A Malawian case study

Agricultural projects typically aim to promote the uptake of project components amongst targeted small farm populations to improve their farm productivity and welfare. While this approach can be an important first step towards improving smallholder livelihoods, it ignores alternative and often super...

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Autores principales: Timu, Anne G., Hazell, Peter B. R., Savastano, Sara
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/152386
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author Timu, Anne G.
Hazell, Peter B. R.
Savastano, Sara
author_browse Hazell, Peter B. R.
Savastano, Sara
Timu, Anne G.
author_facet Timu, Anne G.
Hazell, Peter B. R.
Savastano, Sara
author_sort Timu, Anne G.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Agricultural projects typically aim to promote the uptake of project components amongst targeted small farm populations to improve their farm productivity and welfare. While this approach can be an important first step towards improving smallholder livelihoods, it ignores alternative and often superior livelihood options that might arise within the rural transformation process, particularly in commercial agriculture and the rural nonfarm economy. We argue that the design of smallholder projects implemented within regions already undergoing a dynamic transformation and/or projects which have significant value chain components, should be broadened to assist smallholders in making successful transitions to their best livelihood options. For such projects, monitoring and evaluation activities should track livelihood transitions as well as the usual assessments of productivity and welfare outcomes. To help operationalize such an approach, we propose a typology of smallholder livelihood strategies that can track transitions over time and illustrate its use with data from the Sustainable Agricultural Production Program (SAPP), an agricultural value chain project in Malawi. Using available household panel data and quasi-experimental econometric approaches, we find that the project helped smallholders transition out of subsistence farming to market-oriented farming and helped already existing market-oriented farmers remain as such. Even though the project did not have any specific components designed to promote off-farm incomes, nevertheless, it facilitated many farm household transitions to off-farm diversified livelihoods, possibly due to spillover benefits generated within the local nonfarm economy. All SAPP facilitated transitions led to increases in household incomes. We conclude with some lessons for designing, monitoring, and the evaluation of future agricultural projects.
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spelling CGSpace1523862025-10-26T12:53:20Z An approach for assessing whether agricultural projects help smallholders transition to better livelihood strategies: A Malawian case study Timu, Anne G. Hazell, Peter B. R. Savastano, Sara agricultural products smallholders livelihoods rural transformation impact assessment small farms Agricultural projects typically aim to promote the uptake of project components amongst targeted small farm populations to improve their farm productivity and welfare. While this approach can be an important first step towards improving smallholder livelihoods, it ignores alternative and often superior livelihood options that might arise within the rural transformation process, particularly in commercial agriculture and the rural nonfarm economy. We argue that the design of smallholder projects implemented within regions already undergoing a dynamic transformation and/or projects which have significant value chain components, should be broadened to assist smallholders in making successful transitions to their best livelihood options. For such projects, monitoring and evaluation activities should track livelihood transitions as well as the usual assessments of productivity and welfare outcomes. To help operationalize such an approach, we propose a typology of smallholder livelihood strategies that can track transitions over time and illustrate its use with data from the Sustainable Agricultural Production Program (SAPP), an agricultural value chain project in Malawi. Using available household panel data and quasi-experimental econometric approaches, we find that the project helped smallholders transition out of subsistence farming to market-oriented farming and helped already existing market-oriented farmers remain as such. Even though the project did not have any specific components designed to promote off-farm incomes, nevertheless, it facilitated many farm household transitions to off-farm diversified livelihoods, possibly due to spillover benefits generated within the local nonfarm economy. All SAPP facilitated transitions led to increases in household incomes. We conclude with some lessons for designing, monitoring, and the evaluation of future agricultural projects. 2024-10 2024-09-25T16:38:01Z 2024-09-25T16:38:01Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/152386 en https://doi.org/10.2499/p15738coll2.136520 Open Access Elsevier Timu, Anne G.; Hazell, Peter; and Savastano, Sara. 2024. An approach for assessing whether agricultural projects help smallholders transition to better livelihood strategies: A Malawian case study. Food Policy 128(October 2024): 102728. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodpol.2024.102728
spellingShingle agricultural products
smallholders
livelihoods
rural transformation
impact assessment
small farms
Timu, Anne G.
Hazell, Peter B. R.
Savastano, Sara
An approach for assessing whether agricultural projects help smallholders transition to better livelihood strategies: A Malawian case study
title An approach for assessing whether agricultural projects help smallholders transition to better livelihood strategies: A Malawian case study
title_full An approach for assessing whether agricultural projects help smallholders transition to better livelihood strategies: A Malawian case study
title_fullStr An approach for assessing whether agricultural projects help smallholders transition to better livelihood strategies: A Malawian case study
title_full_unstemmed An approach for assessing whether agricultural projects help smallholders transition to better livelihood strategies: A Malawian case study
title_short An approach for assessing whether agricultural projects help smallholders transition to better livelihood strategies: A Malawian case study
title_sort approach for assessing whether agricultural projects help smallholders transition to better livelihood strategies a malawian case study
topic agricultural products
smallholders
livelihoods
rural transformation
impact assessment
small farms
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/152386
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