Implications of accelerated agricultural growth on household incomes and poverty in Ethiopia: A general equilibrium analysis

Ethiopia’s national development strategy, A Plan for Accelerated and Sustained Development to End Poverty for 2005/06 to 2009/10 (PASDEP) places a major emphasis on achieving high rates of agricultural and overall economic growth. Consistent with the PASDEP, Ethiopia is also in the process of implem...

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Autores principales: Dorosh, Paul A., Thurlow, James
Formato: Artículo preliminar
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Food Policy Research Institute 2009
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Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/162059
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author Dorosh, Paul A.
Thurlow, James
author_browse Dorosh, Paul A.
Thurlow, James
author_facet Dorosh, Paul A.
Thurlow, James
author_sort Dorosh, Paul A.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Ethiopia’s national development strategy, A Plan for Accelerated and Sustained Development to End Poverty for 2005/06 to 2009/10 (PASDEP) places a major emphasis on achieving high rates of agricultural and overall economic growth. Consistent with the PASDEP, Ethiopia is also in the process of implementing the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP) together with other African governments. As part of CAADP, the country has committed itself to meeting targets of devoting at least 10 percent of public expenditures to agriculture and to achieving a 6 percent growth rate in agricultural GDP. Ethiopia has already met these targets in recent years. The challenge remains, however, to continue to devote these public resources and to achieve high growth rates through 2015. This paper analyzes agricultural growth options that can support high levels of agricultural development using a new computable general equilibrium (CGE) model for Ethiopia based on data from the EDRI 2005/06 Ethiopia SAM (Ahmed et al. 2009). The CGE model results indicated that if Ethiopia can meet its targets for crop yields and livestock productivity, then it should be possible to reach and sustain the six percent agricultural growth target during 2006-2015. Even though these yield targets are below the maximum potential yields identified by agricultural field trials, they are still ambitious given the short timeframe of the CAADP initiative (i.e., seven years). Achieving agricultural growth of six percent per year would reduce national poverty to 18.4 percent by 2015, lifting an additional 3.7 million people out of poverty compared to a base simulation using medium term growth rates. Most households are expected to benefit from faster agricultural growth. However, some agro-ecological zones that grow higher value cereals and export-oriented crops and which are better situated to larger urban markets (e.g., the rainfall sufficient highlands) stand to gain more than other parts of the country. Both rural and urban households benefit from faster agricultural growth (and thereby overall economic growth), as rural producers benefit from increased agricultural productivity and incomes, while net purchasers of food in both rural and urban areas benefit from moderate declines in real food prices. Composition of agricultural growth matters, though. Additional growth driven by cereals has larger impacts on poverty reduction, because these crops already constitute a large share of rural incomes and so can contribute substantially to achieving broad-based agricultural growth. Yield improvements in these crops not only benefit farm households directly, by increasing incomes from agricultural production, but also by allowing farmers to diversify their land allocation towards other higher-value crops. Increased productivity of cereals that reduces real cereal prices is also effective at raising rural real incomes and reducing poverty, especially amongst the poorest households. Thus, high priority should be afforded to improving cereals yields and opening market opportunities for upstream processing to reduce demand constraints.
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spelling CGSpace1620592025-11-06T06:27:19Z Implications of accelerated agricultural growth on household incomes and poverty in Ethiopia: A general equilibrium analysis Dorosh, Paul A. Thurlow, James economic growth productivity computable general equilibrium models agricultural development crop yield livestock poverty alleviation market opportunities growth caadp development policies households Ethiopia’s national development strategy, A Plan for Accelerated and Sustained Development to End Poverty for 2005/06 to 2009/10 (PASDEP) places a major emphasis on achieving high rates of agricultural and overall economic growth. Consistent with the PASDEP, Ethiopia is also in the process of implementing the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP) together with other African governments. As part of CAADP, the country has committed itself to meeting targets of devoting at least 10 percent of public expenditures to agriculture and to achieving a 6 percent growth rate in agricultural GDP. Ethiopia has already met these targets in recent years. The challenge remains, however, to continue to devote these public resources and to achieve high growth rates through 2015. This paper analyzes agricultural growth options that can support high levels of agricultural development using a new computable general equilibrium (CGE) model for Ethiopia based on data from the EDRI 2005/06 Ethiopia SAM (Ahmed et al. 2009). The CGE model results indicated that if Ethiopia can meet its targets for crop yields and livestock productivity, then it should be possible to reach and sustain the six percent agricultural growth target during 2006-2015. Even though these yield targets are below the maximum potential yields identified by agricultural field trials, they are still ambitious given the short timeframe of the CAADP initiative (i.e., seven years). Achieving agricultural growth of six percent per year would reduce national poverty to 18.4 percent by 2015, lifting an additional 3.7 million people out of poverty compared to a base simulation using medium term growth rates. Most households are expected to benefit from faster agricultural growth. However, some agro-ecological zones that grow higher value cereals and export-oriented crops and which are better situated to larger urban markets (e.g., the rainfall sufficient highlands) stand to gain more than other parts of the country. Both rural and urban households benefit from faster agricultural growth (and thereby overall economic growth), as rural producers benefit from increased agricultural productivity and incomes, while net purchasers of food in both rural and urban areas benefit from moderate declines in real food prices. Composition of agricultural growth matters, though. Additional growth driven by cereals has larger impacts on poverty reduction, because these crops already constitute a large share of rural incomes and so can contribute substantially to achieving broad-based agricultural growth. Yield improvements in these crops not only benefit farm households directly, by increasing incomes from agricultural production, but also by allowing farmers to diversify their land allocation towards other higher-value crops. Increased productivity of cereals that reduces real cereal prices is also effective at raising rural real incomes and reducing poverty, especially amongst the poorest households. Thus, high priority should be afforded to improving cereals yields and opening market opportunities for upstream processing to reduce demand constraints. 2009 2024-11-21T10:00:54Z 2024-11-21T10:00:54Z Working Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/162059 en https://hdl.handle.net/10568/162064 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/154148 Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Ethiopian Development Research Institute Dorosh, Paul A.; Thurlow, James. 2009. Implications of accelerated agricultural growth on household incomes and poverty in Ethiopia. ESSP II Discussion Paper 2. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/162059
spellingShingle economic growth
productivity
computable general equilibrium models
agricultural development
crop yield
livestock
poverty alleviation
market opportunities
growth
caadp
development policies
households
Dorosh, Paul A.
Thurlow, James
Implications of accelerated agricultural growth on household incomes and poverty in Ethiopia: A general equilibrium analysis
title Implications of accelerated agricultural growth on household incomes and poverty in Ethiopia: A general equilibrium analysis
title_full Implications of accelerated agricultural growth on household incomes and poverty in Ethiopia: A general equilibrium analysis
title_fullStr Implications of accelerated agricultural growth on household incomes and poverty in Ethiopia: A general equilibrium analysis
title_full_unstemmed Implications of accelerated agricultural growth on household incomes and poverty in Ethiopia: A general equilibrium analysis
title_short Implications of accelerated agricultural growth on household incomes and poverty in Ethiopia: A general equilibrium analysis
title_sort implications of accelerated agricultural growth on household incomes and poverty in ethiopia a general equilibrium analysis
topic economic growth
productivity
computable general equilibrium models
agricultural development
crop yield
livestock
poverty alleviation
market opportunities
growth
caadp
development policies
households
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/162059
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AT thurlowjames implicationsofacceleratedagriculturalgrowthonhouseholdincomesandpovertyinethiopiaageneralequilibriumanalysis