An analysis of the impact of public animal health expenditures on the performance of the livestock sub-sector in Kenya

Animal diseases cause significant economic losses to the livestock sub-sector in sub Saharan Africa (SSA). To minimize these losses, SSA governments have allocated over 70% of total livestock services budgets to disease control and other animal health services. Declining state budgets, however, hav...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tambi, N.E., Maina, W.O., Randolph, Thomas F.
Format: Conference Paper
Language:Inglés
Published: International Society for Veterinary Epidemiology and Economics 2000
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/50140
_version_ 1855525288941715456
author Tambi, N.E.
Maina, W.O.
Randolph, Thomas F.
author_browse Maina, W.O.
Randolph, Thomas F.
Tambi, N.E.
author_facet Tambi, N.E.
Maina, W.O.
Randolph, Thomas F.
author_sort Tambi, N.E.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Animal diseases cause significant economic losses to the livestock sub-sector in sub Saharan Africa (SSA). To minimize these losses, SSA governments have allocated over 70% of total livestock services budgets to disease control and other animal health services. Declining state budgets, however, have led to significant fluctuations in public animal health expenditures (PAHE). In Kenya, for example, annual PAHE varied from US$ 18.3 million in 1988 to US$ 8.0 million in 1989, recovering to US$ 15.2 million by 1991. In 1995, PAHE had dropped again to US$ 7.0 million. If public investment in disease control does indeed enhance livestock production, such fluctuations raise major concerns about Kenya's ability to develop its livestock sector. This paper measures the effects of PAHE on livestock production in Kenya. The hypothesis that higher levels of PAHE improve livestock production is empirically tested using annual time series data from 1970-1995. If the hypothesis is home out, the results provide a strong argument to policy makers for strengthening financial commitments to publicly funded animal health services.
format Conference Paper
id CGSpace50140
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2000
publishDateRange 2000
publishDateSort 2000
publisher International Society for Veterinary Epidemiology and Economics
publisherStr International Society for Veterinary Epidemiology and Economics
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace501402023-02-15T09:35:33Z An analysis of the impact of public animal health expenditures on the performance of the livestock sub-sector in Kenya Tambi, N.E. Maina, W.O. Randolph, Thomas F. animal health expenditure public services public health Animal diseases cause significant economic losses to the livestock sub-sector in sub Saharan Africa (SSA). To minimize these losses, SSA governments have allocated over 70% of total livestock services budgets to disease control and other animal health services. Declining state budgets, however, have led to significant fluctuations in public animal health expenditures (PAHE). In Kenya, for example, annual PAHE varied from US$ 18.3 million in 1988 to US$ 8.0 million in 1989, recovering to US$ 15.2 million by 1991. In 1995, PAHE had dropped again to US$ 7.0 million. If public investment in disease control does indeed enhance livestock production, such fluctuations raise major concerns about Kenya's ability to develop its livestock sector. This paper measures the effects of PAHE on livestock production in Kenya. The hypothesis that higher levels of PAHE improve livestock production is empirically tested using annual time series data from 1970-1995. If the hypothesis is home out, the results provide a strong argument to policy makers for strengthening financial commitments to publicly funded animal health services. 2000 2014-10-31T06:08:50Z 2014-10-31T06:08:50Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/50140 en Limited Access International Society for Veterinary Epidemiology and Economics
spellingShingle animal health
expenditure
public services
public health
Tambi, N.E.
Maina, W.O.
Randolph, Thomas F.
An analysis of the impact of public animal health expenditures on the performance of the livestock sub-sector in Kenya
title An analysis of the impact of public animal health expenditures on the performance of the livestock sub-sector in Kenya
title_full An analysis of the impact of public animal health expenditures on the performance of the livestock sub-sector in Kenya
title_fullStr An analysis of the impact of public animal health expenditures on the performance of the livestock sub-sector in Kenya
title_full_unstemmed An analysis of the impact of public animal health expenditures on the performance of the livestock sub-sector in Kenya
title_short An analysis of the impact of public animal health expenditures on the performance of the livestock sub-sector in Kenya
title_sort analysis of the impact of public animal health expenditures on the performance of the livestock sub sector in kenya
topic animal health
expenditure
public services
public health
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/50140
work_keys_str_mv AT tambine ananalysisoftheimpactofpublicanimalhealthexpendituresontheperformanceofthelivestocksubsectorinkenya
AT mainawo ananalysisoftheimpactofpublicanimalhealthexpendituresontheperformanceofthelivestocksubsectorinkenya
AT randolphthomasf ananalysisoftheimpactofpublicanimalhealthexpendituresontheperformanceofthelivestocksubsectorinkenya
AT tambine analysisoftheimpactofpublicanimalhealthexpendituresontheperformanceofthelivestocksubsectorinkenya
AT mainawo analysisoftheimpactofpublicanimalhealthexpendituresontheperformanceofthelivestocksubsectorinkenya
AT randolphthomasf analysisoftheimpactofpublicanimalhealthexpendituresontheperformanceofthelivestocksubsectorinkenya