Livestock Market and Mortality Risk in East Africa

16
Livestock Market and Mortality Risk in East Africa Christopher B. Barrett Vet Med 6723 Guest Lecture February 28, 2014

description

Livestock Market and Mortality Risk in East Africa. Christopher B. Barrett Vet Med 6723 Guest Lecture February 28, 2014. Overview. Livestock’s roles in east African economic development Wealth accumulation and mortality risk Market risk Conclusions. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Livestock Market and Mortality Risk in East Africa

Page 1: Livestock Market and Mortality Risk in    East Africa

Livestock Market and Mortality Risk

in East AfricaChristopher B. Barrett

Vet Med 6723 Guest LectureFebruary 28, 2014

Page 2: Livestock Market and Mortality Risk in    East Africa

Overview Livestock’s roles in east

African economic development

Wealth accumulation and mortality risk

Market risk Conclusions

Page 3: Livestock Market and Mortality Risk in    East Africa

Livestock’s roles in development Livestock as production input

Manure: mitigating soil degradation, spatial redistribution of nutrients

Traction services Transport services

Result: Improved productivity of agricultural or non-agricultural enterprises.

Page 4: Livestock Market and Mortality Risk in    East Africa

Livestock as a production system

Milk and blood (and social prestige): renewable outputs from a single animal

Meat, hides and skins: nonrenewable output from a single animal

Reproduction: dividends from the asset

Result: Income stream generated directly by livestock

Livestock’s roles in development

Page 5: Livestock Market and Mortality Risk in    East Africa

Livestock as a quasi-financial asset, providing savings and insurance

Store of value (walking bank) Sometimes sold to stabilize

incomes Collateralizable for credit

Result: Livestock can play a valuable role where access to conventional financial products is limited or where such products are unattractive.

Livestock’s roles in development

Page 6: Livestock Market and Mortality Risk in    East Africa

Wealth accumulation and mortality risk

Not everyone is equally able to acquire or maintain livestock

Agroecological differences (disease, aridity, etc.)

Lumpiness of investment (Dercon, JDE 1998) Threshold effects (Lybbert et al. EJ 2004) Herder ability (Santos and Barrett 2006)

Page 7: Livestock Market and Mortality Risk in    East Africa

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

Year

Med

ian

hous

ehol

d he

rd s

ize Trend line: Herd1980+t = 51.3-1.7t

Wealth accumulation and mortality riskPronounced cattle cycles are common And accumulation dynamics are

often highly nonlinear

Examples from Boran pastoralists, southern Ethiopia, per Lybbert et al. (2004 EJ)

Page 8: Livestock Market and Mortality Risk in    East Africa

Mortality risk: Resource competition: Is there really a “tragedy of the

commons” in any place lacking private land rights? Rainfall Disease

How idiosyncratic or covariate are these risks (i.e., what’s the best way to deal with them)?

In southern Ethiopia, we find that, rainfall aside, mortality risk is idiosyncratic w/o any significant tragedy of the commons effect (see also McPeak 2005, Human Ecology, similar findings from northern Kenya). But rainfall is a major covariate risk (on which, more later).

Wealth accumulation and mortality risk

Page 9: Livestock Market and Mortality Risk in    East Africa

Livestock market risk Prices fluctuate dramatically

covary negatively with mortality … so wealth is hyperivariable in livestock systems, unlike cropping systems where market prices covary negatively with yields, thereby stabilizing incomes and wealth.

rainfall, quarantine, seasons affect prices dramatically

limited spatial market integration, i.e., major price disconnects across distinct geographic markets

Nairobi-Marsabit price differentials (“basis”)

Page 10: Livestock Market and Mortality Risk in    East Africa

Livestock market risk

Estimated Effects of Drought On Livestock Prices(hypothetical drop of 200 and 300 mm over 3 and 12 months, respectively)

Percent Price Change

Males Females

Camels Marsabit -3.1 -4.6

Moyale -8.1 -11.9

Cattle Marsabit -22.1 -52.3

Moyale -33.4 -47.5

Goats Marsabit -14.6 -17.4

Moyale -12.2 -16.3

Sheep Marsabit -21.3 -34.1

Negative correlation exists between price and mortality because rainfall drives both lactation/reproduction and mortality.

- big variation among species

Source: Barrett et al. (2003 J. African Economies)

Page 11: Livestock Market and Mortality Risk in    East Africa

Livestock market risk

For animals traded long distance, intermarket margins are the source of most livestock price risk. For animals traded locally, local market conditions key:- Auction vs. dyadic exchange- # traders/lorries (partly a function of food aid backhaul capacity)- vet services availability is negatively associated with market price due to vet

care endogeneity in markets (reflects disease problems that drive price down)

Page 12: Livestock Market and Mortality Risk in    East Africa

Livestock market risk

Animal disease control measures matter to prices (Barrett et al., 2003 J. African Economies)

Estimated Effects of Quarantine On Livestock Prices

Percent Change

Males Females

Camels Marsabit -9.1 -6.4

Moyale -6.2 -3.7

Nairobi 0.2 0.1

Cattle Marsabit -23.7 -12.2

Moyale -16.1 -7.4

Nairobi 2.4 2.2

Goats Marsabit -2.1 -2.4

Moyale -1.1 -1.0

Nairobi 0.4 -0.1

Sheep Marsabit -5.9 -2.7

Nairobi 0.2 0.1

Page 13: Livestock Market and Mortality Risk in    East Africa

Livestock market and mortality riskRisks are much broader than just livestock, however, and livestock-related risk is minor to many livestock-dependent peoples

- Livestock disease, prices and pasture availability of greatest concern to wealthier men in Ethiopian/Kenyan pastoralists(Smith et al., JDS 2001)

- Poorer households more concerned about food security, human health, (Doss et al. World Dev’t 2008).

- Development priorities among pastoralists are typically related to health, education and security, not livestock production/marketing (McPeak et al. J. Dev’t Studies 2009)

Page 14: Livestock Market and Mortality Risk in    East Africa

Index-based livestock insurance

Drought-related covariate livestock mortality risk is key. A new, commercial index-based livestock insurance (IBLI) product launched in Marsabit, northern Kenya in Jan 2010.

Subsequently adapted and extended to Ethiopia and to other ASAL areas of Kenya. Also being adapted to other contexts (e.g., hornbills conservation in southern Thailand, Chantarat et al. PNAS 2011)

Page 15: Livestock Market and Mortality Risk in    East Africa

ConclusionsLivestock play a major role in rural

development in east Africa- as production inputs to ag/non-ag enterprises- as production systems- as quasi-financial asset

But …- not everyone has equal access- mortality and market risk are considerable and tend to be mutually reinforcing, making livestock keeping a high risk-high reward activity.- working on developing viable insurance for livestock assets

Page 16: Livestock Market and Mortality Risk in    East Africa

Thanks very much for your comments and questions!