Roads, agriculture and welfare

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ETHIOPIAN DEVELOPMENT RESEARCH INSTITUTE Roads, Agriculture and Welfare: Evidence from a Quasi- Experimental Setting in Rural Ethiopia David Stifel – Lafayette College & IFPRI Bart Minten – IFPRI Bethlehem Koru – EDRI & IFPRI EEA Conference 2012 July 20, 2012 Addis Ababa 1

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Ethiopian Development Research Institute and International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI/EDRI), Tenth International Conference on Ethiopian Economy, July 19-21, 2012. EEA Conference Hall

Transcript of Roads, agriculture and welfare

Page 1: Roads, agriculture and welfare

ETHIOPIAN DEVELOPMENT RESEARCH INSTITUTE

Roads, Agriculture and Welfare: Evidence from a Quasi-Experimental

Setting in Rural Ethiopia

David Stifel – Lafayette College & IFPRIBart Minten – IFPRIBethlehem Koru – EDRI & IFPRI

EEA Conference 2012July 20, 2012Addis Ababa

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What are the benefits of rural feeder roads?

The Question:

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1. The measure of benefits• A standard road project appraisal relies on majoring

various Impacts (accessibility, quality, mobility,)

• Savings in transport

• Income / Consumption / Poverty impacts

2. Reverse causality• Non-random road placement

Measuring Benefits – Two Issues

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• Donkey costs (Birr/kg)o Cost of renting donkey

o Weight donkey can carry

• Economic transport costso Include the opportunity cost

of time

Transport Costs

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Average Travel Times and Transport Costs to the Market Town

Travel Time Transport Cost    (hours) (Birr/Quintal)Transport Cost Quintile

Least Remote 1.5 18.2Quintile 2 3.6 40.2Quintile 3 5.2 52.5Quintile 4 6.0 60.4Most Remote 6.5 73.4

Total 4.5 48.4

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Percent of land holding area

   

Median plot size

(ha)

Median land

holdings (ha)

  Tan color Difficult to plow

Steep slope

Travel cost quintileLeast remote 0.3 2 9.5 17.6 6.3Quintile 2 0.3 1.8 7.4 27.8 16.4Quintile 3 0.3 1.4 8.4 25.8 12.8Quintile 4 0.3 1.1 3.1 33.1 15.3Most remote 0.3 1.3 3.5 37.9 15

Total 0.3 1.5 6.4 28.1 13Source: Authors’ calculations from Ethiopia Rural Transport Survey 2011

Is the primary difference between communities due to transport costs?

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Crop Share (in total land area)

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Modern Input UsePercent of households using…

Chemical Fertilizer Improved Seeds

    Any Dap Urea   (maize only)

Transport Cost Quintile

Least Remote 94.2 94.2 83.0 75.6

Quintile 2 86.2 86.2 61.4 31.2

Quintile 3 79.9 78.5 46.5 15.0

Quintile 4 73.2 73.5 49.3 12.4

Most Remote 71.1 71.7 37.5 9.4

Total 81.2 81.1 56.3 33.3

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Adjusted Cereal Yields

05

10

15

20

Qui

ntal

s / h

a

0 20 40 60 80 100Birr/Quintal

Sorghum MilletMaize Teff

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• Households’ willingness-to-pay for reduced transport costs

• Compensate a remote household just enough such that indifferent between…o Remote (τ = τ0)

o Situation in market town (τ = 0)

Estimate this compensation Equivalent variation

2. Measuring Benefits

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• The average benefits are...

• where...

This is just the area under the demand for transport tonnage curve.

2. Measuring Benefits

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Demand for Transport Tonnage

02

50

500

750

100

01

25

0kg

0 20 40 60 80 100Transport Cost (Birr/kg)

Total Freight Imported ConsumptionAgricultural Surplus Input Purchases

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Demand for Transport TonnageSimple Model

Controlling for landholdings

Transport Cost Difference

    Coeff t-stat   Coeff t-stat   Diff z-stat

Total Freight

Transport cost per quintal -7.9 -9.52 -6.9 -8.51 -1.0 -0.86

Log of HH landholdings (HA) 190.6 10.46

Agricultural Surplus

Transport cost per quintal -3.5 -6.06 -2.4 -4.22 -1.1 -1.31

Log of HH landholdings (HA) 143.7 11.02

Imported Consumption

Transport cost per quintal -2.1 -4.39 -2.1 -4.06 0.0 0.00

Log of HH landholdings (HA) 16.0 1.41

Input Purchases

Transport cost per quintal -2.6-

20.72 -2.5 -20.79 -0.1 -0.80

Log of HH landholdings (HA) 33.5 12.43

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Non-Farm Earnings

Pct. of HH with

NF earnings

Median NFearnings*

(Birr)

Percent difference in HH expenditures between those

w/ and w/o NF earnings   

Least Remote 7 1,000 20.0

Quintile 2 12 1,300 26.1

Quintile 3 13 1,200 22.8

Quintile 4 14 1,180 22.2

Most Remote 17 1,102 18.4

Total 12   1,102 22.1

* Among those with non-farm earnings

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• Most remote households as accessible as the least remote

• ↓ transport costs by US$ 50 / ton

• Benefit ≈ 3,300 Birr per year (US$ 194)

o This is 60.5% of mean consumption (most remote)

Benefits Estimate

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Benefit Estimates

For households in each of the following evenly spaced gridpoints

Benefit as percent ofhousehold consumption

Uncorrected Adjusted*2nd 2.0 2.03rd 5.4 5.34th 6.5 6.55th 6.7 6.76th 7.4 7.27th 17.2 16.98th 23.5 23.09th 53.0 51.8

  Most remote 60.5 57.6

Average for all households 9.3 9.1

* Adjusted for landholdings

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• Cost ≈ 28 million Birr (US$ 1.60 million)

800,000 Birr / km of gravel road

35 km

• Benefits ≈ 10 million Birr per year (US$ 0.58 million)

1,930 Birr benefit on average

5,180 households in survey area

Three years for accrued benefits to exceed cost

Benefits vs. Costs

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• Benefit to most remote HH ≈ 60% of HH consumption

• Costs of construction recovered in 3 years

• Final comments…o Only rural feeder roads

o Potential non-farm earnings

o Transport services are necessary

Concluding Remarks