Type | Working Paper |
Title | Market Imperfection, Farm Household Consumption Behavior and the Life Cycle Model: Evidence From East Africa |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2015 |
URL | http://ageconsearch.umn.edu/bitstream/206058/2/Market Imperfection.pdf |
Abstract | Empirical evidence helping to understand farm behavior in developing countries is undisputable. Moreover, from the aggregate structural data in hand, its clear that farm household and small farm business in East Africa are not static institution but adapt and evolve in response to the changing economic circumstances and regulatory frameworks in the past three decades. In these agriculture-based economies like Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, and Ethiopia, smallholder farming accounts for approximately 75 percent of total employment while the impact of agriculture (production, investment) on the recent growth trends is very limited. For Instance, in the past two decades, Uganda has registered strong economic growth, and is now making significant and consistent strides towards poverty alleviations by improving the quality of life and access to services such as education, health and community infrastructures. Therefore, in order to continue to promote pro-poor economic growth in East Africa, a formal microeconomic models of the farm household explaining consistently the dynamics of household consumption, production, saving and investment is required. Such models will help and support budget strategy as part of the implementation of the National Development Strategy, and postulate a complete and clear understanding of the linkages/interplay between the structured agricultural sector under market imperfections and the decisions in agricultural households, farms family and farm business. To do so, the objective of the paper is to test if small household farm consumption behavior is inconsistent with the life cycle model in the presence of market imperfection, and the interactions between labor (farm, off-farm work), consumption, production uncertainty, and land tenure in East Africa. Therefore, an understanding of small household farm consumption behavior and investment’decisons and the phenotype and archetype of farm household relation to its family members, labor, farm and off-farm income is at stake. This paper, therefore shed light on the different and distinct behavioral assumption and models upon the standard microeconomic framework assuming that farm household in East Africa, and especially in 2 Uganda are rational agents with well defined and characterized preferences. Consequently, this paper provides an integrative framework for policy analysis on income dynamics at the household level and capacity building towards poverty alleviation, which will greatly assist and support the Annual Policy Implementation Review in East Africa, especially in Uganda. Now, given that a dynamics and structured agricultural sector is required to alleviate poverty in SubSaharan Africa, the future of all Sub-Saharan African countries will depend partially and greatly to the ability of smallholder farm household to save and invest while they attempt to find the best set of outcomes under market imperfection and rapid population growth especially in Uganda. This is very important since agricultural investment increases food production capacity and agribusiness activities, which adds quickly and exponentially to the Gross Domestic products and stimulate productivity growth and capital efficiency uses in inputs. Thus, if East African economies invest more in agriculture, they can increase their competitive efficiency of domestic agriculture in world markets as price are pressure down from investment induced technology, and also determine the wealth and health of their farm sector to spark access to credit by leveraging future farm output |
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