Variety Choice and Attribute Trade-Offs Within the Framework of Agricultural Household Models: The Case of Bananas in Uganda


Book Description

The purpose of this research is to study the determinants of farm-level variety choice and variety demand for banana cultivars in Uganda within an integrated agricultural household modeling framework. Of particular interest is the role of banana consumption and production attributes, among other factors, in influencing the scope of the household planting decision. A revealed preference for a particular banana variety encompasses a set of underlying household, market and agro-climatic characteristics that influence farm-level decisions. It is also associated with farmers? perceptions of the intrinsic consumption and production attributes (or specific genetic traits) embodied in the chosen variety and attribute trade-offs that this entails. The model of variety choice developed here provides the analytical means for conceptualizing the interdependence of household production and consumption decisions at the level of attributes inherent to specific varieties grown. The econometric approach used for estimating the set of individual variety demand equations is the Heckman two-step procedure for count data models - the Poisson and the Negative Binomial - that take into account potential sample selection problems. The results indicate that the factors that significantly influence the growing decision (variety choice) and the extent of growing (variety demand) are cultivar-specific, with differences between endemic and non-endemic cultivars, and within the endemic group of cultivars. Production attributes are found to be jointly important to the extent of the planting decision, while the consumption attribute taste is significant for only the non-endemic cultivars. The existence of separability between consumption and production decisions is ambiguous when using the conventional approach, while it appears to hold in the case of endemic cultivars when the attribute approach is employed. Participation in banana markets is found to not only be household-specific, but also cult.













The Economics of Managing Crop Diversity On-farm


Book Description

The purpose of this book is to assess a variety of economic issues as they relate to agro-biodiversity and show how addressing these issues can assist in agro-biodiversity policy-making. This is illustrated using empirical data from some of the countries (Ethiopia, Nepal and Zambia) which are part of the Genetic Resources Policy Initiative. The empirical chapters apply the relevant economic methods, including regression analysis, choice experiments, hedonic pricing, contingent valuation and farm business income analysis. The authors discuss the economics of managing crop diversity on-farm in the context of crop variety attribute preferences, farmers' perception of agro-biodiversity loss, and value addition and marketing of the products of traditional crop varieties. The case studies include detailed analysis of traditional varieties of groundnut, maize, rice, sorghum, and teff. The results are relevant not only to GRPI countries but also to other countries concerned with the sustainable utilization of these resources. Overall, the studies illustrate how genetic resources issues can be integrated into rural development interventions.













Agricultural research, livelihoods, and poverty


Book Description

Those who study global poverty and ways to reduce it face a perennial set of questions: Do advances in knowledge, research, and technology make a real difference in the lives of poor people? What effect does research have on the poor? Who benefits? The contributors to Agricultural Research, Livelihoods, and Poverty shed light on these questions through a collection of case studies that explore the types of impact that agricultural research has had on livelihoods and poverty in low-income countries.