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The (Evolving) Role of Agriculture in Poverty Reduction. Luc Christiaensen (UNU-WIDER), Lionel Demery (Development Consultant), Jesper Kuhl (Development Consultant) Presentation at UN-HQ New York, 2 June, 2010. Four questions.
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The (Evolving) Role of Agriculture in Poverty Reduction Luc Christiaensen (UNU-WIDER), Lionel Demery (Development Consultant), JesperKuhl (Development Consultant) Presentation at UN-HQ New York, 2 June, 2010
Four questions • Does a focus on agriculture lead to more economic growth than a focus on non-agriculture? • Do the poor participate more in growth from agriculture than in growth from non-agriculture? • Does potentially greater participation by the poor in aggrowth offset potentially slower growth from ag, and under which circumstances? • Do the results differ depending on the poor groups considered ($1-day vs $2-day)
Findings • Agriculture better at reducing $1-day poverty; non-agriculture better at reducing $2-day poverty • High inequality reduces poverty reducing power of agriculture and presence of extractive industries reduces poverty reducing effects of non-agriculture • Results driven by larger participation of poor in growth from agriculture • Boosting agricultural performance critical important to reduce poverty especially in low inc countries
What follows? • A conceptual framework • Growth potential across sectors–direct growth effects? • Agriculture and the rest of the economy–indirect growth effects? • Benefiting from growth – participation effects • The (evolving) role of agriculture in poverty reduction - a synthesizing perspective • Concluding remarks
Growth and Poverty reduction dlnPi ≡ εidlnYi Poverty change = elasticity of poverty to GDP *GDP growth Call the elasticity (ε ), the participation component Two components: a participation and a growth component
Poverty reducing effect of growth in a sector depends on four components • The elasticity of overall poverty to sectoral GDP depends • on 2 components: participation and share component piaisai yai + nisni yni Participation Share Growth • The growth effects depends on 2 components: • direct and indirect growth effect pitaitsait-1 yait(ynait-k) + nitsnit-1 ynit(yait-k) participation share direct and indirect growth participation share direct and indirect growth
The Role of Agriculture in Poverty Reduction - schematically Growth component Participation and share components yait Direct effect of a aitsait-1 Indirect effect yait(ynait-k) &ynait(yait-k) Pit nitsnit-1 ynait Direct effect of n pitaitsait-1 yait(ynait-k) + nitsnit-1 ynit(yait-k)
Growth component Participation and share component yait Direct effect aitsait Indirect effect yait(ynait-k) &ynait(yait-k) Pit nitsnit ynait Direct effect The Role of Agriculture in Poverty Reduction – direct growth effect pitaitsait yait(ynait-k) + nitsnit ynit(yait-k)
Growth potential across sectors - direct growth effects • AG-a lagging sector incapable of producing rapid growth? • Over past 40 years ag growth has lagged nag growth by about 1.6 percentage points (1.2 in SSA) • Growth = change in productivity + change in input use + change in prices • Lower growth = lower productivity growth? • Adam Smith: lower growth potential for AG b/c spatial impediments to labour division and capital accumulation • Decompose the growth numbers into their productivity and population growth components
Slower growth in agriculture (1960-2003) largely associated with migration of workers from AG to NAG, not because of slower labor productivity growth Striking antidote to prevailing thinking, but not conclusive
Industrial pull or agricultural push? • Industrial pull – wage equilibrating labor movements in response to higher marginal productivity outside AG • Agricultural push – productivity growth in ag leads to deterioration of TOT against ag and thus declining remuneration of factors (labor and capital) in agric, inducing migration • Empirical evidence (manufacturing/industrial and TFP) • Szirmai (2009) aglabor productivity growing faster in 12/16 developing countries (Latin America and Asia) bw 1973-2005 • from industrial countries suggests TFP growth in ag larger than in nonag sector (Bernard and Jones,1996) • Recent evidence from developing countries confirms this (Martin and Mitra, 2001)
Emerging insights on agriculture’sgrowth potential • No superiority in agricultural TFP growth, but debunk the notion that agriculture is a backward sector. • Globally AG will grow slower than NAG due to Engel’s Law, not b/c inferior productivity growth. • Important growth opportunities for some countries given high income elasticity for non-staple food and where international trading opportunities exist (Brazil, Chile) • Recovery in ag TFP in SSA over past decade holds promise and expected higher agricultural commodity prices in medium term provide opportunities , though many challenges remain,
Growth components Participation and share components yait Direct effect aitsait Indirect effect labor yait(ynait-k) &ynait(yait-k) Pit nitsnit ynait Direct effect The Role of Agriculture in Poverty Reduction - schematically pitaitsait yait(ynait-k) + nitsnit ynit(yait-k)
Agriculture and the rest of the economy – indirect growth effects • Production linkages • forward (agro processing) and backward (input demand, marketing services) • Consumption linkages • increased agric productivity –> direct income effect if tradables; • indirect effect if non-tradables/food lower food prices, higher real incomes, higher demand for locally produced goods and services, off-farm employment generation • Real product wage effects • lower food prices, lower real wages in non-agriculture, higher profits and investment
Common wisdom so far • Consumption linkages four times as important as production linkages at early stages of development • Size of consumption linkages depends on: • how broad based growth process; • income propensity for locally produced goods and services; • supply of locally produced goods and services sufficiently elastic. • In SSA, linkage effects situated in the 1.3-1.5 range • one dollar generated in agriculture generates another 30 to 50 cents in the rest of the economy • Linkages at least as strong from agriculture to nonagriculture than the reverse, with linkage effects declining as countries develop (even though production linkages tend to increase)
New realities • Much of existing evidence is based on structural models, and therefore questioned • Increasing urban-rural subcontracting as countries develop growth in agriculture no longer engine of growth? • Globalization reduces non-tradability of food, also in SSA lower linkage effects?
Reduced form evidence Granger causality using GMM dynamic panel estimation Non-agricultural growth (and vice versa for ag growth): Granger causality - does lagged ag growth affects current nonag growth? Estimation: system GMM with share of mining and precipitation acting as additional external instruments
Growth linkages from AG to NAG largely limited to low-income SSA countries
No linkage effect from NAG to AG in SSA, but noticeable reverse linkage effects in other low income countries
Indirect growth effects – concluding remarks • Evidence from structural and reduced form models suggests: • Continuing linkage effects from agriculture to non-agriculture in SSA, but no longer when countries develop (see also Henderson, Storeygard and Weil, 2009) • In SSA these indirect effects are at least as large the reverse linkages, though not in other low income countries (also consistent with the declining share of agriculture in total GDP) • Variation in exact magnitudes likely depending on agro-ecological conditions, institutions, agrarian structures
Growth components Participation and share components yait Direct effect aitsait Indirect effect yait(ynait-k) &ynait(yait-k) Pit nitsnit ynait Direct effect The Participation Effect
Three main reasons why poverty reducing impact differs across sectors • Difficulties in transferring income across sectors or locations e.g. due to market segmentations or considerations of political economy • Differences in labor intensity across sectors • Differences in inequality in distribution of relevant assets (land in agriculture and capital in non-agriculture)
Estimating the participation effect - – empirical methodology • Test π at=πnt if not, source of growth matters • Country fixed effects protect against bias from unobserved • country heterogeneity within country estimates • But heterogeneity in poverty reducing effects still possible (inequality and importance of extractive industry)
Estimating the participation effect - – empirical methodology (2) • Augment previous equation with interaction terms: With Xit-1=Gini coeff (GN), share in GDP of extractive industry (M), and initial income per capita (z/Y) Similar test of equality (for different values of X variables) If equality not rejected, then the equation collapses to a simple regression of the rate of poverty reduction on the rate of growth of GDP and source of growth would not matter.
Estimating the participation effect - - data • Model estimated using World Bank PovCal data base for poverty episodes, and World Development Indicators for sectoral growth rates • Altogether 265 poverty spells in sample, drawn from 80 countries across the different continents over 1980-2002; 70 % of countries with more than one spell • About 1/3 of the poverty spells from 1980s; and 2/3 from 1990s (globalization and liberalization) • OLS with country fixed effects • Four poverty measures: $1-day poverty gap squared; $1-day poverty HC; $2-day poverty gap squared; $2-day HC
Agriculture more poverty reducing $1-day; Nonagriculture more poverty reducing $2-day
Participating in growth – differences across sectors and degrees of poverty • Agriculture more powerful in reducing $1-day poverty, with its advantage declining as inequality increases • Non-agriculture has the edge when it comes to $2-day poverty, but not if driven by extractive industries and also less effective in poorer countries
Growth components Participation and share components yait Direct effect aitsait Indirect effect yait(ynait-k) &ynait(yait-k) Pit nitsnit ynait Direct effect The Role of Agriculture in Poverty Reduction – towards a synthesis pitaitsait yait(ynait-k) + nitsnit ynit(yait-k)
Overall poverty reducing effect from growth across sectors – direct and indirect effects • Direct effect: • effects differ depending on level of Gini and presence of extractive industry • Indirect effect: • Settings – stage of development: linkage effects evolve and so do sectoral shares: middle income, low income (excl SSA), low income SSA with and w/o extractive industries effects differ for middle & low income countries & SSA
Alternative definitions of sectoral growth • Comparing effects of one percent sectoral growth (as above) penalizes agriculture • AG largest individual sector, but smaller than rest of economy much less likely 1% ag GDP growth yielding similar amount of OVERALL poverty reduction as 1% nag GDP growth resources needed to achieve 1% ag GDP growth hike likely much less than resources needed to achieve 1% nag GDP growth; • Lower bound! • effects differ depending on level of Gini and presence of extractive industry
Alternative definitions of sectoral growth (2) • Alternative control for size of sector and explore effect of one percent aggregate GDP growth coming from a sector (as done in the literature) • Implicitly assumes that it is as easy for a small sector to generate 1% aggregate GDP growth than for a larger sector upper bound
Four key insights from combined effects • Irrespective of setting, AG > 5 times more powerful in reducing poverty among poorest of the poor, as long as inequality not too high • Non-agriculture more powerful in reducing $2-day poverty HC if extractive industry <10% of GDP • Agriculture 0.45 times (resource poor middle income) to 3.4 times as powerful in reducing $1-day poverty depending on sectoral or aggregate growth simulations; in SSA going from 1.7 to 3 times as powerful (Gini< 0.45) • Extractive industry substantially reduces poverty reducing power from nag growth and agriculture loses its edge at high levels of inequality
Concluding Remarks (1) • Contributions of a sector to poverty reduction : • direct growth component – growth potential • Indirect growth component – interlinkage effects • Participation by poor in growth in the sector – inequality/mining • Size of the sector in the economy – stage of development • Insights by component • Slower agricultural growth follows from Engel’s Law and is not to be equated with inherently lower productivity • Large interlinkage effects from agriculture decline as countries develop, but have not yet disappeared in SSA • Much larger participation by the very poor in growth from agriculture, but not by the $2-day poor and not in fundamentally unequal societies
Concluding Remarks (2) • Simultaneous considerations of indirect growth, participation, and share components shows that growth: • in agriculture at least five times more powerful in reducing poverty among the poorest of the poor ($1-day poverty gap squared) • In non-agriculture more powerful among better off poor ($2-day headcount) • In agriculture up to 3.2 times more effective in low income countries, when accounting for sector size, with the advantage diminishing as countries become richer and inequality becomes high • Poverty reducing effects from nonagricultural growth decline substantially in the presence of extractive industries
Concluding Remarks (3) • Implications for agricultural sector strategies in light of global food supply challenge • Most countries increased investment in agriculture as trust in market mediated food security has eroded • Enhancing agricultural productivity indeed a valid entry point also to enhance growth and poverty reduction in most low income countries, especially in SSA and in mineral rich countries • To maximize the poverty reducing effects, smallholder agriculture appears to have an edge Jean Paul Remanoby selected by his village peers in sourthern Madagascar to be the first paricipant in a new programme offering improved farming techniques and modern inputs; IRIN Photo by Tomas de Mul
Thank you! UNU-WIDER WP 36 – The (Evolving) Role of Agriculture in Poverty Reduction – An Empirical Perspective, http://www.wider.unu.edu/