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Food demand elasticities in Ethiopia
Urbanization and economic transformation
Strong economic growth in urban areas has not led to rapid urbanization in Ethiopia, possibly as a result of prevailing land tenure policies.
The Ethiopian government has been promoting a package-driven extension that combines credit, fertilizers, improved seeds, and better management practices.
Agricultural extension services and gender equality
Decentralized delivery of public services has been promoted as a means to enhance citizen voice and make service provision more responsive to users.
Food security without food transfers?
Both availability and access issues underpin Ethiopia’s food security challenges. The country is mostly dependent on drought-exposed, rain fed agriculture, and high transaction costs inhibit trade in staples.
Ethiopia’s growth and transformation plan
In Ethiopia, as in many other African countries, there is a pressing need to improve household food security.
Levels and composition of food consumption are major determinants of the nutritional wellbeing of individuals, which in turn, have important implications for health, productivity, and income.
Livestock production and marketing
The livestock is an important sub-sector within Ethiopia’s economy in terms of its contributions to both agricultural value-added and national GDP.
Policies and performance of Ethiopian cereal markets
Adoption of weather index insurance
In this paper we examine which farmers would be early entrants into weather indexinsurance markets in Ethiopia, were such markets to develop on a large scale.
Cereal price variability in Ethiopia has worsened in recent years, and some of the earlier liberalizations are being reversed due to the unacceptable economic and political costs of increased price variability.
Insurance motives to remit
Migration and remittances can be used by rural households as a means of insurance, investment, and income augmentation.
Economic development transforms an economy from one that is largely agricultural to one that is largely manufacturing and services.
The rural-urban transformation in Ethiopia
Although Ethiopia's economy has grown rapidly over the past decade and urbanization is increasing, the country's economic and spatial transformation has only just begun.
Drawing on a household survey collected in eight woredas in seven Ethiopian regions in 2009, as well as on qualitative fieldwork in four of the eight woredas, this paper provides analysis of agricultural extension delivery in Ethiopia.
Urbanization and spatial connectivity in Ethiopia
In comparison to other African countries, Ethiopia has a low urbanization rate. According to the World Bank World Development Report (WDR) 2009, Sub-Sahara Africa is 30% urbanized, whereas Ethiopia is only 10.9% urbanized.