Search
Agricultural credit is an important instrument for improving farm productivity, the welfare of farm households, and their resilience to weather-related shocks.
The objective of this report is to present results from the baseline survey conducted as part of the Implementer-Led Evaluation and Learning (IMPEL) evaluation of SPIR II, a randomized controlled trial launched in 2022.
Introducing small-scale irrigation can bring opportunities for empowerment and exclusion. To support equity and inclusion, projects must go beyond technology access alone.
This dataset is a follow-up for households who were visited during Feed the Future I (FtF) Ethiopia end-line Survey 2018 and who participated in land rental market in Tigray and Amhara regions.
Demand and supply constraints of credit in smallholder farming: Evidence from Ethiopia and Tanzania
Many smallholder farmers, especially women and other marginalized groups, face difficulty in accessing loans and other forms of credit.
Are smallholder farmers credit constrained? Evidence on demand and supply constraints of credit in Ethiopia and Tanzania
Credit constraint is considered by many as one of the key barriers to adoption of modern agricultural technologies, such as chemical fertilizer, improved seeds, and irrigation technologies, among smallholders.
Grants vs. credits for improving the livelihoods of ultra-poor: Evidence from Ethiopia
Credit markets are key instruments by which liquidity constrained smallholder farmers may finance productivity investments.
What rainfall does not tell us—Enhancing financial instruments with satellite-derived soil moisture and evaporative stress
Advanced parametric financial instruments, like weather index insurance (WII) and risk contingency credit (RCC), support disaster-risk management and reduction in the world’s most disaster-prone regions.
Integrating gender into small-scale irrigation
Small-Scale Irrigation (SSI) interventions, like other development interventions, need to take into account men’s and women’s context-specific roles in agriculture and their related gender-based preferences and challenges.
Micro data on agricultural production systems and overall household welfare for monitoring and evaluation of Africa RISING program in Ethiopia
The Ethiopia Africa Research in Sustainable Intensification for the Next Generation (Africa RISING) Baseline Evaluation Survey (EARBES) survey was implemented during June–July 2014 as part of the International Food Policy Research Institute's Moni
Enhancing women’s assets to manage risk under climate change: Potential for group-based approaches
Potential for Group-Based Approaches
This diagnostic evaluates formal and informal players operating at the low end of the insurance market and across various facets of the value chain.