Credit markets are key instruments by which liquidity constrained smallholder farmers may finance productivity investments.
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Synopsis: How should rural financial cooperatives be best organized? Evidence from Ethiopia
What is the optimal size and composition of rural financial cooperatives (RFCs)?
Synopsis: An assessment of the livestock economy in mixed crop-livestock production systems in Ethiopia
The livestock sub-sector has contributed little to the remarkable economic growth recorded in Ethiopia in the last decade.
The uptake of agricultural mechanization in Ethiopia is low with less than one percent of agricultural plots plowed with a tractor. However, in recent years the uptake of agricultural machinery has accelerated.
An assessment of the livestock economy in mixed crop-livestock production systems in Ethiopia
The livestock subsector has contributed little to the remarkable economic growth recorded in Ethiopia in the last decade.
We use qualitative and quantitative information from a number of datasets to study the adoption patterns and labor productivity impacts of herbicide use by farmers in Ethiopia.
Synopsis: Row planting teff in Ethiopia: Impact on farm-level profitability and labor allocation
Improved technologies are increasingly being promoted to farmers in sub-Saharan-African countries to address low agricultural productivity in their staple crops.
The rapid expansion of herbicide use in smallholder agriculture in Ethiopia: Patterns, drivers, and implications
We use qualitative and quantitative information from a number of datasets to study the adoption patterns and labor productivity impacts of herbicide use in Ethiopia.
One of the key questions in food policy debates in the last decades has been the role of cash cropping for achieving food security in low income countries. We revisit this question in the context of smallholder coffee production in Ethiopia.
Improved technologies are increasingly promoted to farmers in sub-Saharan-African countries to address low agricultural productivity in their staple crops.
This note synthesizes one of the two study tour reports written by the participating African officials.
Cereal production has exhibited unprecedented growth in Ethiopia, leading to important welfare improvements in the country. However, it is not well understood what the drivers have been of this growth and how it can be sustained.
A large proportion of Ethiopians derive their livelihood from smallholder agriculture.
We study the dynamics of the supply response of smallholder grain producers to changes in crop prices and costs of production in Ethiopia.
Synopsis: Coffee value chains on the move: Evidence from smallholder coffee farmers in Ethiopia
Important changes to Ethiopia’s coffee sector have occurred in the last decade. The adoption of improved production, harvest, and post-harvest practices has been increasing with positive impacts on coffee productivity and incomes.
In this paper, we look at the coffee sector in Ethiopia and analyze changes and their drivers upstream in the value chain. In this study we focus on three main research questions.
Cereal production has exhibited unprecedented growth in Ethiopia, leading to important welfare improvements in the country. However, it is not well understood what the drivers have been of this growth and how it can be sustained.
In rural economies encumbered by significant market imperfections, farming decisions may partly be motivated by nutritional considerations, in addition to income and risk factors.
This diagnostic evaluates formal and informal players operating at the low end of the insurance market and across various facets of the value chain.
The livestock sector is a large contributor to the Ethiopian economy as well as a mainstay in the livelihoods of many Ethiopians.