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Who we are

With research staff from more than 70 countries, and offices across the globe, IFPRI provides research-based policy solutions to sustainably reduce poverty and end hunger and malnutrition in developing countries.

Abhijeet Mishra

Abhijeet Mishra is a Research Fellow in the Foresight and Policy Modeling Unit. Abhijeet’s research interests include future sustainable pathways for the global land-use system and the trade-offs between land-based mitigation, food security, and other sustainable development goals.

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What we do

Since 1975, IFPRI’s research has been informing policies and development programs to improve food security, nutrition, and livelihoods around the world.

Where we work

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Where we work

IFPRI currently has more than 480 employees working in over 70 countries with a wide range of local, national, and international partners.

Publications and Datasets

IFPRI publications provide evidence-based insights and analysis on critical issues related to policies for food systems, food security, agriculture, diets and nutrition, poverty, and sustainability, helping to inform effective policies and strategies. Materials published by IFPRI are released under a Creative Commons license, and are available for download. IFPRI authors also publish in external sources, such as academic journals and books. Where possible we provide a download link for the full text of these publications.

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Publications

Journal Article

Associations between Global Diet Quality Score (GDQS) and obesity in women of reproductive age in Northern Tanzania: A cross-sectional study

2026Bliznashka, Lilia; Azupogo, Fusta; Reynolds, Elise; Arnold, Charles D.; Hess, Sonja Y.; Kinabo, Joyce; Jeremiah, Kidola; Malindisa, Evangelista; Olney, Deanna K.; Ruel, Marie T.

Associations between Global Diet Quality Score (GDQS) and obesity in women of reproductive age in Northern Tanzania: A cross-sectional study

Background Obesity is an increasing problem among women of reproductive age (WRA) in Tanzania. Objective We described WRA’s nutritional status by socio-demographic factors and assessed associations with diet quality. Methods We analysed baseline data from a cluster-randomised controlled trial in Arusha and Kilimanjaro regions (n=2,415). Diet was assessed using a quantitative 24-hour recall. We calculated the Global Diet Quality Score (GDQS; 0-49), with higher scores indicating healthier diet. General obesity was defined as body mass index (BMI)≥30 kg/m2; morbid obesity as BMI≥35 kg/m2; and central obesity as: waist circumference (WC)≥80 cm, WC≥88 cm, waist-to-hip ratio (WHR)≥0.85, waist-to-height ratio (WHtR)≥0.50, and WHR≥0.85 or BMI≥30 kg/m2. We tested associations between diet quality and nutritional status using generalised linear models controlling for age and sociodemographic factors and tested interactions to assess differential associations by age groups. Results The prevalence of general obesity was 25.1%, morbid obesity 8.4%, and central obesity 48.2-71.6% depending on the definition. Mean GDQS was 20.9±3.9. General and central obesity were more prevalent among women who were older, less educated, had light physical labour occupations, were in the highest wealth quintile, and lived in more urbanised villages and in more food secure households. Higher GDQS was associated with lower risk of morbid obesity: risk ratio (RR) 0.97 (95% CI 0.94, 1.00). Higher GDQS was also associated with 0.25-0.27 kg/m2 lower BMI, 0.54-0.66 cm lower WC, and 0.53-0.58 cm lower hip circumference in women 30-49 years of age. Conclusion Better diet quality emerged as a protective factor for morbid obesity and for other obesity measures among women 30-49 years of age. Our study suggests that interventions to improve diet quality in Tanzania should target women in their thirties and forties and those with lower physical activity and higher education, food security, and wealth to maximise effectiveness.

Year published

2026

Authors

Bliznashka, Lilia; Azupogo, Fusta; Reynolds, Elise; Arnold, Charles D.; Hess, Sonja Y.; Kinabo, Joyce; Jeremiah, Kidola; Malindisa, Evangelista; Olney, Deanna K.; Ruel, Marie T.

Citation

Bliznashka, Lilia; Azupogo, Fusta; Reynolds, Elise; Arnold, Charles D.; Hess, Sonja Y.; et al. 2026. Associations between Global Diet Quality Score (GDQS) and obesity in women of reproductive age in Northern Tanzania: A cross-sectional study. Journal of Nutrition 156(2): 101282. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tjnut.2025.101282

Keywords

Tanzania; Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Eastern Africa; Health; Diet Quality; Obesity; Gender; Women; Healthy Diets; Nutrition

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Armed conflict and climate-induced weather disruptions in agricultural input use: Evidence from Ethiopia

2026Ayalew, Hailemariam; Berhane, Guush; Wondale, Meserete; Breisinger, Clemens

Armed conflict and climate-induced weather disruptions in agricultural input use: Evidence from Ethiopia

Year published

2026

Authors

Ayalew, Hailemariam; Berhane, Guush; Wondale, Meserete; Breisinger, Clemens

Citation

Ayalew, Hailemariam; Berhane, Guush; Wondale, Meserete; and Breisinger, Clemens. 2026. Armed conflict and climate-induced weather disruptions in agricultural input use: Evidence from Ethiopia. Agricultural Economics 57(1): e70083. https://doi.org/10.1111/agec.70083

Country/Region

Ethiopia

Keywords

Eastern Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Africa; Conflicts; Farm Inputs; Weather Hazards; Armed Conflicts; Climate Change

Language

English

Access/Licence

Limited Access

Project

National Policies and Strategies

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

A food system transformation pathway reconciles 1.5 °C global warming with improved health, environment and social inclusion

2025
Bodirsky, Benjamin Leon; Beier, Felicitas; Humpenöder, Florian; Leip, Debbora; Crawford, Michael S.; Chen, David Meng-Chuen; von Jeetze, Patrick; Springmann, Marco; Soergel, Bjoern; Nicholls, Zebedee
…more Strefler, Jessica; Lewis, Jared; Heinke, Jens; Müller, Christoph; Karstens, Kristine; Weindl, Isabelle; Stevanović, Miodrag; Rein, Patrick; Sauer, Pascal; Mishra, Abhijeet; Bacca, Edna Johanna Molina; Köberle, Alexandre C.; Wang, Xiaoxi; Singh, Vartika; Hunecke, Claudia; Collignon, Quitterie; Schreinemachers, Pepijn; Dietz, Simon; Kanbur, Ravi; Dietrich, Jan Philipp; Lotze-Campen, Hermann; Popp, Alexander

A food system transformation pathway reconciles 1.5 °C global warming with improved health, environment and social inclusion

The improvement of the global food system requires a thorough understanding of how specific measures may contribute to the system’s transformation. Here we apply a global food and land system modelling framework to quantify the impact of 23 food system measures on 15 outcome indicators related to public health, the environment, social inclusion and the economy, up to 2050. While all individual measures come with trade-offs, their combination can reduce trade-offs and enhance co-benefits. We estimate that combining all food system measures may reduce yearly mortality by 182 million life years and almost halves nitrogen surplus while offsetting negative effects of environmental protection measures on absolute poverty. Through joint efforts, including measures outside the food system, the 1.5 °C climate target can be achieved.

Year published

2025

Authors

Bodirsky, Benjamin Leon; Beier, Felicitas; Humpenöder, Florian; Leip, Debbora; Crawford, Michael S.; Chen, David Meng-Chuen; von Jeetze, Patrick; Springmann, Marco; Soergel, Bjoern; Nicholls, Zebedee; Strefler, Jessica; Lewis, Jared; Heinke, Jens; Müller, Christoph; Karstens, Kristine; Weindl, Isabelle; Stevanović, Miodrag; Rein, Patrick; Sauer, Pascal; Mishra, Abhijeet; Bacca, Edna Johanna Molina; Köberle, Alexandre C.; Wang, Xiaoxi; Singh, Vartika; Hunecke, Claudia; Collignon, Quitterie; Schreinemachers, Pepijn; Dietz, Simon; Kanbur, Ravi; Dietrich, Jan Philipp; Lotze-Campen, Hermann; Popp, Alexander

Citation

Bodirsky, Benjamin Leon; Beier, Felicitas; Humpenöder, Florian; Leip, Debbora; Crawford, Michael S.; et al. 2025. A food system transformation pathway reconciles 1.5 °C global warming with improved health, environment and social inclusion. Nature Food 6(12): 1133-1152. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43016-025-01268-y

Keywords

Capacity Building; Food Systems; Health; Environment; Social Inclusion; Climate Change; Global Warming

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Journal Article


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Journal Article

Changes in height-for-age of Egyptian children from 1995 to 2014: Implications for improving child health outcomes

2026Hashad, Reem; Hassan, Zeinab A.
Details

Changes in height-for-age of Egyptian children from 1995 to 2014: Implications for improving child health outcomes

Background Stunting is a serious health problem in Egypt. Stunting rates and height-for-age z-score (HAZ) distributions changed notably in Egypt over time, yet the factors that led to these changes remain unknown. This study examines the factors associated with these changes and provides important considerations for designing interventions to achieve the Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) of ending all forms of malnutrition by 2030. Methods Leveraging data from Egypt’s Demographic and Health Survey for the years 1995, 2003, and 2014, we employ a Recentered Influence Function (RIF) approach that goes beyond the conventional way of measuring stunting as a binary indicator to examine changes across the entire HAZ distribution. The RIF decomposes changes in the HAZ distribution over time into differences attributable to changes in the levels of the determinants of nutrition (covariate effects) and in the strength of the association between these determinants and HAZ (coefficient effects). Results The stylized facts show a puzzling increase in stunting rates despite improvements in the level of the determinants of nutrition. Our RIF results attribute the change in stunting rates and other parts of the HAZ distribution primarily to changes in the association between the determinants of nutrition and HAZ (coefficient effects) rather than in the level of the determinants (covariate effects). The results also show that the determinants of nutrition could have heterogeneous impacts at different quantiles of the HAZ distribution. Conclusion To reduce stunting rates and achieve the SDG of ending malnutrition, our findings highlight the need for targeted interventions. Interventions should be geographically targeted, promote gender and income equality, improve maternal nutrition, and expand access to better sanitation facilities. This is in addition to wealth redistribution and reforming Egypt’s subsidy program to focus on nutritious food.

Year published

2026

Authors

Hashad, Reem; Hassan, Zeinab A.

Citation

Hashad, Reem; and Hassan, Zeinab A. 2026. Changes in height-for-age of Egyptian children from 1995 to 2014: Implications for improving child health outcomes. BMC Public Health 26(1): 153. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-025-25696-4

Country/Region

Egypt

Keywords

Africa; Northern Africa; Children; Child Health; Anthropometry; Child Stunting

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-NC-ND-4.0

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Associations between exposure to nutrition, WASH interventions and children’s academic performance in Ethiopia: A systematic review and meta-analysis

2026Adugna, Yimer Mihretie; Ayelign, Abebe; Zerfu, Taddese Alemu
Details

Associations between exposure to nutrition, WASH interventions and children’s academic performance in Ethiopia: A systematic review and meta-analysis

Background Poor nutrition and inadequate WASH (water, sanitation, and hygiene) practices significantly impact children’s health, nutrition, and cognitive development, especially in low-income settings. These factors further aggravate the incidence of undernutrition, weaken the immune system, increase susceptibility to illnesses and reduce cognitive performance. Evidence on the effectiveness of existing WASH interventions is needed. Objective This review evaluated the effectiveness of nutritional and WASH interventions on the academic performance of children in Ethiopia. Methods A systematic search of Cochrane, DOAJ, Google Scholar, and PubMed (2010–2024) was conducted using MeSH terms and keywords related to WASH. Two independent reviewers screened studies and extracted data. Eligible studies included cross-sectional and cohort studies on Ethiopian schoolchildren with quantifiable academic outcomes. The JBI SUMARI was used to assess bias, and the GRADE approach was used to evaluate evidence quality. The meta-analysis used a random-effects model in Stata and reported pooled RRs with 95% CIs. Subgroup and sensitivity analyses examined moderators such as study design, intervention type, and sample size. Results A total of 19 studies, 16 cross-sectional (n= 16) and three prospective (n= 3) cohort studies with a total of 9034 participants, were included. The random effects model revealed a significant improvement in academic performance among students receiving both nutrition and WASH, with a pooled large positive effect size of 2.05 (95% CI: 1.26, 2.28; I2=). In the subgroup meta-analysis, the effect of the intervention was more positive among those who skipped breakfast (3.47, 95% CI: 0.47, 6.47), chronic iodine deficiency (4.49, 95% CI: 4.08, 4.90), food insecurity (2.810, 95% CI: 1.281, 4.339), and underweight (0.61, 95% CI: 0.46, 0.75). Conclusion Despite moderate variability and some risk of bias, the evidence supports the integration of comprehensive nutrition and WASH programs into school health initiatives. Future research should focus on long-term effects and cost-effectiveness.

Year published

2026

Authors

Adugna, Yimer Mihretie; Ayelign, Abebe; Zerfu, Taddese Alemu

Citation

Adugna, Yimer Mihretie; Ayelign, Abebe; and Zerfu, Taddese Alemu. 2026. Associations between exposure to nutrition, WASH interventions and children’s academic performance in Ethiopia: A systematic review and meta-analysis. BMC Public Health26(1): 798. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-025-26107-4

Country/Region

Ethiopia

Keywords

Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Eastern Africa; Capacity Building; Hygiene; Nutrition; Children; Schoolchildren

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

“If you want to have sex you can, if you don’t, you don’t have to”: A qualitative evaluation of the Unite for a Better Life couples program to prevent intimate partner violence in rural Ethiopia

2026Sharma, Vandana; Pichon, Marjorie; Tewolde, Samuel; Solomon, Arsema; Deyessa, Negussie; Leight, Jessica
Details

“If you want to have sex you can, if you don’t, you don’t have to”: A qualitative evaluation of the Unite for a Better Life couples program to prevent intimate partner violence in rural Ethiopia

Background Gender-transformative programing targeting couples is an important strategy to reduce intimate partner violence (IPV), but questions around efficacy and safety remain. This qualitative study explores indications of change and unintended consequences of the gender-transformative Unite for a Better Life (UBL) intervention, using data from the couples’ and control arms of a cluster randomized controlled trial (cRCT) in Ethiopia. The cRCT found no impact on physical and psychological IPV and weak evidence of reductions in sexual IPV in the couples’ arm. Methods We analyzed 33 facilitator feedback questionnaires and 29 in-depth interviews (IDIs) among couples conducted approximately 30-months post intervention; 14 participated in UBL delivered to couples, and 15 were from the control arm. IDIs were conducted separately with each member of the couple and analyzed thematically in Dedoose to explore indications of change attributed to UBL. Results UBL couples attributed improved household task-sharing, communication, and joint decision-making to the program. Men and women developed more gender-equitable attitudes, leading to more fulfilling relationships. Additionally, most participants in violent relationships reported that UBL led to a reduction or cessation of physical and psychological IPV, and a complete cessation of sexual IPV. These effects were largely attributed to shifts at the individual level for men. Men developed better anger management skills, reduced their alcohol consumption, and increased their knowledge around the consequences of IPV. At the relational level, couples reported increased communication, particularly around sexual desire, and reduced conflict. Additionally, participants reported normative shifts, including decreased acceptance of IPV. There were no reports of changes in control participants nor of major unintended consequences. Conclusions When delivered to couples, UBL shows promise in shifting individual-level male factors and relational dynamics and reducing conflict and IPV. This suggests that engaging men in couples can be an effective and safe strategy for IPV prevention.

Year published

2026

Authors

Sharma, Vandana; Pichon, Marjorie; Tewolde, Samuel; Solomon, Arsema; Deyessa, Negussie; Leight, Jessica

Citation

Sharma, Vandana; Pichon, Marjorie; Tewolde, Samuel; Solomon, Arsema; Deyessa, Negussie; and Leight, Jessica. 2026. “If you want to have sex you can, if you don’t, you don’t have to”: A qualitative evaluation of the Unite for a Better Life couples program to prevent intimate partner violence in rural Ethiopia. BMC Public Health 26(1): 1135. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-025-25838-8

Country/Region

Ethiopia

Keywords

Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Eastern Africa; Rural Areas; Domestic Violence; Sexual Violence; Qualitative Analysis; Gender-based Violence; Interventions

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-NC-ND-4.0

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Assessing the role of food MSMEs in providing employment for women and youth in Ethiopia

2026Mekonnen, Daniel Ayalew; de Brauw, Alan
Details

Assessing the role of food MSMEs in providing employment for women and youth in Ethiopia

Micro-, Small-, and Medium-Sized Enterprises (MSMEs) are often important sources of employment in the food retail environment of Low- and Middle-Income Countries. As a result, policy makers might consider promoting job creation through MSMEs operating in the food environment. In this paper, we study a unique data set collected in two sites in Ethiopia to draw potential policy lessons for job creation based on the characteristics of MSMEs operating in the food environment. The data were collected from among 1,686 food vendors in a neighborhood of Addis Ababa and Butajira, Ethiopia, as part of an effort to better understand the relationship between consumers and the food environment in Ethiopia. Our descriptive analysis suggests that a large share of the enterprises in our sample do not employ anyone beyond the owner, and female-owned enterprises are less likely to hire workers than male-owned enterprises. Moreover, the profits per worker are lower than the cost of a healthy diet, suggesting that without an improvement in profitability it is unlikely that hiring labor would help improve nutritional status. So while the sampled MSMEs may have the potential to deliver food at lower cost, they have limited ability to generate additional employment.

Year published

2026

Authors

Mekonnen, Daniel Ayalew; de Brauw, Alan

Citation

Mekonnen, Daniel Ayalew; and de Brauw, Alan. 2026. Assessing the role of food MSMEs in providing employment for women and youth in Ethiopia. Journal of Innovation and Entrepreneurship 15(1): 34. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13731-026-00622-z

Country/Region

Ethiopia

Keywords

Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Eastern Africa; Small and Medium Enterprises; Microenterprises; Gender; Women; Youth; Employment

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-NC-ND-4.0

Project

Sustainable Healthy Diets

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

A rapid tool for understanding how knowledge users engage with research findings in research-for-development contexts

2026Lam, Steven; Hoffmann, Vivian; Otoigo, Lilian; Hung Nguyen-Viet
Details

A rapid tool for understanding how knowledge users engage with research findings in research-for-development contexts

Promoting the use of research findings in development projects is essential but often overlooked during study design. Existing frameworks for research use tend to focus on clinical settings and offer questionable applicability to development contexts, which are typically nonlinear, dynamic and cross-sectoral. As a result, there remains a gap in tools that can capture how evidence is intended to be applied by diverse knowledge users in real-world development settings. To address this gap, and drawing on over a decade of experience implementing research-to-action strategies, our objective is to develop a simple research uptake and use tool to better understand and support the use of evidence in research-for-development. We piloted the tool immediately after or 1 month following dissemination workshops, engaging 206 participants across nine sessions in five countries – Kenya, Ethiopia, Bangladesh, Malawi, and Vietnam – to gather insights on which evidence was most relevant, how participants intended to apply it and why they valued it. Although conceptualized with a focus on agriculture and global health research, this framework is broadly applicable across the wider development sector in low- and middle-income countries.

Year published

2026

Authors

Lam, Steven; Hoffmann, Vivian; Otoigo, Lilian; Hung Nguyen-Viet

Citation

Lam, S., Hoffmann, V., Otoigo, L. and Hung Nguyen-Viet. 2026. A rapid tool for understanding how knowledge users engage with research findings in research-for-development contexts. Health Research Policy and Systems 24(1): 43. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12961-026-01478-1

Country/Region

Bangladesh; Ethiopia; Kenya; Malawi; Vietnam

Keywords

Africa; Asia; Eastern Africa; Southern Africa; South-eastern Asia; Southern Asia; Development; Research; Research for Development; Frameworks; Survey Design; Research Methods

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

One Health

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Farmers’ preferences and willingness to accept incentives for adopting sustainable agricultural practices in India

2026TM, Kiran Kumara; Birthal, Pratap Singh; Veettil, Prakashan Chellattan; Meena, Dinesh Chand; Kumar, Anjani
Details

Farmers’ preferences and willingness to accept incentives for adopting sustainable agricultural practices in India

Sustainable agricultural practices are increasingly promoted to mitigate the impacts of climate change on agriculture. However, adoption at the farm level remains limited, often due to trade-offs between tradable and non-tradable ecosystem services. This study examines farmers’ preferences for resource conservation practices and their willingness to accept incentive payments for their adoption in the Indian state of Punjab, where rice has become the most important crop despite its cultivation being unsupportive of its climatic conditions. Following the discrete choice experiment approach, the study included 500 farmers with the following attributes: ecosystem service benefits, income compensation, and carbon credit price. The findings reveal that farmers showed a strong preference for adopting improved farm practices. Saving water and avoiding residue burning are the two most preferred ecosystem benefits by the farmers. However, farmers’ preferences are strongly influenced by factors including carbon credit prices, income compensation, socioeconomic characteristics, and their risk aversion capacity. The estimation of extended random parameter logit (RPL) indicated that switching to direct rice seeding requires compensation of Rs. 29,223/ha and Rs. 29,178/ha for reallocating area from rice to legumes, ceteris paribus. These findings are crucial for policymakers in restructuring the existing incentive structure to accelerate the adoption of resource conservation practices in India.

Year published

2026

Authors

TM, Kiran Kumara; Birthal, Pratap Singh; Veettil, Prakashan Chellattan; Meena, Dinesh Chand; Kumar, Anjani

Citation

TM, Kiran Kumara; Birthal, Pratap Singh; Veettil, Prakashan Chellattan; Meena, Dinesh Chand; and Kumar, Anjani. 2026. Farmers’ preferences and willingness to accept incentives for adopting sustainable agricultural practices in India. Discover Sustainability 7(1): 465. https://doi.org/10.1007/s43621-026-02843-4

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Asia; Southern Asia; Capacity Building; Farmers; Sustainable Agriculture; Good Agricultural Practices; Incentives; Logit Analysis

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-NC-ND-4.0

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Distance, prospects, and migration to towns and cities

2026De Weerdt, Joachim; Christiaensen, Luc; Kanbur, Ravi
Details

Distance, prospects, and migration to towns and cities

Year published

2026

Authors

De Weerdt, Joachim; Christiaensen, Luc; Kanbur, Ravi

Citation

De Weerdt, Joachim; Christiaensen, Luc; and Kanbur, Ravi. 2026. Distance, prospects, and migration to towns and cities. World Development 207(November 2026): 107419. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.worlddev.2026.107419

Keywords

Tanzania; Eastern Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Africa; Poverty; Rural Areas; Urban Areas; Migration

Language

English

Access/Licence

Limited Access

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

The two sides of migration in Central America: Aggregate and distributional impacts in Guatemala

2026Escalante, Luis Enrique; Aragie, Emerta A.; Hernandez, Manuel A.
Details

The two sides of migration in Central America: Aggregate and distributional impacts in Guatemala

International migration affects labor supply, production patterns, and external income flows in origin countries, yet our understanding of its economy-wide and distributional consequences remains limited, particularly with regard to the role of return migration. This study integrates detailed microdata on migrant profiles into a general equilibrium model applied to Guatemala to examine how emigration and return migration affect macroeconomic performance, sectoral dynamics, and household welfare. We simulate three scenarios: a reference scenario reflecting recent-historical emigration patterns (MIG-0), a reduced-emigration scenario (MIG-1), and a net-return migration scenario (MIG-2), capturing recent shifts in emigration and return flows by skill level. Results reveal trade-offs between aggregate economic performance and distributional impacts across households. Compared to a baseline economy with no mobility, Gross Domestic Product (GDP) rises modestly under the reference scenario (+0.2 percent) and by additional 0.3–0.5 percentage points under the reduced-emigration and net-return scenarios, driven by expanded labor supply from returnees and currency depreciation. Non-agro-processing manufacturing shows the largest expansion (up to 1.8 percent), reflecting its strong labor-absorption potential. Household welfare, especially among remittance-dependent households, is highly sensitive to these flows, with income and consumption declining under the two counterfactual migration scenarios. These findings underscore the need for policies that facilitate returnee reintegration and strengthen social protection for remittance-dependent households, ensuring that the macroeconomic gains from migration adjustments translate into equitable welfare improvements.

Year published

2026

Authors

Escalante, Luis Enrique; Aragie, Emerta A.; Hernandez, Manuel A.

Citation

Escalante, Luis Enrique; Aragie, Emerta A.; and Hernandez, Manuel A. 2026. The two sides of migration in Central America: Aggregate and distributional impacts in Guatemala. World Development 206(October 2026): 107450. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.worlddev.2026.107450

Country/Region

Guatemala

Keywords

Central America; Americas; Migration; Impact; Circular Migration; Models; Labour Market; Welfare; Households

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

After quantification: Insights from India’s Soil Health Card scheme

2026Ghosh, Ritwick; Nehring, Ryan; Zhang, Wei
Details

After quantification: Insights from India’s Soil Health Card scheme

As the concept of soil health gains prominence, it becomes increasingly important to examine how states design and implement soil health policies. Does soil health offer a novel pathway to enact and legitimize institutional changes toward more sustainable farming systems, or does it risk becoming another neologism that preserves status quo, productivist agriculture? We explore these questions through an analysis of one of the most ambitious state-led initiatives organized around soil health: India’s Soil Health Card (SHC) scheme. The SHC scheme seeks to provide every farmer in the country with bi-annual soil test reports, based on the assumption that improved information will encourage more judicious use of fertilizers and pesticides. The assumption reflects a broader emphasis within the agricultural sciences on the importance of quantifying soil health. Drawing on government documents and farmer perception studies (n = 38), we find that although farmers view the cards positively, they make few substantive changes to their farming practices. As an illustrative case, India’s grand SHC scheme shows that quantification alone is insufficient and could even dampen momentum for transformative policy reforms. Effective and durable change lies in pairing efforts to quantify soil health with (a) plural epistemic approaches to knowledge production, (b) participatory models for knowledge dissemination, and (c) structural reforms in the agri-food system that address issues around land tenure and subsidies.

Year published

2026

Authors

Ghosh, Ritwick; Nehring, Ryan; Zhang, Wei

Citation

Ghosh, Ritwick; Nehring, Ryan; and Zhang, Wei. 2026. After quantification: Insights from India’s Soil Health Card scheme. Land Use Policy 169(October 2026): 108147. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.landusepol.2026.108147

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Asia; Southern Asia; Project Evaluation; Soil Health; Agricultural Policies; Environmental Policies; Sustainable Agriculture; Governance

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-NC-ND-4.0

Record type

Journal Article

Dataset

Tajikistan Rural Household Survey (TRHS) 2025

2026International Food Policy Research Institute
Details

Tajikistan Rural Household Survey (TRHS) 2025

The Tajikistan Rural Household Survey (TRHS) is a survey data collection effort led by the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) and the Tajik Academy of Agricultural Sciences (TAAS). It is an ambitious attempt to generate data critical to filling pertinent evidence gaps on the livelihoods and the resilience of rural households in Tajikistan. The TRHS interviewed 3,267 households in the country’s three most populated regions (Sughd Region, Khatlon Region, and Districts of Republic Subordination). The in-person household survey includes a household-level questionnaire that was administered to any knowledgeable adult household member. An accompanying individual-level questionnaire was administered in private to one randomly selected household member, aged 18 to 54 years old. In households were no adult was present in the specified age range, another household member 55 years or older was allowed to respond to the individual-level questionnaire. The dataset also consists of a brief enumerator survey.

Year published

2026

Authors

International Food Policy Research Institute

Citation

International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). 2026. Tajikistan Rural Household Survey (TRHS) 2025. Washington, DC: IFPRI [dataset]. https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/YPTNYW. Harvard Dataverse. Version 1.

Country/Region

Tajikistan

Keywords

Central Asia; Asia; Income; Gender; Agriculture; Livelihoods; Rural Areas

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Gender Equality

Record type

Dataset

Journal Article

Collecting Holistic Evidence on Agroecology Performance to Accelerate Sustainable Food System Transitions

2026
Jones, Sarah K.; Sánchez, Andrea Cecilia; Dickens, Chris; Geck, Matthias S.; Wickramaratne, Chaturangi; Alary, Veronique; Bolo, Peter; Choruma, Dennis Junior; Douangsavanh, Somphasith; Fall, Modou Gueye
…more Falconnier, Gatien; Gupta, Shweta; Kettle, Chris; Krishnan, Smitha; Nyawira, Sylvia; Orjuela-Ramirez, Guillermo; Orounladji, Boko Michel; Pareja, Piedad; Sibanda, Telma; Lamanna, Christine
Details

Collecting Holistic Evidence on Agroecology Performance to Accelerate Sustainable Food System Transitions

A growing body of research shows the potential of agroecology for enabling a shift to planet-friendly and socially just agrifood systems through context-specific transition pathways. We conduct a scoping review to identify and evaluate the potential of 42 existing agroecology adherence and/or agricultural performance assessment tools to generate credible, legitimate, salient and transferable evidence to inform these transitions. Results show that while multiple relevant tools exist, each of them can be strengthened in at least one area. While most tools are transferable (low time and resource requirements) and have legitimacy (open access with transparent methods), tools have variable saliency (holistic scope inclusive of local priorities) and credibility (use scientific design principles and quality assurance processes). For a subset of 11 tools collecting multidimensional performance data, analysis of 263 identified indicators showed there is a bias towards economic measures (notably income, yield, and resilience), while certain social (e.g. land tenure, traditional knowledge retention) and environmental (e.g. climate mitigation) aspects are regularly overlooked. Through a multidisciplinary process engaging experts across 8 countries, we develop a Holistic Localized Performance Assessment for agroecology (HOLPA) framework that integrates and builds on positive features of existing multidimensional agroecology performance assessments tools and overcomes key limitations. The HOLPA framework for analysis, agroecology indicators, key performance indicators, and low-cost localization process can be used to strengthen agroecology performance assessments, empowering landscape actors to identify evidence-based pathways towards agrifood systems where both people and nature can thrive.

Year published

2026

Authors

Jones, Sarah K.; Sánchez, Andrea Cecilia; Dickens, Chris; Geck, Matthias S.; Wickramaratne, Chaturangi; Alary, Veronique; Bolo, Peter; Choruma, Dennis Junior; Douangsavanh, Somphasith; Fall, Modou Gueye; Falconnier, Gatien; Gupta, Shweta; Kettle, Chris; Krishnan, Smitha; Nyawira, Sylvia; Orjuela-Ramirez, Guillermo; Orounladji, Boko Michel; Pareja, Piedad; Sibanda, Telma; Lamanna, Christine

Citation

Jones, Sarah K., Andrea Cecilia Sánchez, Chris Dickens, et al. 2026. “Collecting Holistic Evidence on Agroecology Performance to Accelerate Sustainable Food System Transitions.” Environmental and Sustainability Indicators 31: 101374. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.indic.2026.101374.

Country/Region

Burkina Faso; India; Kenya; Peru; Senegal; Tunisia; Zimbabwe

Keywords

Laos; Agroecology; Agrifood Systems; Sustainability; Indicators; Frameworks; Trade-offs

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agroecology

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

A robust spectral-temporal index for cross-regional mapping of plastic-mulched farmland using decametric-resolution images

2026
Zhang, Xinyu; Hu, Qiong; Cai, Zhiwen; Yang, Jingya; Wei, Haodong; Yan, Lijuan; Wei, Chenxi; Yu, Shuxia; Long, Xin; Yin, Gaofei
…more You, Liangzhi; Xu, Baodong
Details

A robust spectral-temporal index for cross-regional mapping of plastic-mulched farmland using decametric-resolution images

Year published

2026

Authors

Zhang, Xinyu; Hu, Qiong; Cai, Zhiwen; Yang, Jingya; Wei, Haodong; Yan, Lijuan; Wei, Chenxi; Yu, Shuxia; Long, Xin; Yin, Gaofei; You, Liangzhi; Xu, Baodong

Citation

Zhang, Xinyu; Hu, Qiong; Cai, Zhiwen; Yang, Jingya; Wei, Haodong; et al. 2026. A robust spectral-temporal index for cross-regional mapping of plastic-mulched farmland using decametric-resolution images. European Journal of Agronomy 179(August 2026): 128184. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eja.2026.128184

Keywords

Spectral Analysis; Satellite Imagery; Farmland; Plastic Mulches; Phenology

Language

English

Access/Licence

Limited Access

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Healthier diets: A global economic modelling study of income and employment impacts across regions

2026Komarek, Adam M.; Willenbockel, Dirk; Dunston, Shahnila; Cenacchi, Nicola; Godfray, H. Charles J.; Mason-D’Croz, Mason; Sulser, Timothy B.; Wiebe, Keith D.
Details

Healthier diets: A global economic modelling study of income and employment impacts across regions

Interest has grown in how to achieve healthy, sustainable, and affordable human diets. The potential income and employment effects of a transition towards healthier diets have received much less attention. We simulate aggregate and sectoral income and employment for business-as-usual and healthier diets for all geographic regions up to 2050 using scenario-based modelling. These healthier diets can increase food’s share of household expenditure in some regions, for example from 18% to 25% in East and Central Africa in 2050. Our results suggest that a global shift towards healthier diets leads to a reallocation of primary factors of production, especially low-skilled labour and capital, from non-agricultural sectors to crop agriculture in parts of sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. Notably, in 2050, with healthier diets, agriculture’s share of low-skilled labour increases by 3.2 percentage points in East and Central Africa and 1.5 percentage points in South Asia excluding India. Although Gross Domestic Product increases in these regions relative to business-as-usual, this reallocation raises agriculture’s share of Gross Domestic Product, consistent with a slower pace of long-run structural transformation. The reallocation leads to a mild increase in wages for low-skilled workers relative to high-skilled workers in most of these regions, compared to business-as-usual. However, in parts of sub-Saharan Africa, food price increases outweigh wage gains for low-skilled labour, reducing real purchasing power. Policies that encourage healthier diets may also alter income and employment and reduce economic welfare of poor populations in some regions, so care is needed in policy design to avoid adverse unintended consequences.

Year published

2026

Authors

Komarek, Adam M.; Willenbockel, Dirk; Dunston, Shahnila; Cenacchi, Nicola; Godfray, H. Charles J.; Mason-D’Croz, Mason; Sulser, Timothy B.; Wiebe, Keith D.

Citation

Komarek, Adam M.; Willenbockel, Dirk; Dunston, Shahnila; Cenacchi, Nicola; Godfray, H. Charles J.; et al. 2026. Healthier diets: A global economic modelling study of income and employment impacts across regions. Food Policy 142(August 2026): 103118. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodpol.2026.103118

Keywords

Diet; Income; Employment; Econometric Models; Modelling; Food Affordability; Healthy Diets

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Foresight

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Familiar strangers: The role of diaspora networks in foreign investment and long-run development

2026Chao, Fanghao; Xiong, Ruichi; Zhang, Xiaobo
Details

Familiar strangers: The role of diaspora networks in foreign investment and long-run development

Year published

2026

Authors

Chao, Fanghao; Xiong, Ruichi; Zhang, Xiaobo

Citation

Chen, Fanghao; Xiong, Ruichi; and Zhang, Xiaobo. 2026. Familiar strangers: the role of diaspora networks in foreign investment and long-run development. Journal of International Economics 162: 104293. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jinteco.2026.104293

Keywords

Investment; Foreign Investment; Market Structure

Language

English

Access/Licence

Limited Access

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

The state of global food insecurity measurement: A mix of methods, and a mix of messages

2026Headey, Derek D.
Details

The state of global food insecurity measurement: A mix of methods, and a mix of messages

Robust food insecurity indicators are needed for monitoring development targets, emergency responses, and rationally allocating foreign aid. For decades, global food security monitoring relied on the FAO’s prevalence of undernourishment, but this indicator’s fundamental limitations led the FAO to develop the Food Insecurity Experience Scale (FIES) and adopt the unaffordability of the healthy diet. In parallel, The World Bank monitors monetary poverty, arguably a food insecurity indicator in its own right. In this study we assess whether this larger suite of indicators agrees on: (a) which countries are most food insecure; and (b) whether global food insecurity is really deteriorating. Unfortunately, this new mix of methods produces mixed messages. Longstanding criticisms of the prevalence of undernourishment still apply, while rising undernourishment in the past decade is driven by modelled increases in calorie inequality that are inconsistent with income inequality trends. The FIES fares no better: severe FIES food insecurity is higher in several Latin American and Caribbean countries than in extremely food-insecure African countries such as Niger. The World Bank’s poverty and healthy diet affordability monitoring efforts are significantly constrained by systematically fewer household surveys in poorer and more crisis-affected countries. How can this situation be improved? First, experience-based indicators need to be more rigorously evaluated for cross-cultural comparability, and alternatives need to be considered. Second, international agencies and national governments should pool resources to implement coordinated, high-frequency, multi-purpose surveys – focusing on poor and crisis-affected countries – to jointly monitor food insecurity, poverty and malnutrition, as well as their root causes.

Year published

2026

Authors

Headey, Derek D.

Citation

Headey, Derek D. 2026. The state of global food insecurity measurement: A mix of methods, and a mix of messages. Food Policy 142(August 2026): 103121. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodpol.2026.103121

Keywords

Food Insecurity; Malnutrition; Prevalence of Undernourishment; Poverty; Stunting

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Climate Resilience

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Food systems policy coherence: A ten-country assessment

2026Nordhagen, Stella; Tankari, Mahamadou; Morrison, Jamie; Collins, Julie; Parsons, Kelly; Resnick, Danielle; Valls Bedeau, José
Details

Food systems policy coherence: A ten-country assessment

Policy coherence is widely recognised as essential for achieving food systems transformation, but attempts to assess food systems policy coherence have been limited to date in terms of their scope of topics and geographies and lack of comparable methods. This paper introduces the Food Systems Policy Coherence (FSPC) Diagnostic Tool and uses it to analyse food systems policy coherence across 10 low- and middle-income countries in Africa and Asia through key informant interviews (n = 189) and review of policy documents (n = 808). The FSPC Diagnostic Tool considers two aspects of policy coherence: (1) the structures and mechanisms that may contribute to achieving stronger policy process coherence and (2) coherence between policies from six sectors and ten common food systems goals. Regarding the former, all countries analysed had strong framework documents for cross-sectoral food policy, backed by high-level political commitment, but they tended to be much weaker when it came to capacity for implementation and especially monitoring and accountability. Policy coherence across sectors was generally strong for the goals of climate change adaptation and social protection but weaker for goals of healthy diets for all, adequate wages for food system workers, and climate change mitigation through food systems. Trade policy was the policy area with the greatest incoherence with a diverse range of food systems goals. The results offer the most comprehensive analysis of food systems policy coherence to date. The tool makes a useful contribution to measuring policy coherence and can serve as both a foundation for future research and enhance accountability for achieving coherent policy outcomes.

Year published

2026

Authors

Nordhagen, Stella; Tankari, Mahamadou; Morrison, Jamie; Collins, Julie; Parsons, Kelly; Resnick, Danielle; Valls Bedeau, José

Citation

Nordhagen, Stella; Tankari, Mahamadou; Morrison, Jamie; Collins, Julie; Parsons, Kelly; et al. 2026. Food systems policy coherence: A ten-country assessment. Food Policy 142(August 2026): 103113. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodpol.2026.103113

Keywords

Africa; Asia; Food Systems; Policies; Food Policies; Frameworks; Climate Change Adaptation; Trade

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-NC-ND-4.0

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Uncovering the climate vulnerability of China’s poverty alleviation frontiers

2026Zhao, Feng; Zuo, Lijun; Zhou, Yuyu; You, Liangzhi; Huang, Huabing; Sun, Rui; Zhao, Yuanyuan; Li, Xunhuan; Zhang, Dawei; Meng, Ran
Details

Uncovering the climate vulnerability of China’s poverty alleviation frontiers

Year published

2026

Authors

Zhao, Feng; Zuo, Lijun; Zhou, Yuyu; You, Liangzhi; Huang, Huabing; Sun, Rui; Zhao, Yuanyuan; Li, Xunhuan; Zhang, Dawei; Meng, Ran

Citation

Zhao, Feng; Zuo, Lijun; Zhou, Yuyu; You, Liangzhi; Huang, Huabing; et al. 2026. Uncovering the climate vulnerability of China’s poverty alleviation frontiers. Global Environmental Change 98(July 2026): 103140. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2026.103140

Country/Region

China

Keywords

Asia; Eastern Asia; Climate Change; Vulnerability; Poverty Alleviation; Rural Development; Climate Resilience; Spatial Data; Climate-smart Agriculture

Language

English

Access/Licence

Limited Access

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Women’s experiences of the food environment and their association with fruit and vegetable intake: Insights from northern Tanzania

2026
Singh, Nishmeet; Bliznashka, Lilia; Azupogo, Fusta; Marshall, Quinn; Kumar, Neha; Malindisa, Evangelista; Jeremiah, Kidola; Hess, Sonja Y.; Kinabo, Joyce L.; Olney, Deanna K.
…more Jaacks, Lindsay M.; Bellows, Alexandra L.
Details

Women’s experiences of the food environment and their association with fruit and vegetable intake: Insights from northern Tanzania

This analysis examined associations between factors in the food environment and fruit and vegetable (F&V) intake among women living in rural Northern Tanzania. We used cross-sectional data from 2597 women and 1275 food sources. Women’s self-reported factors included buying frequency, sources, availability, and convenience. We also measured women’s access to F&V sources using geospatial measures of distance and time from home to the reported typical sources. Data from a 30-day F&V food frequency questionnaire were used to calculate two scores that captured intake frequency and variety. We conducted a descriptive analysis of indicators of women’s experience and tested their associations with the scores using multivariable and Poisson regression models, controlling for covariates. On average, 5% and 35% of women reported buying F&V daily, respectively. Fruit was mostly bought from markets: F: 80%, V: 40%. Two-thirds of respondents perceived F&V as available (F: 65%, V: 60%). Median (IQR) distance and time to fruit sources were 9 km (2,19), 39 min (19,78), and to vegetable sources were 3 km (1,10), 32 min (8-69). Compared to women who reported making daily purchases of F&V, those who purchased weekly or monthly reported lower frequency and variety of F&V intake. Women’s perceptions that F&V were less available and at a longer distance were associated with lower frequency and variety of vegetable intake.Buying frequency, perceived availability, and distance to markets were associated with women’s frequency and variety of F&V intake, underscoring the need to consider these and other factors in food environments to increase F&V intake.

Year published

2026

Authors

Singh, Nishmeet; Bliznashka, Lilia; Azupogo, Fusta; Marshall, Quinn; Kumar, Neha; Malindisa, Evangelista; Jeremiah, Kidola; Hess, Sonja Y.; Kinabo, Joyce L.; Olney, Deanna K.; Jaacks, Lindsay M.; Bellows, Alexandra L.

Citation

Singh, Nishmeet; Bliznashka, Lilia; Azupogo, Fusta; Marshall, Quinn; Kumar, Neha; et al. 2026. Women’s experiences of the food environment and their association with fruit and vegetable intake: Insights from northern Tanzania. Health and Place 100(July 2026): 103694. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.healthplace.2026.103694

Keywords

Tanzania; Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Eastern Africa; Capacity Building; Gender; Women; Food Environment; Fruits; Vegetables; Feeding Preferences; Rural Areas

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Fruit and Vegetables for Sustainable Healthy Diets

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Diets, fruit and vegetable intake, and nutritional status in Benin, Fiji, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, and Tanzania: Foreword

2026Olney, Deanna K.; Hambayi, Mutinta; Perera, Thushanthi; Hess, Sonja Y.
Details

Diets, fruit and vegetable intake, and nutritional status in Benin, Fiji, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, and Tanzania: Foreword

Improving diets can improve nutrition and health outcomes. In this supplement, evidence from five low-and-middle-income countries on the country specific dietary (including F&V) intake patterns, nutrition issues and evaluated solutions to improve diets across population groups is presented. Based on this evidence, the final paper offers perspectives and future priorities.

Year published

2026

Authors

Olney, Deanna K.; Hambayi, Mutinta; Perera, Thushanthi; Hess, Sonja Y.

Citation

Olney, Deanna K.; Hambayi, Mutinta; Perera, Thushanthi; and Hess, Sonja Y. 2026. Diets, fruit and vegetable intake, and nutritional status in Benin, Fiji, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, and Tanzania: Foreword. Maternal and Child Nutrition 22(3): e70163. https://doi.org/10.1111/mcn.70163

Country/Region

Benin; Fiji; Philippines; Sri Lanka

Keywords

Africa; Asia; Diet; Fruits; Vegetables; Food Intake; Nutritional Status; Nutrition; Developing Countries

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Fruit and Vegetables for Sustainable Healthy Diets

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Perceived challenges and solutions to adopting healthy diets among women and children: A photovoice study in urban Ethiopia

2026Worku, Meron; Holdsworth, Michelle; Ruel, Marie T.; Irache, Ana; Baye, Kalaeb; Spires, Mark; Bricas, Nicolas; Pradeilles, Rebecca
Details

Perceived challenges and solutions to adopting healthy diets among women and children: A photovoice study in urban Ethiopia

Ethiopia has one of the highest rates of undernutrition among children under five (U5) and women of reproductive age (WRA) globally, alongside rising overweight/obesity, particularly in urban areas. Poor diet is a shared driver of multiple forms of malnutrition. We used a participatory photography (Photovoice) approach to explore the lived experiences of WRA and their children U5 in adopting healthy diets across lower- and higher- socio-economic status (SES) groups in Addis Ababa. Women took photographs illustrating challenges to healthy diets, and five focus groups (n = 31 women) were conducted to discuss challenges and solutions, with separate sessions held for different SES groups. A hybrid thematic analysis, combining deductive and inductive approaches, identified themes/subthemes, with comparisons across SES groups. Financial and physical barriers to accessing healthy foods, time constraints and perceived poor food safety were major contributors to poor diets. In lower SES groups, women also reported limited knowledge about healthy diets, inadequate family support and poor home food environments. In higher SES groups, unhealthy food preferences coupled with easy access to and aggressive promotion of unhealthy foods were key challenges. Proposed government-level solutions included job creation, nutrition education, affordable healthy food, investment in household infrastructure, expanded childcare and restrictions on unhealthy food availability and promotion. Societal-level solutions included gender equality, strengthened community-based loan schemes and support for urban agriculture. These findings highlight that women recognise their needs and who should support them, and emphasise the importance of including women’s voices in decision-making processes. Findings also underscore the need for integrated interventions targeting individual, food environment and socio-economic drivers to improve diets among women and children in urban Ethiopia.

Year published

2026

Authors

Worku, Meron; Holdsworth, Michelle; Ruel, Marie T.; Irache, Ana; Baye, Kalaeb; Spires, Mark; Bricas, Nicolas; Pradeilles, Rebecca

Citation

Worku, Meron; Holdsworth, Michelle; Ruel, Marie T.; Irache, Ana; Baye, Kalaeb; et al. 2026. Perceived challenges and solutions to adopting healthy diets among women and children: A photovoice study in urban Ethiopia. Maternal and Child Nutrition 22(3): e70208. https://doi.org/10.1111/mcn.70208

Country/Region

Ethiopia

Keywords

Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Eastern Africa; Capacity Building; Healthy Diets; Gender; Women; Children; Photography; Urban Areas; Malnutrition; Food Environment; Reproductive Performance

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Journal Article

Book Chapter

Geopolitical changes and the new agricultural trade environment

2026Piñeiro, Martin; Piñeiro, Valeria; Mesquita Moreira, Mauricio
Details

Geopolitical changes and the new agricultural trade environment

In the previous edition of this book series, published in 2024 as a contribution to the 13th Ministerial Conference, one of our main themes was the profound geopolitical changes that were taking place in the world and its implications for the functioning of the World Trade Organization (WTO) and trade in general. Our analysis pointed to a progressive weakening of multilateral institutions and of the enforcement of multilateral trade rules. This was particularly noticeable among the large economies with considerable bargaining power. We warned that this trend risked a return to power-based bilateralism, at the expense of global cooperation. Two years later, as we approach the 14th Ministerial Conference (MC14) in Yaoundé, the geopolitical changes we were concerned about—and the threats to the rules-based multilateral trade system—have gained a scale and intensity that exceed even the most pessimistic forecasts. This crisis is fueled by a growing conviction in many advanced economies, led by the United States of America (US), that the current trade framework is outdated. The US perspective has shifted from supporting the system to actively disrupting it, citing chronic non-compliance, particularly by China, and the perceived failure of the WTO to address state-led economic models. As a result, the global landscape has shifted beyond potential risks, with increasing use of reciprocal tariffs and a gradual fragmentation of trade relationships.

Year published

2026

Authors

Piñeiro, Martin; Piñeiro, Valeria; Mesquita Moreira, Mauricio

Citation

Piñeiro, Martin; Piñeiro, Valeria; and Mesquita Moreira, Mauricio. 2026. Geopolitical changes and the new agricultural trade environment. In Agricultural Trade at a Crossroads with Latin American, Caribbean, and African Perspectives for Post-MC14, eds. Valeria Piñeiro, Simon Mevell, and Martin Piñeiro. Part One: The Changing Geopolitical Landscape and the WTO, Chapter 1.1, Pp. 2-15. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute and the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183431

Keywords

Latin America and the Caribbean; Africa; Agricultural Trade; Trade; Geopolitics; Globalization; Developing Countries; Impact

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-SA-3.0-IGO

Record type

Book Chapter

Book

Agricultural trade at a crossroads with Latin American, Caribbean, and African perspectives for post-MC14

2026Piñeiro, Valeria; Mevel, Simon; Piñeiro, Martin
Details

Agricultural trade at a crossroads with Latin American, Caribbean, and African perspectives for post-MC14

Year published

2026

Authors

Piñeiro, Valeria; Mevel, Simon; Piñeiro, Martin

Citation

Piñeiro, Valeria; Mevel, Simon; and Piñeiro, Martin (Eds.). 2026. Agricultural trade at a crossroads with Latin American, Caribbean, and African perspectives for post-MC14. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute and the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183392

Keywords

Africa; Latin America and the Caribbean; Trade; International Trade; Agricultural Trade; Trade Disputes; Trade Facilitation

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-SA-3.0-IGO

Record type

Book

Book Chapter

Introduction [in Agricultural trade at a crossroads with Latin American, Caribbean, and African perspectives for post-MC14]

2026Piñeiro, Valeria; Piñeiro, Martin
Details

Introduction [in Agricultural trade at a crossroads with Latin American, Caribbean, and African perspectives for post-MC14]

Agricultural trade lies at the heart of development, food security, and sustainability. Over the past several decades, global trade in agricultural products has grown both in volume and complexity. Trade has supported structural transformation, expanded food access, and increased incomes across regions. But in recent years, this system has become increasingly strained. Rising geopolitical tensions, recurring global shocks, and a growing disconnect between trade rules and sustainability goals have left the global trading system at a crossroads. This book is the fourth in a series of concise, policy-focused publications aimed at supporting agricultural trade reform and food systems transformation. The first volume, titled Transforming Agriculture in Latin America and the Caribbean: Challenges and Opportunities, examined how shifting climate, social, and economic pressures were reshaping the region’s food systems. The second, Food Systems at a Crossroads, explored the political economy of food and agriculture in Latin America, identifying core trade-offs and opportunities for policy innovation. The third volume, The Road to MC12, provided timely analysis ahead of the 12th World Trade Organization’s (WTO) Ministerial to highlight risks of fragmentation and Latin America’s potential to contribute to a reinvigorated multilateral system. This fourth edition expands the conversation to include Africa, a region with growing importance in global agricultural trade debates. Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) and Africa face distinct realities, but they also share vulnerabilities and strategic interests. Both regions have significant agricultural potential, are highly exposed to trade-related shocks, and are seeking a fairer, more inclusive trade regime. This book aims to deepen understanding of how these regions are navigating a rapidly evolving global landscape and how they can contribute to shaping the future of agricultural trade.

Year published

2026

Authors

Piñeiro, Valeria; Piñeiro, Martin

Citation

Piñeiro, Valeria; and Piñeiro, Martin. 2026. Introduction. In Agricultural Trade at a Crossroads with Latin American, Caribbean, and African Perspectives for Post-MC14, eds. Valeria Piñeiro, Simon Mevell, and Martin Piñeiro. Pp. x-xviii. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute and the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183430

Keywords

Africa; Latin America and the Caribbean; Trade; International Trade; Agricultural Trade; Trade Disputes; Trade Facilitation

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-SA-3.0-IGO

Record type

Book Chapter

Book Chapter

State of the agricultural negotiations and prospects for progress at MC14

2026Glauber, Joseph W.
Details

State of the agricultural negotiations and prospects for progress at MC14

Agricultural negotiations have largely been stalemated since the collapse of the Doha Round in July 2008. Members have struggled to fulfil in its entirety the mandate set out in Article 20 of the Agreement on Agreement (AOA), as well as other relevant Ministerial mandates. With the exception of a few outcomes, including those on Public Stockholding and the administration of Tariff Rate Quotas at the Ninth Ministerial Conference (MC9) in Bali in 2013, on Export Competition at MC10 in Nairobi in 2015, and on export restrictions for food aid in MC12 in Geneva, there has not been any substantive outcome in the agriculture negotiations since they were launched in 2000. The prospects for a substantive outcome at MC14 in Yaoundé remained limited, as sharp divisions persisted among Members on several critical issues, while recent trade actions have added further strain to the multilateral trading system and risk undermining progress achieved over the past three decades. I begin by reviewing progress in the so-called pillars of the AOA: domestic support, market access, and export competition. I then consider the areas of contention during the Doha Round negotiations, specifically the special safeguard mechanism (SSM), cotton, public stockholding (PSH), and export restrictions. I conclude with a broad assessment of the chances for meaningful progress and discuss some potential avenues beyond Yaoundé.

Year published

2026

Authors

Glauber, Joseph W.

Citation

Glauber, Joseph W. 2026. State of the agricultural negotiations and prospects for progress at MC14. In Agricultural Trade at a Crossroads with Latin American, Caribbean, and African Perspectives for Post-MC14, eds. Valeria Piñeiro, Simon Mevell, and Martin Piñeiro. Part One: The Changing Geopolitical Landscape and the WTO, Chapter 1.2, Pp. 16-32. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute and the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183432

Keywords

Trade Agreements; Trade; Market Access; Exports

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-SA-3.0-IGO

Record type

Book Chapter

Book Chapter

Innovation, sustainability and the new frontier of competitiveness in the agrifood sector

2026Papendieck, Sabine; Villarreal, Federico; Elverdin, Pablo
Details

Innovation, sustainability and the new frontier of competitiveness in the agrifood sector

The global agricultural trade landscape is experiencing a structural transition. The longstanding emphasis on volume and price is increasingly being complemented—and in some cases replaced—by value-based considerations, whereby production processes – “how” products are produced-carry weight comparable to production outputs – “what” product is produced. This evolution reflects the growing integration of sustainability, traceability, and environmental performance criteria into global value chains and market access conditions (World Bank, 2024; OECD, 2023). For Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC), a major contributor to global net agrifood exports, this shift represents both a challenge and an opportunity to consolidate its role as a sustainable food supplier (OECD-FAO, 2024).

Year published

2026

Authors

Papendieck, Sabine; Villarreal, Federico; Elverdin, Pablo

Citation

Papendieck, Sabine; Villarreal, Federico; and Elverdin, Pablo. 2026. Innovation, sustainability and the new frontier of competitiveness in the agrifood sector. In Agricultural Trade at a Crossroads with Latin American, Caribbean, and African Perspectives for Post-MC14, eds. Valeria Piñeiro, Simon Mevell, and Martin Piñeiro. Part Two: Latin America and the Caribbean: Regional Perspective, Chapter 2.3, Pp. 124-144. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute and the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183458

Keywords

Latin America and the Caribbean; Innovation; Sustainability; Economic Competition; Agrifood Sector; Public Goods

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-SA-3.0-IGO

Record type

Book Chapter

Book Chapter

LAC’s role in global food security and the multilateral system

2026Illescas, Nelson; Vicentin Masaro, Jimena
Details

LAC’s role in global food security and the multilateral system

This chapter argues that LAC’s contribution to global food security cannot be understood in isolation from broader debates on trade governance and multilateral cooperation. As climate pressures, geopolitical fragmentation, and market volatility increasingly intersect, the credibility of the rules-based trading system becomes a central determinant of global supply stability. In this context, LAC occupies a relevant position at the intersection of production capacity and global governance: as a major net exporter, it enhances international availability and moderates price volatility, thereby supporting affordability in food-deficit regions; yet, paradoxically, significant segments of its own population—particularly in parts of Central America and the Caribbean—still face constraints in affording a healthy diet (FAO, IFAD, UNICEF, WFP and WHO. 2025.). This dual condition underscores that food security is multidimensional, linking availability, access, and stability. By leveraging its comparative advantages while engaging constructively in WTO-centered trade governance reform—strengthening disciplines on export restrictions, transparency, and dispute settlement—the region can safeguard its export interests and perform a structural, system-wide balancing role in promoting a more resilient, predictable, and affordable global food system.

Year published

2026

Authors

Illescas, Nelson; Vicentin Masaro, Jimena

Citation

Illescas, Nelson; and Vicentin Masaro, Jimena. 2026. LAC’s role in global food security and the multilateral system. In Agricultural Trade at a Crossroads with Latin American, Caribbean, and African Perspectives for Post-MC14, eds. Valeria Piñeiro, Simon Mevell, and Martin Piñeiro. Part Two: Latin America and the Caribbean: Regional Perspective, Chapter 2.2, Pp. 105-125. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute and the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183459

Keywords

Latin America and the Caribbean; Globalization; Food Security; Multilateral Organizations; Climate Resilience; Sustainability; Global Value Chains

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-SA-3.0-IGO

Record type

Book Chapter

Book Chapter

Agricultural trade structure, disruptions, and competitiveness in Latin America and the Caribbean

2026Piñeiro, Valeria; Gianatiempo, Juan Pablo; Rueda, Jorge; Mesquita Moreira, Mauricio
Details

Agricultural trade structure, disruptions, and competitiveness in Latin America and the Caribbean

Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) has a central position in global agricultural trade, both as a major exporter of staple commodities and as a region increasingly exposed to shifts in global demand, trade policy, and geopolitical fragmentation. Recent developments show that agrifood trade is no longer shaped primarily by gradual liberalization or isolated tariff disputes. Instead, it is being reshaped by a more complex environment in which higher tariffs coexist with selective application, exemptions, and preferential treatment. A key insight emerging from recent trade shocks is that markets can adjust, but adjustment increasingly takes place through the reallocation of trade flows rather than through smooth prices or production responses. This has important implications for LAC, where trade is often concentrated around a limited number of products and destinations. As adjustment costs rise, outcomes depend less on aggregate performance and more on structural characteristics such as diversification, bargaining power, and institutional capacity. Against this backdrop, the chapter situates LAC’s experience within the broader global debate, emphasizing the need to align national and regional strategies with a changing global trade landscape.

Year published

2026

Authors

Piñeiro, Valeria; Gianatiempo, Juan Pablo; Rueda, Jorge; Mesquita Moreira, Mauricio

Citation

Piñeiro, Valeria; Gianatiempo, Juan Pablo; Rueda, Jorge; and Mesquita Moreira, Mauricio. 2026. Agricultural trade structure, disruptions, and competitiveness in Latin America and the Caribbean. In Agricultural Trade at a Crossroads with Latin American, Caribbean, and African Perspectives for Post-MC14, eds. Valeria Piñeiro, Simon Mevell, and Martin Piñeiro. Part Two: Latin America and the Caribbean: Regional Perspective, Chapter 2.1, Pp. 85-104. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute and the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183460

Keywords

Latin America and the Caribbean; Trade; Agricultural Trade; Economic Competition; Trade Cycles; Climate Change; Geopolitics; Globalization; Productivity; Policies

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-SA-3.0-IGO

Record type

Book Chapter

Book Chapter

Scenarios for agricultural trade in a changing world

2026Piñeiro, Valeria; Gianatiempo, Juan Pablo; Glauber, Joseph W.; Rueda, Jorge; Laborde Debucquet, David
Details

Scenarios for agricultural trade in a changing world

Over the past 45 years, world merchandise trade has undergone significant structural transformations, and agrifood products have been part of that evolution. After a period of stagnation in the early 1980s, global trade expanded steadily from the mid-1980s through the early 2000s, driven by trade liberalization, technological progress, and deeper economic integration. This expansion accelerated between 2005 and 2010 with the consolidation of global value chains. Between 2010 and 2020, trade growth slowed amid weaker demand and rising tensions. Following the COVID-19 shock, trade rebounded sharply, reaching a historical peak in 2022, largely driven by price increases in the context of the war in Ukraine and general inflationary trends due to the economic recovery following the pandemic. These price surges proved relatively short-lived, however, and commodity prices have generally declined since mid-2022 as supply conditions improved and markets adjusted.

Year published

2026

Authors

Piñeiro, Valeria; Gianatiempo, Juan Pablo; Glauber, Joseph W.; Rueda, Jorge; Laborde Debucquet, David

Citation

Piñeiro, Valeria; Gianatiempo, Juan Pablo; Glauber, Joseph W.; Rueda, Jorge; and Laborde Debucquet, David. 2026. Scenarios for agricultural trade in a changing world. In Agricultural Trade at a Crossroads with Latin American, Caribbean, and African Perspectives for Post-MC14, eds. Valeria Piñeiro, Simon Mevell, and Martin Piñeiro. Part One: The Changing Geopolitical Landscape and the WTO, Chapter 1.4, Pp. 63-83. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute and the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183464

Keywords

Africa; Latin America and the Caribbean; Agricultural Trade; Impact; Production Factors; Welfare; Agricultural Products; Policies

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-SA-3.0-IGO

Record type

Book Chapter

Book Chapter

Evolving trade instruments in a fragmented system

2026Bellmann, Christophe; Ismail, Yasmin; Lehmann, Fabrice
Details

Evolving trade instruments in a fragmented system

The global landscape for agricultural trade is going through deep transformations. In the face of persistent blockage in multilateral negotiations, growing geopolitical tensions, and national security considerations, governments are exploring alternative forms of cooperation. Alongside traditional bilateral and regional trade agreements, new collaborative arrangements are emerging in the form of plurilateral or sectoral approaches, informal coalitions, soft law initiatives, or agreed principles to deepen economic integration or advance specific trade agendas among like-minded partners. While these initiatives provide a space to test new ideas and approaches, which could inform future models of trade cooperation, they also contribute to growing fragmentation in the global agricultural trading system.

Year published

2026

Authors

Bellmann, Christophe; Ismail, Yasmin; Lehmann, Fabrice

Citation

Bellmann, Christophe; Ismail, Yasmin; and Lehmann, Fabrice. 2026. Evolving trade instruments in a fragmented system. In Agricultural Trade at a Crossroads with Latin American, Caribbean, and African Perspectives for Post-MC14, eds. Valeria Piñeiro, Simon Mevell, and Martin Piñeiro. Part One: The Changing Geopolitical Landscape and the WTO, Chapter 1.3, Pp. 33-62. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute and the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183465

Keywords

Africa; Latin America and the Caribbean; Trade; Trade Agreements; Collaboration; Agricultural Trade; Digital Technology

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-SA-3.0-IGO

Record type

Book Chapter

Book Chapter

The WTO from a Latin American and Caribbean perspective: Why rules still matter

2026Abraham Peralta, Gloria
Details

The WTO from a Latin American and Caribbean perspective: Why rules still matter

Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) occupies a distinctive position in the global agri-food system. The region combines highly competitive agricultural exporters, systemic actors of considerable weight such as Mexico and Brazil, and small Caribbean Island economies that are structurally dependent on food imports. This internal diversity is central to understanding the continued importance of multilateral rules for the region’s economic stability (World Bank 2020; FAO 2023).

Year published

2026

Authors

Abraham Peralta, Gloria

Citation

Abraham Peralta, Gloria. 2026. The WTO from a Latin American and Caribbean perspective: Why rules still matter. In Agricultural Trade at a Crossroads with Latin American, Caribbean, and African Perspectives for Post-MC14, eds. Valeria Piñeiro, Simon Mevell, and Martin Piñeiro. Part Two: Latin America and the Caribbean: Regional Perspective, Chapter 2.4, Pp. 145-163. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute and the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa.

Keywords

Latin America and the Caribbean; Wto; Regional Policies; Agricultural Trade; Reforms; Multilateral System of Access and Benefit-sharing

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-SA-3.0-IGO

Record type

Book Chapter

Brief

Rice establishment methods in Myanmar: Trends, perceptions, and constraints

2026Goeb, Joseph; Minten, Bart; Synt, Nang Lun Kham; Aung, Zin Wai
Details

Rice establishment methods in Myanmar: Trends, perceptions, and constraints

Key Findings: Direct-seeded rice (DSR) is widely adopted in Myanmar rice production, used by around 50 percent of farmers during the monsoon season and about 75 percent during the dry season, accounting for the majority of cultivated rice area. Rice establishment methods remained relatively stable from 2023–2025 despite political instability, market disruptions, labor shortages, and price volatility. DSR adoption is higher among larger farms and non-irrigated farms, indicating that labor and water constraints strongly influence establishment choices. Broadcasting is the dominant DSR method, particularly dry broadcasting, while row planting remains uncommon. Most farmers believe puddled-transplanted rice (PTR) produces higher yields than DSR, with an average perceived yield advantage of about 11 baskets per acre. Farmers overwhelmingly perceive PTR as more labor-intensive, while differences in fertilizer and pesticide use are viewed as relatively small or mixed. Labor shortages and water constraints are the primary reasons for adopting DSR, not perceptions of lower profitability or lower yields under PTR. Recommended Actions: Strengthen investments in irrigation and water management systems to reduce water-related constraints and enable farmers to choose establishment methods based on productivity rather than necessity. Address rural labor shortages through mechanization support, labor-saving technologies, and improved access to agricultural services. Develop and disseminate best management practices for DSR, particularly for weed control, seed establishment, and water management to improve productivity and profitability. Conduct rigorous research on the economic returns of DSR and PTR across different agro-ecological zones, farm sizes, and irrigation conditions.

Year published

2026

Authors

Goeb, Joseph; Minten, Bart; Synt, Nang Lun Kham; Aung, Zin Wai

Citation

Goeb, Joseph; Minten, Bart; Synt, Nang Lun Kham; and Aung, Zin Wai. 2026. Rice establishment methods in Myanmar: Trends, perceptions, and constraints. Myanmar SSP Research Note 131. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183444

Country/Region

Myanmar

Keywords

Asia; South-eastern Asia; Rice; Direct Sowing; Plant Establishment; Irrigation; Water Management; Rural Employment

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Brief

Report

Essential commodities prices, availability, and market actors’ perceptions: May 2026

2026Rakhy, Tarig; Mohamed, Shima; Nigus, Halefom Yigzaw; Suliman, Gotada; Siddig, Khalid
Details

Essential commodities prices, availability, and market actors’ perceptions: May 2026

Sudan Market Prices and Availability Report

Year published

2026

Authors

Rakhy, Tarig; Mohamed, Shima; Nigus, Halefom Yigzaw; Suliman, Gotada; Siddig, Khalid

Citation

Rakhy, Tarig; Mohamed, Shima; Abushama, Hala; Nigus, Halefom Yigzaw; Suliman, Gotada; and Siddig, Khalid. 2026. Essential commodities prices, availability, and market actors’ perceptions: May 2026. Sudan Market Prices and Availability Report 16. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183435

Country/Region

Sudan

Keywords

Africa; Northern Africa; Capacity Building; Commodities; Prices; Markets

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open Access

Record type

Report

Brief

Vegetable intake among women of reproductive age in northern Tanzania: Baseline findings from the FRESH end-to-end evaluation

2026Azupogo, Fusta; Hess, Sonja Y.; Bliznashka, Lilia; Arnold, Charles D.; Djuazon, Nelly; Jeremiah, Kidola; Malindisa, Evangelista; Kinabo, Joyce; Cunningham, Kenda; Olney, Deanna K.
Details

Vegetable intake among women of reproductive age in northern Tanzania: Baseline findings from the FRESH end-to-end evaluation

Adequate intake of fruit and vegetables (F&V) is fundamental to meeting micronutrient requirements, reducing the risk of diet-related noncommunicable diseases, and supporting overall health and well-being. The World Health Organization recommends a minimum daily intake of 400 g of F&V, whereas the Tanzania Food-Based Dietary Guidelines (FBDGs) advise a daily intake of approximately 280 g each of fruit and vegetables to promote healthy living. Intake of F&V in Tanzania and many other low- and middle-income countries, however, remains substantially below recommended levels. In sub-Saharan Africa, diets are frequently dominated by staple cereals and tubers, with limited dietary diversity and low intake of nutrient-dense foods, including F&V. In Tanzania, women of reproductive age (WRA) are at high risk of micronutrient deficiencies, including iron, folate, vitamins A, C and B12. These inadequacies impair immune function, increase susceptibility to infection, and contribute to iron-deficiency anaemia, fatigue, and reduced productivity. During pregnancy, poor micronutrient status elevates the risk of maternal morbidity, preterm birth, low birth weight, and impaired fetal growth. During lactation, inadequate status may reduce the micronutrient content of breast milk, potentially compromising infant growth and immune function.

Year published

2026

Authors

Azupogo, Fusta; Hess, Sonja Y.; Bliznashka, Lilia; Arnold, Charles D.; Djuazon, Nelly; Jeremiah, Kidola; Malindisa, Evangelista; Kinabo, Joyce; Cunningham, Kenda; Olney, Deanna K.

Citation

Azupogo, Fusta; Hess, Sonja Y.; Bliznashka, Lilia; Arnold, Charles D.; Djuazon, Nelly; et al. 2026. Vegetable intake among women of reproductive age in northern Tanzania: Baseline findings from the FRESH end-to-end evaluation. Tanzania Evaluation Research Brief 6. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183404

Keywords

Tanzania; Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Eastern Africa; Vegetables; Food Intake; Feeding Habits; Reproductive Performance; Gender

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Brief

Working Paper

Pre- and postharvest losses and their correlates in the Irish potato value chain in Kenya

2026Bachewe, Fantu Nisrane; Geoffrey, Baragu; Niyonsingiza, Josue; Popoola, Olufemi
Details

Pre- and postharvest losses and their correlates in the Irish potato value chain in Kenya

Food losses are a major constraint to agricultural productivity, farm incomes, and agrifood system efficiency in sub-Saharan Africa, yet comprehensive micro-level evidence across value chains remains limited. This study provides a detailed assessment of pre- and postharvest losses in the Irish potato value chain in Kenya, drawing on purposefully collected data from producers, aggregators and processors. Using a consistent, multidimensional measurement framework, the study captures both quantitative (physical) and qualitative (degradation) losses across production and postharvest stages. The results indicate that potato losses are widespread and occur throughout the value chain, with the largest share concentrated at the producer level. Preharvest losses and on-farm postharvest losses account for a substantial proportion (23.5 percent) of total losses, reflecting the combined effects of pest and disease pressures, weather-related shocks, and suboptimal management practices. Nationally, producer-level potato losses could amount to KSh 14.5 billion annually, equivalent to the annual per capita income of about 50,000 Kenyans. While producer-level losses dominate, descriptive evidence shows that potato aggregators and processors also incur nonnegligible losses, particularly during storage, transportation, and handling. These losses are commonly associated with spillage, mechanical damage, inadequate storage conditions, and poor handling practices, highlighting inefficiencies beyond the farm gate. Econometric results reveal that loss patterns vary across producers and production environments. Differences in demographic characteristics, farm size, labor availability, and market orientation contribute to heterogeneity in both the likelihood and intensity of losses. These results further demonstrate that asset ownership, management practices, and exposure to production risks are key determinants of loss outcomes. Greater household assets and labor availability are associated with reduced loss incidence and intensity, while exposure to biotic and abiotic stressors – captured through a composite index – significantly increases both the probability and severity of preharvest losses. Input use and management practices also play an important role. The application of chemical fertilizers is associated with reduced loss intensity, consistent with improved crop vigor and resilience, while the use of pest control is positively correlated with loss occurrence, likely reflecting reactive application following infestation. The adoption of improved seed varieties increases the likelihood of losses but reduces the intensity of them, which is a nuanced finding that suggests both greater exposure and improved resilience conditional on damage. Access to training and third-party agricultural service is associated with lower losses, underscoring the importance of knowledge and advisory support. This area also presents opportunities for youth, particularly young women, to engage in agrifood-system service provision through activities such as advisory services, quality management, aggregation, and postharvest handling, which can simultaneously reduce losses and generate income. Importantly, the analysis reveals strong linkages between preharvest and postharvest losses. Higher preharvest losses are associated with both increased likelihood and greater severity of postharvest losses, indicating that damage incurred during production propagates along the value chain. Overall, potato losses in Kenya are systemic but largely preventable through improved handling, storage, market infrastructure, and farmer capacity. Although youth sample sizes in this study are too small to quantify specific effects, the data highlight clear entry points for engaging youth, particularly young women, in reducing post-harvest losses. For instance, there are opportunities for involving youths in services offered at the production stage, which include sorting, curing, and transportation.

Year published

2026

Authors

Bachewe, Fantu Nisrane; Geoffrey, Baragu; Niyonsingiza, Josue; Popoola, Olufemi

Citation

Bachewe, Fantu Nisrane; Geoffrey, Baragu; Niyonsingiza, Josue; and Popoola, Olufemi. 2026. Pre- and postharvest losses and their correlates in the Irish potato value chain in Kenya. SFS4Youth Working Paper 16. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183402

Country/Region

Kenya

Keywords

Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Eastern Africa; Harvesting Losses; Postharvest Losses; Potatoes; Agricultural Value Chains; Value Chains

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open Access

Record type

Working Paper

Journal Article

India’s national maternity benefit cash transfer program and child anthropometry

2026Ray, Soumyajit; Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Pal, Sumantra; Scott, Samuel P.; Menon, Purnima; Chakrabarti, Suman
Details

India’s national maternity benefit cash transfer program and child anthropometry

This study evaluates the impact of India’s Pradhan Mantri Matru Vandana Yojana (PMMVY), the world’s largest rights-based conditional cash transfer (CCT) program targeting women during their first pregnancy. Using National Family Health Survey data from 2005 to 2021, we assess changes in growth in a nationally representative sample of children, before and after program implementation. To address potential biases, we employ a quasi-experimental approach with a Propensity Scores Matched Difference in Differences analysis. We find that potential exposure to the program is associated with moderate improvements (0.10 SD) in height-for-age and weight-for-age z-scores. These effects likely operate through increased uptake of health interventions and consumption of certain food groups. The study underscores persistent barriers to program access and finds that women from higher socio-economic strata have entered the CCT beneficiary pool since 2017, suggesting a need for more equitable program targeting.

Year published

2026

Authors

Ray, Soumyajit; Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Pal, Sumantra; Scott, Samuel P.; Menon, Purnima; Chakrabarti, Suman

Citation

Ray, Soumyajit; Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Pal, Sumantra; Scott, Samuel P.; Menon, Purnima; and Chakrabarti, Suman. 2026. India’s national maternity benefit cash transfer program and child anthropometry. Scientific Reports 16: 18807. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-026-48160-8

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Asia; Southern Asia; Cash Transfers; Social Protection; Maternity; Anthropometry; Children

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Transforming Agrifood Systems in South Asia

Record type

Journal Article

Brief

Effects of the Iran conflict on fuel, fertilizer, and food prices in Nigeria

2026Kirui, Oliver K.; Fasoranti, Adetunji; Bamiwuye, Temilolu; Balana, Bedru; Glauber, Joseph W.; Hebebrand, Charlotte; Omamo, Steven Were
Details

Effects of the Iran conflict on fuel, fertilizer, and food prices in Nigeria

Nigeria faces a new wave of economic pressure from the ongoing Iran conflict, with disruptions around the Strait of Hormuz causing sharp increases in global oil and fertilizer prices and threatening to reverse the recent decline in Nigeria’s food inflation. Although Nigeria could benefit from higher oil and fertilizer export revenues due to its expanding domestic refining and urea production capacity, the country remains heavily dependent on imported refined fuel, potash, phosphate, and other fertilizer inputs. Rising transport, logistics, and production costs are already increasing pressure on farmers, food systems, and household welfare. At the same time, however, the crisis presents a strategic opportunity for Nigeria to strengthen domestic refining, expand fertilizer production, deepen regional trade, and reposition itself as a major supplier of fuel and fertilizer across Africa.

Year published

2026

Authors

Kirui, Oliver K.; Fasoranti, Adetunji; Bamiwuye, Temilolu; Balana, Bedru; Glauber, Joseph W.; Hebebrand, Charlotte; Omamo, Steven Were

Citation

Kirui, Oliver K.; Fasoranti, Adetunji; Bamiwuye, Temilolu; Balana, Bedru; Glauber, Joseph W.; et al. 2026. Effects of the Iran conflict on fuel, fertilizer, and food prices in Nigeria. NSSP Policy Note 58. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183398

Country/Region

Nigeria

Keywords

Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Western Africa; Conflicts; Impact; Fuels; Fertilizers; Food Prices; Inflation; Value Chains

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Brief

Working Paper

Gender asset-ownership gap, women’s agency, and its implications for household inequality: Evidence from Nigeria

2026Kirui, Oliver K.; Olanrewaju, Opeyemi; Bamiwuye, Temilolu; Popoola, Olufemi; Nwagboso, Chibuzo
Details

Gender asset-ownership gap, women’s agency, and its implications for household inequality: Evidence from Nigeria

he gender asset-ownership gap remains a persistent barrier to inclusive economic growth. While women contribute significantly to agricultural production and household welfare, they continue to face constraints in accessing and controlling productive assets such as land and non-land resources. Using nationally representative panel data from the Nigeria Living Standards Measurement Study-Integrated Surveys on Agriculture (LSMS-ISA) waves 4 and 5, this study examines the role of women’s productive asset ownership and empowerment in shaping household income inequality in rural Nigeria. Descriptive evidence shows persistently high intrahousehold inequality, with intrahousehold Gini coefficients averaging approximately 0.70 across survey rounds, despite a modest decline between 2018/19 and 2023/24. Regional patterns reveal particularly pronounced inequality in the North East, where income distributions are heavily skewed and most households exhibit extreme intrahousehold disparities. Employing fixed effects regressions and Blinder-Oaxaca decompositions, the analysis yields three key findings. First, women’s land share is associated with reduced intrahousehold income inequality, but this effect is modest and conditional. It becomes meaningful primarily in households where women control more than half of total household farmland, suggesting that small and fragmented landholdings offer limited inequality-reducing potential on their own. Women’s control over income and participation in agricultural decision-making emerge as additional and consistently significant drivers of reduced intrahousehold inequality. Second, women’s land share has a significant and positive effect on women’s income share, with a 10 percentage point increase in female-managed farmland associated with approximately a 0.76 percentage point increase in women’s share of household income; women’s income control and agricultural decision-making further amplify this effect. Third, Blinder-Oaxaca decompositions reveal that households where women own productive assets have significantly lower intrahousehold inequality and higher women’s income shares than those where no woman owns an asset, with differences driven primarily by disparities in women’s income control and decision-making authority rather than asset ownership alone. This shifts the policy debate from simply closing gender asset gaps to ensuring women’s assets are productive and consolidated with genuine economic agency.

Year published

2026

Authors

Kirui, Oliver K.; Olanrewaju, Opeyemi; Bamiwuye, Temilolu; Popoola, Olufemi; Nwagboso, Chibuzo

Citation

Kirui, Oliver K.; Olanrewaju, Opeyemi; Bamiwuye, Temilolu; Popoola, Olufemi; and Nwagboso, Chibuzo. 2026. Gender asset-ownership gap, women’s agency, and its implications for household inequality: Evidence from Nigeria. IFPRI Discussion Paper 2422. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute.

Country/Region

Nigeria

Keywords

Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Gender; Women; Assets; Inequality; Gender Inequality; Household Income; Income Distribution; Households

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open Access

Record type

Working Paper

Working Paper

Can local procurement for food aid foster market development? Evidence from indirect conditional contracting in Uganda

2026Abate, Gashaw T.; Mugabo, Serge; Raghunathan, Kalyani; Van Campenhout, Bjorn
Details

Can local procurement for food aid foster market development? Evidence from indirect conditional contracting in Uganda

Smallholder farmers in low-income countries often operate in fragmented markets characterized by volatile prices, weak bargaining power, and limited incentives to invest in productivity and quality. Large institutional buyers procuring locally can reshape these conditions by creating structured demand and embedding sourcing requirements in contracts with intermediaries, potentially transmitting incentives upstream to farmers. This study evaluates a maize procurement policy introduced in 2021 by a major institutional buyer in Uganda that required its large trader-aggregator suppliers to source at least 20 percent of deliveries directly from smallholder farmers through “indirect conditional contracting.” Using survey data collected in 2024 from nearly 1,300 smallholder farmers and nearly 300 aggregators across six districts, we estimate effects on prices, technology adoption, quality upgrading, welfare, and resilience. Intent-to-treat (ITT) estimates show that residing in areas where the major buyer operates is associated with 5–6 percent higher farmgate prices on average, with instrumental variable (IV) estimates suggesting upper bound premiums of up to 45 percent. Farmers in the conditional contract group earn positive net returns and increase adoption of improved inputs and postharvest practices. Intermediary aggregators receive about 7 (ITT) to 30 (IV) percent lower selling prices but increase adoption of postharvest quality practices. Mediation analysis indicates that gains for farmers arise primarily through increased competition between intermediaries. However, downstream welfare outcomes remain inconclusive, with suggestive evidence that non-participating farmers in treatment areas may face lower prices due to market segmentation. Overall, our findings show that indirect conditional contracts can reshape value chain incentives by attracting intermediaries, increasing competition, and stimulating upstream investment, even as they generate uneven distributional effects.

Year published

2026

Authors

Abate, Gashaw T.; Mugabo, Serge; Raghunathan, Kalyani; Van Campenhout, Bjorn

Citation

Abate, Gashaw T.; Mugabo, Serge; Raghunathan, Kalyani; and Van Campenhout, Bjorn. 2026. Can local procurement for food aid foster market development? Evidence from indirect conditional contracting in Uganda. IFPRI Discussion Paper 2423. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183400

Country/Region

Uganda

Keywords

Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Food Aid; Smallholders; Value Chains; Food Assistance; Maize; Markets

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open Access

Record type

Working Paper

Working Paper

The early bird gets the cash: Early notification and conditional cash transfers for secondary school

2026Leight, Jessica; Gilligan, Daniel O.; Mulford, Michael; Zafar, Sarim
Details

The early bird gets the cash: Early notification and conditional cash transfers for secondary school

What is the optimal timing for a cash transfer targeting increased secondary school enrollment? We present evidence from a randomized trial in rural Ethiopia showing a CCT increases enrollment and reduces child marriage. The largest effects are observed for youth offered the transfer a year prior to their (potential) matriculation; in this cohort, there is also a significant in-crease in the probability students pass the primary school leaving exam. By contrast, reduced treatment effects are observed for prior dropouts, and a generalized random forest analysis suggests this primarily reflects different observable characteristics (lower academic performance) among this sub-sample.

Year published

2026

Authors

Leight, Jessica; Gilligan, Daniel O.; Mulford, Michael; Zafar, Sarim

Citation

Leight, Jessica; Gilligan, Daniel O.; Mulford, Michael; and Zafar, Sarim. 2026. The early bird gets the cash: Early notification and conditional cash transfers for secondary school. IFPRI Discussion Paper 2421. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183379

Country/Region

Ethiopia

Keywords

Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Eastern Africa; Cash Transfers; Social Protection; Education; Youth; Secondary Education

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open Access

Record type

Working Paper

Working Paper

Gender, disability, and welfare in Myanmar

2026van Asselt, Joanna; Linn, Khin Mar; Oo, Theingi
Details

Gender, disability, and welfare in Myanmar

This working paper examines household welfare among women-adult-only households and households with a disabled/chronically ill member using Myanmar Household Welfare Surveys from April 2022 to July 2025. It analyzes their demographic characteristics, income composition, and levels of asset and income poverty. The paper’s main contribution is assessing key food security indicators for these vulnerable households, including Minimum Dietary Diversity, the Food Consumption Score, and the Household Hunger Score. Women-adult-only households, defined as households without any male members aged 15 or older, account for 9 percent of households nationally, or 13 percent when including households with elderly male dependents. Fourteen percent of households have a disabled or chronically ill member, and 10 percent have a disabled or chronically ill adult. Women-adult-only and disability-affected households have higher asset poverty rates than the national average. Women-adult-only households have similar income poverty levels compared with the national average, while 71 percent of households with a disabled/chronically ill member are income poor, compared to 63 percent nationally. Remittance receipt among women-adult-only households decreases income poverty for the group; more women-adult-only households receive remittances (33 percent) and rely on remittances (24 percent) as their main income source. Women-adult-only and disability-affected households perform worse across all dietary indicators. Women-adult-only households show, on average, 4 percentage points higher prevalence of low food consumption across survey rounds, while households with a disabled/chronically ill adult have a 3percentage-point higher prevalence. Moderate or severe hunger is also higher among women-adultonly households (6 percent) and households with a disabled/chronically ill adult (7 percent), compared with the national average of 4 percent. Households with a disabled/chronically ill adult are significantly more likely to rely on negative food-related coping strategies—including borrowing food, reducing meals, and skipping meals— highlighting their heightened vulnerability relative to other households. Regression results highlight that women-adult-only households face elevated hunger because of their structural economic disadvantages —fewer different income sources, weaker land ownership, and lower asset holdings — rather than the absence of adult men per se. Low food consumption, however, remains significantly lower for women-adult-only households even after fully controlling for these structural factors. This likely reflects the severe time constraints of households where all productive, care, and domestic tasks fall on adult women alone. For households with a disabled or chronically ill adult hunger persists across all specifications regardless of income, land, or asset controls — pointing to a direct burden that structural economic characteristics cannot explain. These contrasting findings suggest different interventions: structural economic interventions around land and livelihoods for women-adult-only households, and direct consumption support and social protection transfers for households affected by disability.

Year published

2026

Authors

van Asselt, Joanna; Linn, Khin Mar; Oo, Theingi

Citation

van Asselt, Joanna; Linn, Khin Mar; and Oo, Theingi. 2026. Gender, disability, and welfare in Myanmar. Myanmar SSP Working Paper 81. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183378

Country/Region

Myanmar

Keywords

Asia; South-eastern Asia; Gender; Disabilities; Welfare; Disability Inclusion; Social Inclusion; Financial Inclusion; Food Security; Family Structure; Persons with Disabilities; Women

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Working Paper

Working Paper

Soil tests, vouchers, and the limits of site-specific fertilizer recommendations: Experimental evidence from Malawi

2026Assefa, Thomas; Atkinson, Jonathan; Ayalew, Hailemariam; De Weerdt, Joachim; Siyame, Edwin W. P.; Spielman, David J.; Van Campenhout, Bjorn
Details

Soil tests, vouchers, and the limits of site-specific fertilizer recommendations: Experimental evidence from Malawi

Fertilizer subsidy programmes dominate agricultural spending in several African countries. Rising and volatile fertilizer prices have renewed concerns about the efficiency of such spending, prompting initiatives to tailor fertilizer recommendations to local soil conditions. We test this premise in Malawi, where the national subsidy programme distributes a standard package of urea and NPK fertilizer. In a cluster-randomized trial involving more than 2,000 households across 113 villages, we assign farmers to (i) a plot-level soil-test recommendation, (ii) the same recommendation combined with a voucher of subsidy-equivalent value, or (iii) a control group. The recommendation alone has no effect on fertilizer use, input choice, or maize yields. When paired with a voucher, fertilizer use and maize yields increase substantially, with yields rising by roughly one-third; at the maize prices prevailing in our study area, however, the value of this additional production falls short of the face value of the voucher, let alone the value of the voucher plus the cost of individualized soil test. For farmers themselves the package is nonetheless profitable, since the voucher largely displaces fertilizer they would have bought anyway and so lowers their own input spending, and because many households are net maize buyers, valuing the additional output at retail rather than farmgate prices narrows the shortfall. The yield gains do not reflect adoption of site-specific prescriptions: voucher recipients predominantly purchase urea and NPK in proportions closely matching the standard subsidy bundle, regardless of what their soil test recommends, and compliance with recommended alternatives such as potassium, lime, or calcium ammonium nitrate is negligible. Because the observed gains come almost entirely from nitrogen intensification while phosphorus, potassium, and lime gaps remain uncorrected, the measured yield response is a lower bound on what full-compliance fertilization could deliver. Relaxing financial constraints thus increases input use and productivity, but information alone does not redirect behaviour toward precision fertilization. Effective subsidy reform will require addressing broader supply- and demand-side constraints, including input availability, farmer familiarity with recommended products, and the practical implementation of site-specific recommendations, not only improving agronomic information.

Year published

2026

Authors

Assefa, Thomas; Atkinson, Jonathan; Ayalew, Hailemariam; De Weerdt, Joachim; Siyame, Edwin W. P.; Spielman, David J.; Van Campenhout, Bjorn

Citation

Assefa, Thomas; Atkinson, Jonathan; Ayalew, Hailemariam; De Weerdt, Joachim; Siyame, Edwin W. P.; et al. 2026. Soil tests, vouchers, and the limits of site-specific fertilizer recommendations: Experimental evidence from Malawi. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183376

Country/Region

Malawi

Keywords

Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Southern Africa; Capacity Building; Inputs; Subsidies; Fertilizers; Soil Analysis; Industrial Supply

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open Access

Record type

Working Paper

Working Paper

When quality (doesn’t) pay: Evidence from two experiments in Uganda

2026Van Campenhout, Bjorn; Ariong, Richard M.; Kariuki, Sara Wairimu; Chamberlin, Jordan
Details

When quality (doesn’t) pay: Evidence from two experiments in Uganda

Quality in agri-food supply chains is often unobservable at first sale and early aggregation limits traceability, weakening incentives for quality provision. We study whether making milk quality visible and traceable creates a market for quality in Uganda’s dairy sector. Increasing observability reduces adulteration and improves quality, but no premium emerges. In a follow-up experiment, we introduce trader quality premiums. This increases quality when binding, yet informed intermediaries capture the gains and farm-gate prices do not rise. Observability is necessary but insufficient: without downstream demand for quality and pass-through by intermediaries, incentives for quality upgrading remain weak.

Year published

2026

Authors

Van Campenhout, Bjorn; Ariong, Richard M.; Kariuki, Sara Wairimu; Chamberlin, Jordan

Citation

Van Campenhout, Bjorn; Ariong, Richard M.; Kariuki, Sarah Wairimu; and Chamberlin, Jordan. 2026. When quality (doesn’t) pay: Evidence from two experiments in Uganda. IFPRI Discussion Paper 2420. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183322

Country/Region

Uganda

Keywords

Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Dairying; Value Chains; Enforcement; Quality Management; Quality Assurance; Quality Control

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open Access

Project

Rethinking Food Markets

Record type

Working Paper

Working Paper

Climate change impacts on agriculture and adaptation options for Uzbekistan

2026Mirkasimov, Bakhrom; Parpiev, Ziyodullo; Wolfson, Inna
Details

Climate change impacts on agriculture and adaptation options for Uzbekistan

Climate change is likely to reshape agriculture in an irrigated, water-scarce transition economy like Uzbekistan. We use IFPRI’s International Model for Policy Analysis of Agricultural Commodities and Trade (IMPACT) model and evaluate the direct effects of climate change on Uzbekistan’s agriculture through 2050. We assume changes in GDP, population, and technological progress to be exogenous. We find that climate change and the corresponding temperature increase will have significant adverse effects on the long-term yields of cotton and wheat through changes in water availability, precipitation patterns, crop yields, and the use of land, water, and other natural resources, but harvested area responses may differ. All climate change scenarios are similar in predicting an increase in harvested area for temperate fruits and vegetables, but their yield gains remain conditional on market prices, policy reform, water use and institutional constraints. For policymakers, this makes climate change adaptation actions an opportunity for incentives and structural reforms as well as for technology to adapt to changing environmental conditions and to ensure food security.

Year published

2026

Authors

Mirkasimov, Bakhrom; Parpiev, Ziyodullo; Wolfson, Inna

Citation

Mirkasimov, Bakhrom; Parpiev, Ziyodullo; and Wolfson, Inna. 2026. Climate change impacts on agriculture and adaptation options for Uzbekistan. Central Asia Working Paper 8. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183323

Country/Region

Uzbekistan

Keywords

Central Asia; Asia; Climate Change; Climate Change Adaptation; Mathematical Models; Climate Change Impacts; Modelling

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open Access

Record type

Working Paper

Working Paper

Targeting of beneficiaries in chemical fertilizer subsidy programs: State of knowledge and evidence gaps

2026Trachtman, Carly; Hill, Ruth Vargas
Details

Targeting of beneficiaries in chemical fertilizer subsidy programs: State of knowledge and evidence gaps

Low- and middle-income countries are under increasing fiscal pressure to rationalize spending on fertilizer subsidy programs. Policy reforms shifting expenditure away from subsidies can have beneficial impacts given the well-documented distortionary market effects and negative environmental externalities of fertilizer subsidies. However, such reforms also result in losses and often lower fertilizer use for current beneficiaries. Understanding who is impacted by reform thus requires an assessment of who is currently benefiting, yet there is little systematic work understanding who these programs currently benefit both on paper and in practice. In this paper, we identify low- and middle- income countries with active fertilizer subsidy programs, and characterize the targeting regime of each program based on both explicit and implicit criteria determining eligibility. Then in a selection of case studies, we explore which individuals are receiving subsidy benefits in practice. We find that while many fertilizer subsidy programs are designed as universal, in many countries there are implicit targeting criteria embedded in the way subsidy programs are implemented and/or informal targeting induced by supply shortfalls. Further, we find evidence that regardless of targeting regime, the targeting of subsidy programs is generally pro-poor, driven by the fact that the poor are often concentrated in the agricultural sector.

Year published

2026

Authors

Trachtman, Carly; Hill, Ruth Vargas

Citation

Trachtman, Carly; and Hill, Ruth. 2026. Targeting of beneficiaries in chemical fertilizer subsidy programs: State of knowledge and evidence gaps. IFPRI Discussion Paper 2419. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183317

Keywords

Latin America and the Caribbean; Southern Asia; Eastern Asia; Sub-saharan Africa; Middle East; Northern Africa; Fertilizers; Subsidies; Support Measures; Targeting; Inorganic Fertilizers

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open Access

Record type

Working Paper

Report

IFPRI Malawi maize market report, May 2026

2026International Food Policy Research Institute; Benson, Anderson
Details

IFPRI Malawi maize market report, May 2026

Average retail prices of maize declined by most measures, with lowest prices registered in the Southern Region. Driven by increased domestic supply of newly harvested maize and cheap imports, maize retailed mostly below the government-mandated minimum farmgate price.

Year published

2026

Authors

International Food Policy Research Institute; Benson, Anderson

Citation

International Food Policy Research Institute. 2026. IFPRI Malawi monthly maize market report, May 2026. MaSSP Monthly Maize Market Report May 2026. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183310

Country/Region

Malawi

Keywords

Maize; Markets; Market Prices; Retail Prices; Food Prices

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open Access

Record type

Report

Report

From Vision to Action (V2A): Co-development of transition pathways towards enhanced multifunctionality in Mandla landscapes, Madhya Pradesh (India)

2026Barooah, Prapti; Singh, Saurabh; Falk, Thomas; Krishnan, Smitha; Kumar, Gopal
Details

From Vision to Action (V2A): Co-development of transition pathways towards enhanced multifunctionality in Mandla landscapes, Madhya Pradesh (India)

Mandla district is situated in the central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh (seen in figure 1), covers an area of 7226 km2 and is defined by its diverse topography and agricultural significance. The district is situated within the Satpura hill range and the Narmada catchment area. The district comprises 1223 villages with a population of 1.28 million, and is home to several scheduled tribes, particularly the Gond, Baiga, and Oraon communities https://hdl.handle.net/10568/173476. These indigenous groups rely heavily on the commons, forests for Non-Timber Forest Produce (NTFP), and open pastures. The district’s agricultural landscape is marked by the cultivation of key crops such as rice, wheat, pulses, and oilseeds. Mandla faces challenges like soil erosion, particularly in ridge areas, prompting the construction of continuous contour bunds and trenches to mitigate its impact. With a total cropped area of 376,780 hectares, the district predominantly cultivates paddy, wheat, and pulses. However, water scarcity looms large despite an annual average rainfall of more than 1300 mm, as the districts undulating topography limits prolonged water retention and its soil characteristics further constrain groundwater recharge. Limited irrigation infrastructure, concentrated mainly near dams and canals, compels local residents to depend on rivers, streams, and traditional wells for domestic water needs. The district, largely falling under the Narmada river catchment, exhibits a unique environmental duality, with over 60% covered by forests providing vital habitat for wildlife and serving as a crucial resource for the local population.

Year published

2026

Authors

Barooah, Prapti; Singh, Saurabh; Falk, Thomas; Krishnan, Smitha; Kumar, Gopal

Citation

Barooah, Prapti; Singh, Saurabh; Falk, Thomas; Krishnan, Smitha; and Kumar, Gopal. 2026. From Vision to Action (V2A): Co-development of transition pathways towards enhanced multifunctionality in Mandla landscapes, Madhya Pradesh (India). CGIAR Multifunctional Landscapes Program. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183315

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Environment; Stakeholders; Sustainability; Sustainable Agriculture

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Report

Data Paper

Myanmar Agricultural Performance Survey Round Eight: Note on Sample Characteristics and Weighting

2026van Asselt, Joanna; Aung, Zin Wai; Ei Win, Hnin
Details

Myanmar Agricultural Performance Survey Round Eight: Note on Sample Characteristics and Weighting

The Myanmar Agricultural Performance Survey (MAPS) is a nationally and sub-nationally representative phone survey that collects bi-annual data on agricultural indicators, including crop production and sales, input use, crop marketing, farm and livestock assets, and farm services. MAPS is a sub-sample of the Myanmar Household Welfare Survey (MHWS), a nationally and sub-nationally representative phone survey that collects bi-annual data on household and individual welfare indicators, including poverty, food security, dietary quality, subjective wellbeing, and coping strategies. This note covers the eighth round of MAPS. Rounds 1, 3, 5, and 8 were conducted between January and March of 2022 and 2026 and collect recall data on monsoon production. Rounds 2, 4, 6, and 7 were conducted between June and October of 2022 and 2025 and collect recall data on dry season production (post/pre-monsoon season). In this note, we provide details on the data collection and sample characteristics of the eighth-round of MAPS. First, we briefly describe the modules present in MAPS data. Second, we discuss the household sampling design of MHWS and each MAPS round and the differences between the datasets. Third, we discuss the calculation of weights for MAPS and provide descriptives of the weighted sample. Most comparisons throughout the paper are between MAPS round 5 and MAPS round 8 because both surveys were carried out for the monsoon season.

Year published

2026

Authors

van Asselt, Joanna; Aung, Zin Wai; Ei Win, Hnin

Citation

van Asselt, Joanna; Aung, Zin Wai; Ei Win, Hnin. 2026. Myanmar Agricultural Performance Survey Round Eight: Note on Sample Characteristics and Weighting. Data Paper. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183271

Country/Region

Myanmar

Keywords

Eastern Asia; Asia; Household Surveys; Data; Rural Areas; Farmers; Welfare; Agricultural Production

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Data Paper

Report

Current Agro-Based Transformation and Its Future in East and Southern Africa

2026Matchaya, Greenwell C.; Nkosi, Mahlatse; Yade, Sambane; Tadesse, Getaw; Gabriel, Sherwin; Thomas, Timothy S.; Robertson, Richard D.; Nkanyani, Shiluva; Mwamakamba, Sithembile; Zimba, Noah
Details

Current Agro-Based Transformation and Its Future in East and Southern Africa

Year published

2026

Authors

Matchaya, Greenwell C.; Nkosi, Mahlatse; Yade, Sambane; Tadesse, Getaw; Gabriel, Sherwin; Thomas, Timothy S.; Robertson, Richard D.; Nkanyani, Shiluva; Mwamakamba, Sithembile; Zimba, Noah

Citation

Matchaya, Greenwell Collins, Mahlatse Nkosi, Sambane Yade, et al. 2026. Current Agro-Based Transformation and Its Future in East and Southern Africa. Edited by Greenwell Collins Matchaya and Mahlatse Nkosi. International Water Management Institute (IWMI).

Keywords

Eastern Africa; Southern Africa; Agricultural Transformation; Diversification; Climate Change; Agricultural Production; Trade; Value Chains

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Report

Working Paper

Conflict and farmland values: Spatial panel data evidence from rice plots in Myanmar

2026Takeshima, Hiroyuki; Minten, Bart; Masias, Ian; Aung, Zin Wai; Ei Win, Hnin
Details

Conflict and farmland values: Spatial panel data evidence from rice plots in Myanmar

The significant economic implications of the value of farmland in developing countries is increasingly recognized, particularly in those countries where land scarcity is a growing problem. However, knowledge gaps remain about how farmland values can be affected by factors such as conflict and social instability. A knowledge gap also remains regarding how spatial transmission and feedback effects of land values among geographically proximate parcels may affect the relationship between conflict and farmland values. This impact has generally been overlooked in the literature, despite the well-established importance of clustering in agricultural economies. This paper addresses these gaps by utilizing unique, nationally representative panel data on farm households and spatial data on conflict intensity in Myanmar, with a focus on the period of significant conflict intensification following the 2021 political crisis, particularly in 2022 and 2023, when the country’s conflict level largely shifted to a high-intensity state. We apply spatial econometric models and their extensions to a panel data framework, as well as models that allow for endogenous spatial weights, which enable conflicts to not only affect farmland values but also shape how changes in farmland values transmit across locations. Our results indicate that more local conflict during the prior 12 months, measured by the number of months with at least one fatal violent event within the township of respondents, significantly reduced the farmland values of the largest rice plot of these respondents. Specifically, in the monsoon and non-monsoon harvesting seasons of 2022 and 2023, an additional one month of fatal violence was associated with approximately 3 percent and 5 percent decline in land values, respectively, implying a potentially sizable decline for townships that experience more persistent conflicts over several months. Moreover, the effects of violent events are magnified by spatial spillover effects on land values across village tracts. These adverse effects are robust and consistent across a range of methodologies and hold across diverse agroecological conditions.

Year published

2026

Authors

Takeshima, Hiroyuki; Minten, Bart; Masias, Ian; Aung, Zin Wai; Ei Win, Hnin

Citation

Takeshima, Hiroyuki; Minten, Bart; Masias, Ian; Aung, Zin Wai; and Win, Hnin Ei. 2026. Conflict and farmland values: Spatial panel data evidence from rice plots in Myanmar. 2026. IFPRI Discussion Paper 2418. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183196

Country/Region

Myanmar

Keywords

Asia; South-eastern Asia; Farmland; Conflicts; Spatial Analysis; Seasons; Monsoon Climate; Cereals; Rice

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open Access

Record type

Working Paper

Brief

Financial inclusion for youth in agrifood systems: Gendered barriers and solutions in northern Nigeria

2026Nwagboso, Chibuzo; Heckert, Jessica; Popoola, Olufemi
Details

Financial inclusion for youth in agrifood systems: Gendered barriers and solutions in northern Nigeria

Nigeria is home to one of the world’s largest and fastest-growing youth populations aged 15–35, yet financial exclusion continues to sideline young people, particularly young women, from fully participating in agrifood systems. When women control financial resources, they generate multiplier effects across the food system. In northern Nigeria, where more than half the population remains unbanked, the stakes are especially high. This research note draws on evidence from two complementary IFPRI studies to examine the financial inclusion experiences of young women and young men in northern Nigeria and identify practical, gender-sensitive solutions.

Year published

2026

Authors

Nwagboso, Chibuzo; Heckert, Jessica; Popoola, Olufemi

Citation

Nwagboso, Chibuzo; Heckert, Jessica; and Popoola, Olufemi. 2026. Financial inclusion for youth in agrifood systems: Gendered barriers and solutions in northern Nigeria. SFS4Youth Research Note 7. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183198

Country/Region

Nigeria

Keywords

Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Western Africa; Financial Inclusion; Youth; Agrifood Systems; Gender; Gender Norms

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Brief

Working Paper

Strengthening Myanmar’s agrifood system: Evidence and pathways for resilience

2026
Minten, Bart; Masias, Ian; Curtis, Matt; van Asselt, Joanna; Goeb, Joseph; Aung, Zin Wai; Htar, May Thet; Linn, Khin Mar; Oo, Theingi; Synt, Nang Lun
…more Ei Win, Hnin; Zu, A Myint
Details

Strengthening Myanmar’s agrifood system: Evidence and pathways for resilience

Myanmar’s agrifood system is central to the country’s economy and to the livelihoods of most of its population, having historically accounted for roughly almost half of GDP and two-thirds of employment. Since 2021, the political crisis, intensifying conflict and insecurity, climate shocks, and a major earthquake have placed the system under sustained and compounding stress. Drawing on evidence collected between 2021 and 2025, this paper provides a snapshot of where the system stands following this period of crisis and identifies opportunities for strengthening its resilience going forward. Private sector actors have been central to sustaining the agrifood system’s resilience since 2021. Input retailers have maintained the physical availability of fertilizer, seeds, and agro-chemicals, even in insecure areas, while mechanization service providers have continued to supply labor-saving services through flexible payment arrangements. Private agribusinesses have absorbed the contraction in formal credit, now accounting for roughly three-quarters of fertilizer credit sources, and have become the dominant providers of extension, both in-person and digital. These actors are operating under significant financial stress, but they have sustained farmers’ access to inputs, services, credit, and advice during a period when these would otherwise have likely collapsed. Input costs have risen significantly since 2022, with agricultural wages, mechanization costs, and fertilizer prices all rising substantially. Farmers have responded by partially shifting toward lower-cost production practices, including direct seeding, which carries an estimated yield penalty of approximately 15 percent compared to transplanted rice. Promoting appropriate agricultural technologies in conflict- and climate-affected areas requires targeted attention, particularly for smallholders and more remote households. Sustaining and expanding development assistance alongside humanitarian assistance will be important to support the transition toward more productive and sustainable farming systems, with scaling domestic production of organic soil amendments and expanding mechanization services. Agricultural extension use rebounded to 38 percent in the 2025 dry season, with the private sector now the dominant provider and digital channels expanding rapidly. Given persistently low and unequal access to extension services, more inclusive outreach combining targeted in-person support in underserved areas with strengthened digital delivery is needed, with particular attention to women, less educated, remote, and conflict-affected farmers. As agrochemical distributors dominate both in-person and digital advisory services, promoting high-quality agronomic content and ensuring clear separation between technical advice and product promotion is important. The rapid expansion of digital platforms creates opportunities but requires investments in digital literacy, content quality, and monitoring systems to assess impact. Partnerships between digital platforms and large firms could also support traceability and quality requirements for export markets.

Year published

2026

Authors

Minten, Bart; Masias, Ian; Curtis, Matt; van Asselt, Joanna; Goeb, Joseph; Aung, Zin Wai; Htar, May Thet; Linn, Khin Mar; Oo, Theingi; Synt, Nang Lun; Ei Win, Hnin; Zu, A Myint

Citation

Minten, Bart; Masias, Ian; Curtis, Matt; van Asselt, Joanna; Goeb, Joseph; et al. 2026. Strengthening Myanmar’s agrifood system: Evidence and pathways for resilience. Myanmar SSP Working Paper 80. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183199

Country/Region

Myanmar

Keywords

Asia; South-eastern Asia; Agrifood Systems; Resilience; Stress; Conflicts

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Working Paper

Brief

Ice valuation among artisanal fishers in Hadramawt: Findings from a field-based choice study

2026Darwish, Maram; Bahurmiz, Osan; Kurdi, Sikandra; Ecker, Olivier
Details

Ice valuation among artisanal fishers in Hadramawt: Findings from a field-based choice study

A field-based choice study of 129 artisanal fishers in two coastal locations in Hadramawt, Yemen, supports the following key findings: Ice use for chilling fish is very low, despite willingness to adopt its use. Only 2 percent of fishers reported always using ice, yet 53 percent of fishers indicated willingness to adopt ice use and 36 percent were willing to forgo a cash payment in exchange for a bag of ice. This gap is consistent with low adoption being driven primarily by economic constraints rather than lack of awareness. Fishers’ valuation of ice is well below its market prices. The average valuation is approximately 2,200 YER per bag of ice, less than half the prevailing market price of 5,0006,000 YER. Only about 3 percent of fishers would choose to purchase ice at current prices. Willingness to adopt ice is highly price-sensitive. The share of fishers willing to adopt ice rises sharply as prices decline. A reduction to around 2,500 YER per bag—approximately half the current market price—could increase adoption to an estimated 40–50 percent of fishers. Expected gains from ice use vary by species. Price premiums are modest for the most commonly targeted fish species, limiting the economic incentive for most fishers to use ice. Access to iceboxes is associated with higher willingness to adopt ice use. Fishers who own an icebox are about 20 percentage points more likely to indicate willingness to adopt ice use and are willing to forgo approximately 1,390 YER more to obtain ice. This highlights the importance of complementary assets, such as iceboxes, in shaping adoption decisions.

Year published

2026

Authors

Darwish, Maram; Bahurmiz, Osan; Kurdi, Sikandra; Ecker, Olivier

Citation

Darwish, Maram; Bahurmiz, Osan; Kurdi, Sikandra; and Ecker, Olivier. 2026. Ice valuation among artisanal fishers in Hadramawt: Findings from a field-based choice study. MENA Project Note 32. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183197

Country/Region

Yemen

Keywords

Middle East; Fisheries; Valuation; Cold Storage; Prices; Ice

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Brief

Report

Cost–benefit analysis of WFP’s integrated resilience programme in Chad (2018–2023)

2026Ulimwengu, John M.; Marivoet, Wim; Hema, Aboubacar; Benin, Samuel; Udahemuka, Francois Regis; Ibrahim, Hagar; Ngaradoumri, Ruth; Salissou, Mamane
Details

Cost–benefit analysis of WFP’s integrated resilience programme in Chad (2018–2023)

1. Integrated resilience programming (IRP) works. The IRP significantly improved household food security, with participating households recording an average 6.6 point increase in Food Consumption Scores (FCS) and reduced reliance on negative coping strategies, and increased resilience capacities, compared with nonparticipants, underscoring the value of multisectoral, layered interventions. 2. High economic returns are achievable in fragile contexts. Overall, the IRP delivered a benefitcost ratio (BCR) of 3.98, meaning every US$1 invested generated nearly US$4 in measurable benefits. 3. Nutrition interventions (treatment of acute malnutrition and blanket supplementary feeding) yield the strongest returns. Treatment of acute malnutrition and preventive nutrition support for women and children produced BCRs ranging from 6:1 to 9:1, validating global evidence on the cost-effectiveness of nutrition investments. 4. Knowledge-based and community-led interventions are transformative. Training and sensitization activities achieved the highest BCR (20:1) for resilience outcomes, highlighting the long-term payoffs of behavior change, empowerment, and knowledge transfer activities. 5. Cereal banks, particularly when combined with Food Assistance for Assets (FFA) through cash transfers, contributed to improved food security and resilience outcomes. The Cereal Bank + FFA Cash Transfers combination achieved balanced gains across key indicators (FCS +9.2, rCSI –3.4, RCS +10.4), highlighting its role in stabilizing seasonal food availability and access. However, despite these outcome improvements, the cost-effectiveness was modest, with BCRs ranging from 0.4 to 0.6—suggesting that while the intervention supports resilience, its financial return per dollar invested may be limited under current implementation models. 6. Bundled interventions outperform stand-alone ones. Layered approaches—particularly FFA Cash Transfers combined with School Feeding—produced the largest FCS gains (+5.7 points; BCR = 2.85), reinforcing WFP’s integrated “three-pronged approach” to resilience-building. 7. Short-term transfers remain essential but less cost-efficient. Lean season food and cash distributions provided vital relief but yielded lower long-term returns (BCR < 1), emphasizing the need to balance immediate humanitarian needs with investments in sustainability. 8. Strategic scaling of high-return interventions is crucial. Scaling nutrition, training, and cereal bank programs, while optimizing the design and sequencing of combined packages, could maximize impact per dollar spent and strengthen resilience dividends. 9. Resilience is a smart investment. The findings demonstrate that resilience programming is not only a humanitarian necessity but also a financially sound strategy—reducing long-term aid dependency, improving livelihoods, and fostering local self-reliance across fragile environments in Chad. 10. Short-term coping behavior responds more slowly than food security and resilience capacity outcomes, highlighting the need for sustained and sequenced support. While IRP interventions generated significant improvements in food consumption and resilience capacity, reductions in severe coping strategies were not observed in the short term. This underscores that behavioral change lags behind stabilization and capacity-building gains, and that resilience impacts should be assessed over longer horizons rather than through immediate reductions in negative coping alone.

Year published

2026

Authors

Ulimwengu, John M.; Marivoet, Wim; Hema, Aboubacar; Benin, Samuel; Udahemuka, Francois Regis; Ibrahim, Hagar; Ngaradoumri, Ruth; Salissou, Mamane

Citation

Ulimwengu, John M.; Marivoet, Wim; Hema, Aboubacar; Benin, Samuel; Udahemuka, Francois Regis; et al. 2026. Cost–benefit analysis of WFP’s integrated resilience programme in Chad (2018–2023). Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183180

Country/Region

Chad

Keywords

Africa; Middle Africa; Cost Benefit Analysis; Resilience; Livelihoods; Policies; Food Security

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Report

Journal Article

Food subsidies in India: Revisiting the estimates

2026Narayanan, Sudha; Saha, Shree
Details

Food subsidies in India: Revisiting the estimates

There is a view that the fis­cal bur­den of food sub­si­dies in India is un­sus­tain­able. Yet pop­u­lar de­bate and dis­cus­sion around the costs of these food sub­si­dies, rel­a­tive to their ben­e­fits, are mis­lead­ing for two rea­sons. First, they typ­i­cally treat re­ported bud­getary sub­sidy es­ti­mates—i.e. the fis­cal cost to the gov­ern­ment of the dis­tri­b­u­tion of food via ra­tion shops—as equiv­a­lent to “trans­fers” to ben­e­fi­cia­ries. Sec­ondly, they tend to focus ex­clu­sively on con­sumers. In doing so, they ne­glect the two-part na­ture of the food dis­tri­b­u­tion sys­tem, which in­cludes pay­ments to farm­ers at the time of pro­cure­ment. This paper ex­am­ines ways of mea­sur­ing the costs and value of the food sub­sidy. We pre­sent es­ti­mates that com­bine the im­plicit value of ben­e­fits to con­sumers aris­ing from the re­duced price of grain sold to con­sumers via ra­tion shops, with im­plicit ben­e­fits to farm­ers, in terms of the price dif­fer­ence be­tween what farm­ers are paid by the gov­ern­ment and what they would have ob­tained in the open mar­ket. This ap­proach shows that each rupee of the “food sub­sidy” re­ported in gov­ern­ment ac­counts rep­re­sents a trans­fer worth Rs 1.29 to con­sumers and farm­ers, on av­er­age, over the pe­riod 2001–02 to 2022–23. That is, each rupee trans­ferred to these groups is as­so­ci­ated with a cost of Rs 0.79 to the gov­ern­ment.

Year published

2026

Authors

Narayanan, Sudha; Saha, Shree

Citation

Narayanan, Sudha; and Saha, Shree. 2026. Food subsidies in India: Revisiting the estimates. Review of Agrarian Studies 16(1). 14 p. http://ras.org.in/food_subsidies_in_india

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Asia; Southern Asia; Subsidies; Food Aid; Social Protection; Fiscal Policies; Cost Benefit Analysis; Cash Transfers

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open Access

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Beyond the 24-hour recall: Aligning dietary diversity metrics with nutrient physiology

2026Zerfu, Taddese Alemu; Tareke, Amare Abera; Alemayehu, Dawit
Details

Beyond the 24-hour recall: Aligning dietary diversity metrics with nutrient physiology

Year published

2026

Authors

Zerfu, Taddese Alemu; Tareke, Amare Abera; Alemayehu, Dawit

Citation

Zerfu, Taddese Alemu; Tareke, Amare Abera; and Alemayehu, Dawit. 2026. Beyond the 24-hour recall: Aligning dietary diversity metrics with nutrient physiology. Journal of Nutrition 156(6): 101523. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tjnut.2026.101523

Keywords

Dietary Diversity; Trace Elements; Nutrient Intake; Dietary Assessment

Language

English

Access/Licence

Limited Access

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Changing rural labor markets and welfare in Malawi

2026De Weerdt, Joachim; Duquennois, Claire; Oliveres-Mallol, Adriana
Details

Changing rural labor markets and welfare in Malawi

Year published

2026

Authors

De Weerdt, Joachim; Duquennois, Claire; Oliveres-Mallol, Adriana

Citation

De Weerdt, Joachim; Duquennois, Claire; and Oliveres-Mallol, Adriana. 2026. Changing rural labor markets and welfare in Malawi. World Development Perspectives 42(June 2026): 100784. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wdp.2026.100784

Country/Region

Malawi

Keywords

Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Eastern Africa; Rural Areas; Welfare; Labour Market; Food Security; Rural Employment; Poverty

Language

English

Access/Licence

Limited Access

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Cash transfers relax climate-induced mobility constraints in Kenya

2026Mueller, Valerie; Gray, Clark; Handa, Sudhanshu
Details

Cash transfers relax climate-induced mobility constraints in Kenya

The use of migration as an adaptation strategy is now recognized by scholars and policymakers as a key response to climate change. Cash transfer programs, now being implemented worldwide, also have the potential to facilitate adaptation and promote resilience in low- and middle-income countries. We investigate the extent to which a cash transfer program in Kenya promoted the mobility of household members due to climate shocks, leveraging exogenous variation in local deviations from the historical climate and the administration of the program through a randomized controlled trial. Our findings indicate that beneficiary households were less likely to reduce migration amid cold spells, likely via shifts in education-related migration. We also find that heat spells ubiquitously encourage new members to join the household, while cold spells have the opposite effect, and that cash transfers do not appear to alter these relationships. Together the results suggest that cold spells can trap migrants in temperate, low-resource settings and that cash transfers can partially alleviate these constraints. Modeling migration and complementary strategies in the presence of climate tipping points will become necessary to predict when more permanent migration will be triggered and modifying social assistance will become necessary.

Year published

2026

Authors

Mueller, Valerie; Gray, Clark; Handa, Sudhanshu

Citation

Mueller, Valerie; Gray, Clark; and Handa, Sudhanshu. 2026. Cash transfers relax climate-induced mobility constraints in Kenya. Population and Environment 48(2): 9. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11111-025-00515-5

Country/Region

Kenya

Keywords

Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Eastern Africa; Cash Transfers; Social Protection; Climate Change; Migration; Climate Migration

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-NC-ND-4.0

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Modeling the association between repeated measures of hemoglobin during pregnancy and adverse birth outcomes

2026Geng, Jiaxi; Zhang, Ziwei; Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Luo, Hanqi; Young, Melissa F.; Ko, Yi-An
Details

Modeling the association between repeated measures of hemoglobin during pregnancy and adverse birth outcomes

Year published

2026

Authors

Geng, Jiaxi; Zhang, Ziwei; Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Luo, Hanqi; Young, Melissa F.; Ko, Yi-An

Citation

Geng, Jiaxi; Zhang, Ziwei; Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Luo, Hanqi; Young, Melissa F.; and Ko, Yi-An. 2026. Modeling the association between repeated measures of hemoglobin during pregnancy and adverse birth outcomes. Journal of Nutrition 156(6): 101511. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tjnut.2026.101511

Keywords

Maternal and Child Health; Haemoglobin; Longitudinal Studies; Models; Logit Analysis

Language

English

Access/Licence

Limited Access

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Youth in relation to agroecology: practices, promises, and perceptions in five countries

2026Rietveld, Anne; Guettou Djurfeldt, Nadia; Shijagurumayum, Meghajit; Gupta, Shweta; Tristán Febres, Maria Claudia; Chimonyo, Vimbayi Grace Petrova; Nehring, Ryan; Murugani, Vongai Gillian; Idoudi, Zied; Singh, Sonali
Details

Youth in relation to agroecology: practices, promises, and perceptions in five countries

In the context of rising youth populations in many low- and middle-income countries, coupled with high youth unemployment and aging farmer populations, this paper asks in what ways agroecology, as a sustainable alternative to the conventional agricultural practices and paradigm, attracts youth to farming and rural-based livelihoods. We draw on empirical data from semi-structured interviews and photovoice conducted with young women and men in five countries: Kenya, India, Peru, Tunisia, and Zimbabwe. In our discussion, we highlight which dimensions and aspects of agroecology resonate with youth and why.

Year published

2026

Authors

Rietveld, Anne; Guettou Djurfeldt, Nadia; Shijagurumayum, Meghajit; Gupta, Shweta; Tristán Febres, Maria Claudia; Chimonyo, Vimbayi Grace Petrova; Nehring, Ryan; Murugani, Vongai Gillian; Idoudi, Zied; Singh, Sonali

Citation

Rietveld, A., Guettou-Djurfeldt, N., Shijagurumayum, M., Gupta, S., Tristán, M., Chimonyo, V., Nehring, R., Murugani, V., Idoudi, Z., & Singh, S. (2025). Youth in relation to agroecology: practices, promises, and perceptions in five countries. Agroecology and Sustainable Food Systems 50(6): 1348-1381. https://doi.org/10.1080/21683565.2025.2573791

Country/Region

Kenya; India; Peru; Tunisia; Zimbabwe

Keywords

Eastern Africa; Southern Asia; Latin America; Northern Africa; Southern Africa; Rural Youth; Agroecology; Agriculture; Rural Development; Labour; Livelihoods

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-NC-ND-4.0

Project

Agroecology

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Uncovering bottlenecks and innovative solutions for scaling small-scale irrigation through a system approach and design thinking: Evidence from Nigeria

2026Iraoya, Augustine Okhale; Balana, Bedru
Details

Uncovering bottlenecks and innovative solutions for scaling small-scale irrigation through a system approach and design thinking: Evidence from Nigeria

CONTEXT Small-scale irrigation (SSI) is central to food system transformation in Sub-Saharan Africa, yet its scaling remains low in Nigeria despite the apparent demand and policy narratives. OBJECTIVE Examine intermediary ‘missing middle’ barriers to SSI scaling and co-create solutions for socially inclusive, environmentally sustainable, and institutionally coherent scaling of SSI. METHODS We integrated Agricultural Innovation Systems (AIS) theory with a Human-Centered Design (HCD) approach to examine SSI diffusion in a Responsible Scaling lens. For qualitative study, a series of HCD workshops were conducted in three geographies (Kano, Oyo, and FCT) with a total of 85 stakeholders drawn from government institutions, financial organizations, and private irrigation technology suppliers. To complement qualitative insights, we analyzed the 2023 National Agricultural Sample Survey microdata to generate a national snapshot of irrigation prevalence, methods, and water sources. This is a nationally representative data from sample of 152,485 households and over 76 million agricultural plots included in the Nigeria National Agricultural Sample Survey (NASS) 2022/2023. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS The study demonstrates that Nigeria’s SSI bottlenecks stem not simply from farmer reluctance or technological ignorance but primarily from systemic intermediation failures across policy coordination, finance, and market supply chains—producing a “missing-middle” ecosystem. These failures include fragmented government mandates, high lender risk perceptions, weak supplier networks, gendered exclusion, and pervasive information gaps. Applying responsible scaling (RS) we show how scaling of SSI is being hindered by institutional fragmentation, liquidity constraints, gender exclusion, and data/information deficiency. SIGNIFICANCE The study presents co-created innovation pathways, including a national SSI coordination platform, blended-finance mechanisms, supplier hub models, and gender-responsive financing, mapped to AIS functions to guide responsible, inclusive, and climate-resilient scaling. The integrated AIS–HCD–RS approach advances system learning and participatory co-design and offers a practical methodology for responsible scaling of agricultural innovation.

Year published

2026

Authors

Iraoya, Augustine Okhale; Balana, Bedru

Citation

Iraoya, Augustine Okhale; and Balana, Bedru. 2026. Uncovering bottlenecks and innovative solutions for scaling small-scale irrigation through a system approach and design thinking: Evidence from Nigeria. Agricultural Systems 236(June 2026): 104742. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agsy.2026.104742

Country/Region

Nigeria

Keywords

Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Western Africa; Capacity Building; Innovation Scaling; Small-scale Irrigation; Irrigation; Systems Analysis; Design; Agricultural Innovation Systems

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Food supply implications of healthy diet consumption in Senegal by 2050

2026Marivoet, Wim
Details

Food supply implications of healthy diet consumption in Senegal by 2050

Year published

2026

Authors

Marivoet, Wim

Citation

Marivoet, Wim. 2026. Food supply implications of healthy diet consumption in Senegal by 2050. Food Security 18(3): 819-838. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12571-026-01656-7

Country/Region

Senegal

Keywords

Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Western Africa; Food Supply; Healthy Diets; Food Consumption; Nutrition; Food Security

Language

English

Access/Licence

Limited Access

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Targeting social assistance in fragile settings: An experiment in community-based targeting

2026Abay, Kibrom A.; Berhane, Guush; Gilligan, Daniel O.; Tafere, Kibrom; Taffesse, Alemayehu Seyoum
Details

Targeting social assistance in fragile settings: An experiment in community-based targeting

Year published

2026

Authors

Abay, Kibrom A.; Berhane, Guush; Gilligan, Daniel O.; Tafere, Kibrom; Taffesse, Alemayehu Seyoum

Citation

Abay, Kibrom A.; Berhane, Guush; Gilligan, Daniel O.; Tafere, Kibrom; and Taffesse, Alemayehu Seyoum. 2026. Targeting social assistance in fragile settings: An experiment in community-based targeting. Journal of Development Economics 182(June 2026): 103819. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jdeveco.2026.103819

Country/Region

Ethiopia

Keywords

Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Eastern Africa; Targeting; Social Protection; Fragility; Randomized Controlled Trials; Local Communities

Language

English

Access/Licence

Limited Access

Project

National Policies and Strategies

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Political economy of planting for food and jobs input subsidy policy process in Ghana: An application of the Kaleidoscope Model

2026Wongnaa, Camillus Abawiera; Babu, Suresh Chandra; Awunyo-Vitor, Dadson
Details

Political economy of planting for food and jobs input subsidy policy process in Ghana: An application of the Kaleidoscope Model

The Planting for Food and Jobs (PFJ) input subsidy policy was Ghana’s flagship agricultural programme from 2017 to 2025, designed to increase agricultural productivity, enhance food security, create jobs, and improve rural livelihoods through targeted support to smallholder farmers. Despite its prominence, there has been little systematic analysis of the political economy of the policy process that shaped it. This study applies the Kaleidoscope Model of Policy Change (KM), a framework developed for analysing development policy processes, to examine how the PFJ input subsidy policy was placed on the agenda, designed, adopted, and implemented. A qualitative research design was employed, involving 50 key informant interviews with policymakers, programme implementers, farmer-based organisations, and development partners, alongside two focus group discussions with farmers. Data were coded and analysed thematically using the KM framework to identify drivers, enablers, and constraints across the different stages of the policy process. The findings indicate that focusing events and policy coalitions were crucial in placing PFJ on the agenda. Policy design was influenced by the urgency of addressing declining productivity, ideological factors, and cost–benefit assessments. Adoption was shaped by the authority of advocates, the limited resistance of veto players, and favourable political timing, reflecting the perception that presidential initiatives often become policy priorities. Implementation, although constrained by budget shortfalls and logistical challenges, benefited from institutional capacity, budgetary allocations, and sustained advocacy. Overall, PFJ reached its target number of beneficiaries, raised productivity, enhanced food security, created jobs, and reduced dependence on food imports, despite only 69% of planned resources being released. However, limited tailored support for youth and women remains a key gap. The study demonstrates the value of political economy analysis for agricultural policy and recommends structured engagement with the private sector in subsidized input delivery from agenda setting through to implementation.

Year published

2026

Authors

Wongnaa, Camillus Abawiera; Babu, Suresh Chandra; Awunyo-Vitor, Dadson

Citation

Wongnaa, Camillus Abawiera; Babu, Suresh Chandra; and Awunyo-Vitor, Dadson. 2026. Political economy of planting for food and jobs input subsidy policy process in Ghana: An application of the Kaleidoscope Model. Cleaner and Circular Bioeconomy 14(June 2026): 100217. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clcb.2026.100217

Country/Region

Ghana

Keywords

Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Western Africa; Capacity Building; Political Ecology; Subsidies; Models; Development Programmes; Policies; Farm Inputs

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

The impact of a continuum of care intervention from prevention to treatment on child wasting compared to usual community group activities: A cluster randomized controlled trial in Mali

2026Huybregts, Lieven; Diop, Loty; Fall, Talla; Barba, Francisco; Brander, Rebecca L.; Touré, Mariama; Ouedraogo, Moctar; Hien, Alain; Becquey, Elodie
Details

The impact of a continuum of care intervention from prevention to treatment on child wasting compared to usual community group activities: A cluster randomized controlled trial in Mali

Background Child wasting is associated with a high mortality risk and remains a persistent public health challenge. Objective This study aimed to evaluate the impact of an intervention strengthening the continuum of care of child wasting from prevention, screening, and referral to treatment in Mali. Methods A two-arm cluster-randomized controlled trial was conducted using two study designs to evaluate impact and pathways: i) a longitudinal study of children enrolled at 6 months (n=2,324) with monthly follow-up for 3–6 months to assess wasting prevalence (primary outcome); ii) a longitudinal study of all children 6–23 months admitted to outpatient therapeutic programs (OTP; n=7,104) assessing recovery and adherence. Additional OTP coverage surveys were conducted at the end of the study. In both study arms, nutrition activity support groups (NASG) screened children for wasting and provided caregiver behavior change communication (BCC). The intervention arm additionally received small-quantity lipid-based nutrient supplements (SQ-LNS), child-centered BCC, family-led screening, and follow-up on referred wasting cases to support OTP admission and adherence. Results The intervention did not impact wasting prevalence but reduced the incidence of wasting (relative risk (RR): 0.80, 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.64, 0.99) and severe acute malnutrition (SAM) (RR: 0.71, 95%CI: 0.57, 0.89). The intervention significantly increased wasting screening coverage by 37 pp (95%CI: 31, 44) and SAM treatment coverage by 15 pp (95%CI: 0.35, 30). No impacts of the intervention on OTP recovery or adherence were found. NASGs often replaced the monthly home visits with community gatherings to deliver the intervention. NASGs also often distributed SQ-LNS to children they identified with wasting instead of referring them to the OTP. Conclusions Strengthening the continuum of care of wasting through community groups reduced the incidence of wasting and SAM and improved screening coverage, which translated into a modest gain in SAM treatment coverage.

Year published

2026

Authors

Huybregts, Lieven; Diop, Loty; Fall, Talla; Barba, Francisco; Brander, Rebecca L.; Touré, Mariama; Ouedraogo, Moctar; Hien, Alain; Becquey, Elodie

Citation

Huybregts, Lieven; Diop, Loty; Fall, Talla; Barba, Francisco; Brander, Rebecca L.; et al. 2026. The impact of a continuum of care intervention from prevention to treatment on child wasting compared to usual community group activities: A cluster randomized controlled trial in Mali. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 123(6): 101294. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajcnut.2026.101294

Country/Region

Mali

Keywords

Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Western Africa; Capacity Building; Child Wasting; Disease Prevention; Disease Management; Randomized Controlled Trials; Food Supplements; Integrated Disease Management; Interventions; Screening

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Adding small quantity lipid-based nutrient supplements to an enhanced homestead food production program improves child hemoglobin, iron and vitamin A status in rural Burkina Faso: A cluster randomized controlled trial

2026Bliznashka, Lilia; Becquey, Elodie; Ruel, Marie T.; Pedehombga, Abdoulaye; Nordhagen, Stella; Olney, Deanna K.
Details

Adding small quantity lipid-based nutrient supplements to an enhanced homestead food production program improves child hemoglobin, iron and vitamin A status in rural Burkina Faso: A cluster randomized controlled trial

Background Enhanced homestead food production programs (EHFP) including nutrition behavior change communication and women’s empowerment activities have limited impacts on child nutrition. This may be due to short program duration or the absence of interventions to improve water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) and access to nutritious foods. Objective We assessed impacts on child anemia, micronutrient status and anthropometry of prior village exposure to an EHFP, and of adding WASH alone or WASH with daily small quantity-lipid based nutrient supplements (SQ-LNS). Design This 2y longitudinal cluster-randomized controlled trial (2014-2016) included 60 villages in Burkina Faso randomized to four groups (15 per group): (1) EHFP-2014, (2) EHFP-2014+WASH, (3) EHFP-2010+WASH, and (4) EHFP-2010+WASH+SQ-LNS. Groups 3 and 4 had previously received EHFP (2010-2012). We assessed impacts on child anemia and micronutrient status (n=1,704; 3-12.9 mo at baseline) and anthropometry (n=2,308; 0-12.9 mo at baseline) using difference-in-difference (DID) specifications. We controlled for covariates, adjusted for clustering, and assessed interactive effects by child age at baseline. The trial was registered with clinicaltrials.gov (NCT02236468). Results We found no impact of prior exposure to EHFP (groups 2 vs 3) on the outcomes examined. Adding WASH (groups 1 vs 2) reduced anemia (hemoglobin (Hb)<11 g/dL) (DID=9.43 pp, p<0.01) and led to a decline in weight-for-age Z-score (WAZ) (DID -0.11±0.04, p=0.01). Adding SQ-LNS (groups 3 vs 4) increased Hb (DID=0.26±0.13 g/dL, p<0.05), plasma ferritin (DID=7.61±2.69 μg/L, p<0.01), and retinol binding protein (DID=0.07±0.02 umol/L, p<0.01) concentrations. Effects were larger in children <6 mo at baseline, where providing SQ-LNS (>6 mo) positively impacted Hb, plasma ferritin, height-for-age Z-score, WAZ, and underweight. Conclusions Using EHFP to deliver WASH and SQ-LNS reduced child anemia and improved micronutrient status. Anthropometric improvements were found in children who joined the program before 6 mo of age and were exposed for the whole complementary feeding period.

Year published

2026

Authors

Bliznashka, Lilia; Becquey, Elodie; Ruel, Marie T.; Pedehombga, Abdoulaye; Nordhagen, Stella; Olney, Deanna K.

Citation

Bliznashka, Lilia; Becquey, Elodie; Ruel, Marie T.; Pedehombga, Abdoulaye; Nordhagen, Stella; and Olney, Deanna K. 2026. Adding small quantity lipid-based nutrient supplements to an enhanced homestead food production program improves child hemoglobin, iron and vitamin A status in rural Burkina Faso: A cluster randomized controlled trial. Journal of Nutrition 156(6): 101519. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tjnut.2026.101519

Country/Region

Burkina Faso

Keywords

Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Western Africa; Capacity Building; Lipids; Supplements; Food Production; Children; Child Nutrition; Haemoglobin; Iron; Retinol; Randomized Controlled Trials

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Role of credit access, improved varieties, and gender dynamics in commercialization of cassava seeds in Nigeria

2026
Abioye, D.O.; Yami, M.; Fillipi, V.; Omitoyin, S.; Ogunniyi, A.I.; Popoola, Olufemi; Fadare, D.A.; Olorode, B.; Adeyeye, J.; Sore, S.Z.
…more Atser, R.; Atser, G.; Sanni, L.; Popoola, B.; Shaibu, A.; Nwilene, F.; Akande, A.
Details

Role of credit access, improved varieties, and gender dynamics in commercialization of cassava seeds in Nigeria

Cassava seed entrepreneurship is critical for strengthening seed systems and advancing agricultural transformation in Nigeria. This study examines the determinants of smallholder participation in cassava seed entrepreneurship and simulates the effects of targeted policy interventions using survey data from 993 cassava farmers in Benue State. The analysis applies a binary logit framework with counterfactual scenario simulations and production-regime, specific estimations to account for heterogeneity between low- and high-productivity environments, alongside additional robustness checks. The results show that access to credit (dy/dx = 13.2%, p <0.01), adoption of improved cassava varieties (dy/dx = 14.3%, p < 0.01), use of an area-calculation mobile application (dy/dx = 7.1%, p < 0.05), and access to extension services (dy/dx = 5.2%, p < 0.05) significantly increase the likelihood of participation in cassava seed entrepreneurship. Gender-disaggregated analysis indicates that male farmers have a modest but meaningful advantage (β = 0.92, dy/dx = 5.8%), reflecting differential access to productive resources and institutional support. The production-regime analysis reveals important structural differences in participation drivers. In low-productivity environments, participation is primarily constrained by financial capital, with credit access emerging as the dominant determinant. In contrast, in high-productivity environments, participation is more strongly influenced by technological complementarities, particularly adoption of improved varieties, digital decision-support tools, and extension services that enhance productivity and market coordination. These findings highlight that entrepreneurial engagement is context-dependent rather than uniform across farming systems. Policy simulations further indicate that the joint provision of credit and improved varieties could increase participation probabilities by 36.1 percentage points for men, 32.0 percentage points for youth (≤35 years), and 25.8 percentage points for women, demonstrating substantial untapped entrepreneurial potential among women and youth if structural barriers are relaxed. As part of the robustness analysis, conflict exposure, used as a proxy for local political instability, shows a positive and statistically significant association with participation, suggesting that farmers in conflict-affected environments may adopt cassava seed entrepreneurship as a resilience or income-diversification strategy. Consistency across alternative specifications confirms that institutional access, technological adoption, and productive capacity remain more decisive for participation than most demographic characteristics. Overall, the study underscores the need for gender and youth-responsive policies that integrate financial inclusion, technological support, institutional strengthening, context-sensitive interventions as well as attention to productivity regimes and local security conditions, to promote inclusive and resilient cassava seed systems in Nigeria.

Year published

2026

Authors

Abioye, D.O.; Yami, M.; Fillipi, V.; Omitoyin, S.; Ogunniyi, A.I.; Popoola, Olufemi; Fadare, D.A.; Olorode, B.; Adeyeye, J.; Sore, S.Z.; Atser, R.; Atser, G.; Sanni, L.; Popoola, B.; Shaibu, A.; Nwilene, F.; Akande, A.

Citation

Abioye, D.O., Yami, M., Fillipi, V., Omitoyin, S., Ogunniyi, A.I., Olufemi, A.P., … & Akande, A. (2026). Role of credit access, improved varieties, and gender dynamics in commercialization of cassava seeds in Nigeria. World Development Perspectives, 42, 100789, 1-16.

Country/Region

Nigeria

Keywords

Africa; Western Africa; Financial Inclusion; Smallholders; Cassava; Seed; Farmers; Entrepreneurship; Productivity; Youth

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

C’est la vie! Mixed impacts of an edutainment television series in West Africa

2026Dione, Malick; Heckert, Jessica; Hidrobo, Melissa; le Port, Agnes; Peterman, Amber; Seye, Moustapha
Details

C’est la vie! Mixed impacts of an edutainment television series in West Africa

Edutainment is a promising tool for changing behavior at scale, yet little is known about how to maximize impacts. We undertake an experimental evaluation of a popular West African television series, C’est la vie!, delivered through film clubs targeted at adolescent girls and young women in rural Senegal. We examine impacts on violence against women and girls and sexual and reproductive health. Results show C’est la vie! improved knowledge on both domains three months after film clubs ended, as well as violence-related attitudes nine months later, however, had no impact on behaviors. We investigate design components intended to strengthen impacts, generally finding no additional impacts from post-screening discussions, engaging men, and podcasts. Our findings suggest that edutainment is an engaging way to reach viewers on sensitive themes, however more evidence is needed on how to effectively deliver edutainment content for sustained behavior change at scale.

Year published

2026

Authors

Dione, Malick; Heckert, Jessica; Hidrobo, Melissa; le Port, Agnes; Peterman, Amber; Seye, Moustapha

Citation

Dione, Malick; Heckert, Jessica; Hidrobo, Melissa; le Port, Agnes; Peterman, Amber; and Seye, Moustapha. 2026. C’est la vie! Mixed impacts of an edutainment television series in West Africa. Journal of Development Economics 182(June 2026): 103748. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jdeveco.2026.103748

Keywords

Africa; Western Africa; Education; Television; Mass Media; Impact Assessment; Social Impact Assessment; Randomized Controlled Trials; Violence; Health; Gender-based Violence; Reproductive Health; Adolescents

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Policies, Institutions, and Markets

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Cost and affordability of recommended diets in Rwanda using [near] real-time market data

2026Manners, Rhys; Lecy, Kate Schneider; Warner, James; Matsiko, Eric; Vasanthakaalam, Hilda; Benimana, Gilberthe Uwera; Spielman, David J.
Details

Cost and affordability of recommended diets in Rwanda using [near] real-time market data

Countries are increasingly benchmarking food assistance and labour laws on the cost of nationally recommended diets. Benchmarking is made against national annual estimates, which fail to account for sub-national and intra-annual variation in cost, blunting the impact of policies. Using monthly market price data collected by the Government of Rwanda (April 2019-March 2024), we estimate the cost of the country’s proposed food-based dietary guidelines, using a standardised diet costing methodology. We found rural areas experienced greater inflation in diet cost over the study period than urban areas (41% vs 28%), yet the recommended diet was 12.7% higher in urban locations. Diet costs were approximately 6% lower in districts with international border crossings to Tanzania, but 7% more in those with borders with the Democratic Republic of Congo. Fruits and vegetables (110% and 71%) and starchy staples (86% and 83%) contributed most to cost increases in rural and urban locations respectively. Seasonal diet cost fluctuations were also evident with a seasonal amplitude of 5.6% and 6.9% in rural and urban locations, synchronised to Rwanda’s agricultural calendar. 70% of employed Rwandans would find the recommended diet unaffordable, if spending 52% of wages on food. Diet costs varied 4.2-fold across all districts throughout the study period, meaning that uniform national policies to address costs and affordability would be systematically inadequate in high-cost settings and wasteful in low-cost ones. That such spatial–temporal variation exists in a small, relatively market integrated country like Rwanda suggests variation would be at least equally consequential in other low and lower-middle-income countries. High-frequency and sub-national monitoring of prices, diet costs, and affordability provides essential intelligence for policymakers to enable spatially and seasonally targeted interventions, improving both the adequacy and efficiency of food policy.

Year published

2026

Authors

Manners, Rhys; Lecy, Kate Schneider; Warner, James; Matsiko, Eric; Vasanthakaalam, Hilda; Benimana, Gilberthe Uwera; Spielman, David J.

Citation

Manners, Rhys; Lecy, Kate Schneider; Warner, James; Matsiko, Eric; Vasanthakaalam, Hilda; et al. 2026. Cost and affordability of recommended diets in Rwanda using [near] real-time market data. Food Policy 141(June 2026): 103085. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodpol.2026.103085

Country/Region

Rwanda

Keywords

Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Eastern Africa; Costs; Food Prices; Food Affordability; Recommended Dietary Allowances; Markets; Frequency Distribution

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Digital Innovation

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Using method of moments quantile regression to examine the influences of fishery operations and their ramifications for marine water contamination

2026Alsaleh, Mohd; Abdul-Rahim, A.S.; Bai, Keyu; Berhane, Guush
Details

Using method of moments quantile regression to examine the influences of fishery operations and their ramifications for marine water contamination

This study aims to investigate the dynamic impact of the fishing industry on marine water contamination in 27 European countries by taking into account the roles of fisheries output, the use of fossil fuels, economic development, and governance between 1990 and 2022. The results, which used a novel technique called the Method of Moments Quantile Regression (MMQR) in addition to factors that are fixed effect, demonstrated that, at most quantiles, there was a significant positive correlation between fishing production and marine water contamination. At the earliest and latest quantiles, fishery production significantly exacerbates marine water contamination, with a smaller impact at the lowest and a larger impact at the highest. Additionally, the data indicate that affluent EU14 countries produce more fish than developing EU13 countries, which has a significant and negative impact on the contamination of marine water. Marine water contamination from the usage of fossil fuels has increased significantly in the EU13 developing countries as compared to the EU14 wealthy countries. Policymakers can reduce marine water contamination in EU14 and EU13 countries by using eco-friendly fishing gear, more sustainable fishing methods, and energy technologies like wave and tidal power.

Year published

2026

Authors

Alsaleh, Mohd; Abdul-Rahim, A.S.; Bai, Keyu; Berhane, Guush

Citation

Alsaleh, Mohd; Abdul-Rahim, A.S.; Bai, Keyu; and Berhane, Guush. 2026. Using method of moments quantile regression to examine the influences of fishery operations and their ramifications for marine water contamination. Turkish Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 26(6): TRJFAS26217. https://doi.org/10.4194/TRJFAS26217

Keywords

Europe; Regression Analysis; Fisheries; Water Pollution; Sustainable Aquaculture

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open Access

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Digital literacy training to promote diffusion of digital agricultural tools to smallholder farmers: Evidence from a randomized intervention in Egypt

2026Abdelaziz, Fatma; Abay, Kibrom A.
Details

Digital literacy training to promote diffusion of digital agricultural tools to smallholder farmers: Evidence from a randomized intervention in Egypt

Despite growing enthusiasm about the potential of digital innovations to transform agrifood systems, adoption among smallholder farmers in Africa remains low and heterogeneous. While the proliferation of digital tools targeting smallholder farmers is encouraging, the vast majority remain at pilot stages, facing barriers such as limited awareness among farmer, digital illiteracy, usability challenges, and low trust among farmers. This paper evaluates alternative digital literacy interventions designed to address these demand-side barriers and enhance smallholder farmers’ knowledge, utilization, trust, and uptake of two Egyptian mobile apps offering marketing, advisory, and input delivery services. Following a Training of Trainers (TOT) model, we designed and implemented a randomized controlled trial to test three variants of digital literacy training: standard classroom-based digital literacy training (T1), digital training complemented (preceded) by a video-based play (T2), digital training complemented (preceded) by a live community play (T3), and a control group (C). We find that the different variants of digital training led to statistically significant increases in uptake and utilization of digital tools. Specifically, the standard digital training alone increased uptake by 20 percentage points and utilization by 18 percentage points. The interventions also improved farmers’ trust in digital tools by 8–13 percentage points. Surprisingly, for some outcomes, the digital literacy training alone outperformed the combined approaches that incorporated edutainment nudges. We explore possible explanations, including group size effects and social influence dynamics during the plays. We also document heterogeneity in the impact of these interventions across farmers’ gender and age. Our findings offer insights into designing cost-effective, scalable interventions that build digital capabilities and trust among smallholder farmers, while cautioning against assuming edutainment always strengthens adoption outcomes.

Year published

2026

Authors

Abdelaziz, Fatma; Abay, Kibrom A.

Citation

Abdelaziz, Fatma; and Abay, Kibrom A. 2026. Digital literacy training to promote diffusion of digital agricultural tools to smallholder farmers: Evidence from a randomized intervention in Egypt. Food Policy 141(June 2026): 103108. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodpol.2026.103108

Country/Region

Egypt

Keywords

Africa; Middle East; Capacity Building; Digital Literacy; Training; Digital Agriculture; Digital Technology; Smallholders

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Assessing the development impacts of bio-innovations: The case of genetically modified maize and cassava in Tanzania

2026Benfica, Rui; Zambrano, Patricia; Chambers, Judith A.; Falck-Zepeda, José B.
Details

Assessing the development impacts of bio-innovations: The case of genetically modified maize and cassava in Tanzania

Year published

2026

Authors

Benfica, Rui; Zambrano, Patricia; Chambers, Judith A.; Falck-Zepeda, José B.

Citation

Benfica, Rui; Zambrano, Patricia; Chambers, Judith A.; and Falck-Zepeda, José B. 2026. Assessing the development impacts of bio-innovations: The case of genetically modified maize and cassava in Tanzania. Economic Systems Research 38(2): 251-274. https://doi.org/10.1080/09535314.2025.2582642

Keywords

Tanzania; Eastern Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Africa; Biofortification; Innovation; Maize; Cassava; Fortified Foods; Genetically Modified Foods

Language

English

Access/Licence

Limited Access

Project

Policies, Institutions, and Markets

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Agrifood systems of India: A state-level analysis using a social accounting matrix

2026Pal, Barun Deb; Thurlow, James; Pauw, Karl; Diao, Xinshen; Ajmani, Manmeet Singh
Details

Agrifood systems of India: A state-level analysis using a social accounting matrix

Year published

2026

Authors

Pal, Barun Deb; Thurlow, James; Pauw, Karl; Diao, Xinshen; Ajmani, Manmeet Singh

Citation

Pal, Barun Deb; Thurlow, James; Pauw, Karl; Diao, Xinshen; and Ajmani, Manmeet Singh. 2026. Agrifood systems of India: A state-level analysis using a social accounting matrix. Outlook on Agriculture 55(2): 223-235. https://doi.org/10.1177/00307270261429519

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Income; Surveys; Food Systems; Off-farm Employment

Language

English

Access/Licence

Limited Access

Project

Foresight

Record type

Journal Article

Internal Document

IFPRI: Africa strategy: Partnering for evidence-based transformation

2026International Food Policy Research Institute
Details

IFPRI: Africa strategy: Partnering for evidence-based transformation

The International Food Policy Research Institute’s Africa Strategy focuses on achieving impact through partnerships, research and evidence-building, capacity development, and innovative communication and knowledge sharing in support of Africa’s agenda for agrifood systems transformation. Building on decades of high-impact engagement at continental, regional, national, and subnational levels, IFPRI aims to sharpen and intensify its work in a rapidly transforming Africa. Through deepened partnerships with African institutions, IFPRI plans to help generate high-quality evidence to drive impact across Africa’s fast-changing agrifood systems and economies to support sustainable, inclusive economic growth and open new opportunities for a better future.

Year published

2026

Authors

International Food Policy Research Institute

Citation

International Food Policy Research Institute. 2026. IFPRI: Africa strategy: Partnering for evidence-based transformation. IFPRI Brochure. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/158218

Keywords

Africa; Food Policies

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open Access

Record type

Internal Document

Journal Article

What’s on the menu? A review of school meal quality across 29 countries

2026Kanté, Aisha; Gelli, Aulo; Bell, Winnie; Wineman, Ayala
Details

What’s on the menu? A review of school meal quality across 29 countries

Objective: The double burden of malnutrition (DBM) – the coexistence of undernutrition and overweight/obesity – poses a critical global health challenge, particularly for children and adolescents. School meal programs offer an opportunity to address the DBM by providing nutritious meals that support growth, development, and lifelong health. However, limited school meal quality data hinders effective program design. This study evaluates global school meal quality through nutrient composition analyses and the Global Diet Quality Score (GDQS)-Meal and -Menu metrics. Design: Data were collected from the Global Child Nutrition Foundation’s 2024 Global Survey of School Meal Programs, grey literature, and in-country stakeholders. Nutritional content was compared to age-specific Nutrient Reference Values, including Harmonized Average Requirements. The nutritional quality of meals and menus was assessed using GDQS metrics based on 25 food groups. Setting: Twenty-nine countries across diverse geographic and socioeconomic contexts. Participants: Not applicable. Results: Most menus met or exceeded 30% of recommended daily nutrient values. Lunches had the highest nutrient contributions, followed by snacks and breakfasts. GDQS-Meal and -Menu scores revealed variability across age groups, meal types, and countries. Overall, 57% of menus achieved high nutritional quality, 37% medium, and 6% low. Few menus lost points for unhealthy components. Diverse, balanced menus with healthy food groups scored higher, though fortification also proved nutritionally valuable. Conclusions: While most menus contribute significantly to daily nutrient needs, variability across countries, age groups, and meal types highlights opportunities for context-specific improvements through diversification and fortification. Learning from high-performing peer programs can help identify feasible improvements.

Year published

2026

Authors

Kanté, Aisha; Gelli, Aulo; Bell, Winnie; Wineman, Ayala

Citation

Kanté, Aisha; Gelli, Aulo; Bell, Winnie; and Wineman, Ayala. 2026. What’s on the menu? A review of school meal quality across 29 countries. Public Health Nutrition 20(1): e108. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1368980026102456

Keywords

Capacity Building; School Feeding; Nutritive Value; Nutrition; Children; Diet Quality

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Market remoteness and the production–diet association in smallholder food systems: Evidence from rural Nepal

2026Singh, Tushar; Kishore, Avinash; Alvi, Muzna
Details

Market remoteness and the production–diet association in smallholder food systems: Evidence from rural Nepal

Year published

2026

Authors

Singh, Tushar; Kishore, Avinash; Alvi, Muzna

Citation

Singh, Tushar; Kishore, Avinash; and Alvi, Muzna. 2026. Market remoteness and the production–diet association in smallholder food systems: Evidence from rural Nepal. Global Food Security 49(June 2026): 100923. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gfs.2026.100923

Country/Region

Nepal

Keywords

Asia; Southern Asia; Markets; Smallholders; Food Systems; Rural Areas; Dietary Diversity; Diversification; Nutrition-sensitive Agriculture

Language

English

Access/Licence

Limited Access

Project

NEXUS Gains

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Climate shocks, conflict, and agricultural change

2026Takeshima, Hiroyuki; Minten, Bart; van Asselt, Joanna; Aung, Zin Wai; Goeb, Joseph
Details

Climate shocks, conflict, and agricultural change

Year published

2026

Authors

Takeshima, Hiroyuki; Minten, Bart; van Asselt, Joanna; Aung, Zin Wai; Goeb, Joseph

Citation

Takeshima, Hiroyuki; Minten, Bart; van Asselt, Joanna; Aung, Zin Wai; and Goeb, Joseph. 2026. Climate shocks, conflict, and agricultural change. Global Food Security 49(June 2026): 100920. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gfs.2026.100920

Country/Region

Myanmar

Keywords

Asia; South-eastern Asia; Climate Change; Shock; Conflicts; Agricultural Transformation; Vulnerability; Climate-smart Agriculture

Language

English

Access/Licence

Limited Access

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Leveraging salt fortification platforms to address multiple-micronutrient deficiencies in Africa: A policy opportunity

2026Zerfu, Taddese Alemu; Takere, Amare Abera; Chekol, Dawit Alemayehu
Details

Leveraging salt fortification platforms to address multiple-micronutrient deficiencies in Africa: A policy opportunity

Year published

2026

Authors

Zerfu, Taddese Alemu; Takere, Amare Abera; Chekol, Dawit Alemayehu

Citation

Zerfu, Taddese Alemu; Takere, Amare Abera; and Chekol, Dawit Alemayehu. 2026. Leveraging salt fortification platforms to address multiple-micronutrient deficiencies in Africa: A policy opportunity. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 1560(1): e70334. https://doi.org/10.1111/nyas.70334

Keywords

Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Nutrition; Food Fortification; Iodine; Micronutrient Deficiencies; Salts

Language

English

Access/Licence

Limited Access

Record type

Journal Article

Opinion Piece

Iran War: From fertilizer to food crisis?

2026Vos, Rob
Details

Iran War: From fertilizer to food crisis?

The critical supply chain for fertilizer in combination with rising energy and transport costs will be felt most by poorer countries and households. Whether this develops into a veritable food crisis will depend on how the war procedes.

Year published

2026

Authors

Vos, Rob

Citation

Vos, Rob. 2026. Iran War: From fertilizer to food crisis? Welternährung. Published online June 2026. https://www.welthungerhilfe.org/global-food-journal/rubrics/crises-humanitarian-aid/iran-war-from-fertilizer-to-food-crisis

Keywords

Conflicts; Fertilizers; Food Affordability; Supply Chains; Costs

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open Access

Record type

Opinion Piece

Journal Article

Understanding of functional trait contributions to seed yield and drought adaptations in common bean

2026Sivasakthi, Kaliamoorthy; Voddu, Tejaswini; Surender, Reddymalla; Viateur, Ndayizeye; Govindaraj, Mahalingam
Details

Understanding of functional trait contributions to seed yield and drought adaptations in common bean

Year published

2026

Authors

Sivasakthi, Kaliamoorthy; Voddu, Tejaswini; Surender, Reddymalla; Viateur, Ndayizeye; Govindaraj, Mahalingam

Citation

Sivasakthi, Kaliamoorthy; Voddu, Tejaswini; Surender, R.; Viateur, Ndayizeye; and Govindaraj, Mahalingam. 2026. Understanding of functional trait contributions to seed yield and drought adaptations in common bean. Plant Physiology Reports 31(2): 392-401. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40502-026-00950-y

Keywords

Yields; Yield Components; Drought Resistance; Common Beans

Language

English

Access/Licence

Limited Access

Record type

Journal Article

Report

Myanmar monthly food price report – April 2026

2026Htar, May Thet; Minten, Bart; Masias, Ian
Details

Myanmar monthly food price report – April 2026

Rice prices increased sharply month-on-month in April 2026 (up 8.9 percent) and remained broadly stable year-on-year, suggesting a continued recovery following earlier declines driven by lower international rice prices and strong domestic supply. However, regional price disparities remain significant across major producing and deficit areas. Most export crop prices showed relatively limited month-on-month movement, particularly for pulses, reflecting stable regional demand from China and India during the Thingyan holiday period. In contrast, maize prices increased sharply following expectations of the reopening of the Thailand–Myanmar border trade route. Vegetable prices showed mixed trends in April 2026. Onion, chili, and garlic prices increased modestly month-on-month, partly linked to improving border trade expectations and lower domestic garlic production, while potato prices declined sharply amid increased inflows of imported Chinese potatoes and weak domestic demand. Most animal-sourced food prices remained substantially higher year-on-year, led by mutton, pork, and fish, reflecting continued supply constraints, disease outbreaks, and export demand. Month-on-month changes remained relatively modest, although extreme summer temperatures affected poultry, livestock, and aquaculture production conditions during April. Most animal-sourced food prices remained substantially higher year-on-year, led by mutton, pork, and fish, reflecting continued supply constraints, disease outbreaks, and export demand. Month-on-month changes remained relatively modest, although extreme summer temperatures affected poultry, livestock, and aquaculture production conditions during April.

Year published

2026

Authors

Htar, May Thet; Minten, Bart; Masias, Ian

Citation

Htar, May Thet; Minten, Bart; and Masias, Ian. 2026. Myanmar monthly food price report – April 2026. Myanmar Monthly Food Price Report April 2026. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183116

Country/Region

Myanmar

Keywords

Asia; South-eastern Asia; Food Prices; Food Security; Crops; Animal Source Foods

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Report

Report

Essential commodities prices, availability, and market actors’ perceptions: April 2026

2026Rakhy, Tarig; Mohamed, Shima; Nigus, Halefom Yigzaw; Suliman, Gotada; Siddig, Khalid
Details

Essential commodities prices, availability, and market actors’ perceptions: April 2026

Year published

2026

Authors

Rakhy, Tarig; Mohamed, Shima; Nigus, Halefom Yigzaw; Suliman, Gotada; Siddig, Khalid

Citation

Rakhy, Tarig; Mohamed, Shima; Abushama, Hala; Nigus, Halefom Yigzaw; Suliman, Gotada; and Siddig, Khalid. 2026. Essential commodities prices, availability, and market actors’ perceptions: April 2026. Sudan Market Prices and Availability Report 15. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183117

Country/Region

Sudan

Keywords

Africa; Northern Africa; Commodities; Prices; Markets

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open Access

Record type

Report

Working Paper

Farm commercialization and farm services: Myanmar Agricultural Performance Survey (monsoon 2025)

2026Ei Win, Hnin; Minten, Bart
Details

Farm commercialization and farm services: Myanmar Agricultural Performance Survey (monsoon 2025)

This Working Paper presents findings from an assessment of farm commercialization and farm services during the 2025 monsoon. The analysis is based on data from the Myanmar Agriculture Performance Survey (MAPS), a phone-based survey conducted with 4,553 crop farmers across all states/regions of the country during Q1 of 2026. Our findings reveal the following: Insecurity continues to affect farming, as reflected in the substantial share of farmers who feel unsafe and report being unable to move freely to buy inputs or sell outputs without serious concerns for their safety. Twenty-three percent of farmers reported feeling “very insecure” or “insecure” during the survey period. Additionally, 7 percent reported that some agricultural fields in their area could not be cultivated due to conflict. Furthermore, 9 percent of farmers expressed fear of storing produce at home because of the risk of confiscation or destruction. Despite challenges related to fuel and mobility, agricultural inputs were largely available during the monsoon, reflecting the resilience of the private sector in supplying these goods even under difficult conditions. However, labor scarcity is becoming more pronounced, seemingly linked to migration and insecurity. Input prices continued to rise, with fertilizer prices increasing by 24 percent compared to two years earlier. Other input costs, including mechanization and wages, increased even more. On the output side, prices for paddy—grown by 64 percent of all farmers during the monsoon—fell over the last two years, leading to reduced investments and lower agricultural productivity. Other crops linked to export markets also experienced price declines or only moderate increases over the same period, including pigeon pea (-18 percent) and maize (+28 percent), compared to much larger increases for more domestically consumed crops such as tomato (+178 percent), betel nut (+75 percent), and betel leaves (+43 percent). Most farmers reported either stabilization or worsening of agricultural sales income compared to the previous monsoon. Thirty-nine percent of farmers reported lower incomes in the 2025 monsoon season than in the previous monsoon, with 22 percent experiencing declines of more than 20 percent. Only 30 percent reported an increase in sales income. The use of agricultural credit during the 2025 monsoon continued its decline, falling from 47 percent of farmers in 2021 to 38 percent in 2025—a decrease of 9 percentage points. This decline occurred across all agro-ecological zones except the Delta. Access to agricultural extension services remained at levels similar to previous years, with 35 percent of farmers accessing some type of extension service. Security challenges continue to hinder crop commercialization in Myanmar. Conditions vary across states and regions, with the Delta—the country’s rice bowl—experiencing relatively better security conditions. Farmers in conflict-affected areas face greater obstacles to commercialization, including reduced availability of agricultural inputs.

Year published

2026

Authors

Ei Win, Hnin; Minten, Bart

Citation

Ei Win, Hnin; and Minten, Bart. 2026. Farm commercialization and farm services: Myanmar Agricultural Performance Survey (monsoon 2025). Myanmar SSP Working Paper 79. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183097

Country/Region

Myanmar

Keywords

Asia; South-eastern Asia; Commercialization; Agricultural Sector; Surveys; Wet Season; Prices; Marketing

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Working Paper

Working Paper

Rice productivity and profitability in Myanmar: Assessment of the 2025 monsoon season

2026Aung, Zin Wai; Minten, Bart
Details

Rice productivity and profitability in Myanmar: Assessment of the 2025 monsoon season

We analyzed rice productivity and profitability data for the 2025 monsoon season from the Myanmar Agriculture Performance Survey (MAPS), conducted at the beginning of 2026. The survey covered plots managed by 2,734 rice producers across all states and regions of the country. As no MAPS survey was conducted during the 2024 monsoon season, we compare performance changes with those observed in 2023. Our findings reveal the following: 1. National rice productivity, measured on farmers’ largest plots, declined by an average of 8 percent during the 2025 monsoon compared to 2023. This lower productivity was primarily driven by reduced incentives for production as shown by reduced labor inputs, with more farmers adopting broadcasting methods, as well as an increased incidence of natural shocks, notably floods and heavy rains. 2. The Delta agro-ecological zone, the country’s principal rice-producing area, experienced a 7 percent decline in rice productivity in 2025 compared to 2023, while the Coastal agro-ecological zone recorded the largest decline among all zones, with yields falling by 22 percent. This sharp reduction was partly driven by poor performance in Rakhine State, which was largely cut off from commercial input and output markets in 2025, considerably reducing the use of modern inputs in rice production. 3. Thirty-six percent of paddy farmers reported being affected by climatic or other production shocks during the 2025 monsoon season. Floods, reported by 10 percent of farmers, and heavy rains, reported by 15 percent, had significant adverse effects on yields. Among affected farmers, paddy yields declined by 34 percent and 15 percent, respectively. 4. Significant changes in rice cultivation input costs were observed between the 2023 and 2025 monsoon seasons. Prices of urea, the most important chemical fertilizer used by rice farmers, increased by 23 percent, while mechanization costs, measured through plowing costs, increased by 55 percent. Wages recorded the sharpest increases, likely reflecting escalating rural labor scarcity. Wages increased by 88 percent for men and 83 percent for women. Overall input expenditures per acre of rice cultivated increased by 63 percent. 5. Farmgate paddy prices declined by 6 percent, reflecting changes in international rice prices between the 2023 and 2025 monsoon seasons. 6. Given rising input costs and declining paddy prices, paddy farming profits declined substantially and reached their lowest level in the last six years. Nominal profits per acre fell by 40 percent between 2023 and 2025. 7. Commercially obtained inputs are significantly associated with higher rice yields. A doubling of commercial input expenditures is associated with a 34 percent increase in yields, while a doubling of chemical fertilizer use is associated with a 9 percent increase in yields, ceteris paribus. The use of organic fertilizer is also positively and significantly associated with higher yields, with users obtaining yields that are 4 percent higher on average. The outlook for paddy production in 2026 appears highly uncertain due to several factors: 1. The Iran war: High fuel prices, as well as constrained fuel availability resulting from the Iran war, are likely to complicate transportation, irrigation, and agricultural mechanization, thereby affecting preparation for the next monsoon season. Fertilizer prices have also risen sharply and are expected to remain elevated for the foreseeable future (Arita et al. 2026), with likely negative consequences for use rates and profitability for paddy production during the 2026 monsoon (USDA 2026). 2. Weather conditions: Adverse weather conditions, as observed during the 2025 monsoon, can significantly affect yields. Most climate models predict El Niño conditions during the second half of 2026. These conditions are typically associated with drier-than-average rainfall, which could lead to lower rice yields. 3. Evolution of insecurity: Insecurity is associated with reduced access to agricultural inputs and higher input costs where inputs remain available, thereby reducing profitability for farmers in these areas. 4. Labor scarcity: Labor availability is expected to remain constrained during the next monsoon season due to significant out-migration (linked to the Military Service Law). These findings point to three key implications for Myanmar’s rice sector: 1. Ensuring access to agricultural inputs: Myanmar’s rice sector is highly commercialized, and access to commercial inputs is crucial for its performance. Risks associated with the Iran war, particularly regarding fuel and chemical fertilizer availability and prices, pose serious challenges for the functioning of the sector. While some commercial inputs could potentially be partially substituted with local production factors, such as agricultural labor replacing mechanized operations or organic fertilizers substituting for chemical fertilizers, a lack of access to these commercial inputs would nevertheless have major implications for rice production and national food security. Where feasible, encouraging such substitution may help mitigate some of these impacts. 2. Expanding access to climate-resilient seeds and other climate-smart agricultural technologies: As farmers are increasingly relying on self-preserved paddy seeds, there is an urgent need for them to have access to and to promote improved, high-yielding, and stress-tolerant rice varieties. Our findings show that farmers affected by floods and droughts experience substantially lower yields than unaffected farmers. Given the expected increase in weather-related shocks associated with climate change, as well as anticipated El Niño conditions, wider adoption of adapted seed varieties as well as other climate-smart agricultural technologies will be critical. 3. Ensuring profitability in rice farming: Rice farming profitability was severely stressed in 2025. This raises concerns about production incentives for the upcoming monsoon season, particularly as input costs continue to rise while rice prices – at least internationally – remain stagnant. Adjustment of the dual exchange rate system that currently depresses output prices would be beneficial. Ensuring adequate rice availability in the country may also require expanded access to credit schemes, or targeted input voucher programs for poorer smallholders, to sustain production and national food security.

Year published

2026

Authors

Aung, Zin Wai; Minten, Bart

Citation

Aung, Zin Wai; and Minten, Bart. 2026. Rice productivity and profitability in Myanmar: Assessment of the 2025 monsoon season. Myanmar SSP Working Paper 78. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183098

Country/Region

Myanmar

Keywords

Asia; South-eastern Asia; Rice; Agricultural Productivity; Profitability; Monsoon Climate; Wet Season; Farm Inputs

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Working Paper

Data Paper

Myanmar Agricultural Performance Survey Round Six: Note on Sample Characteristics and Weighting

2026van Asselt, Joanna; Aung, Zin Wai; Ei Win, Hnin
Details

Myanmar Agricultural Performance Survey Round Six: Note on Sample Characteristics and Weighting

The Myanmar Agricultural Performance Survey (MAPS) is a nationally and sub-nationally representative phone survey with the objective of collecting bi-annual data on agricultural indicators including crop production and sales, input use, crop marketing, farm and livestock assets, and farm services. The Myanmar Household Welfare Survey (MHWS) is a nationally and sub‐nationally representative phone survey with the objective of collecting bi-annual data on household and individual welfare indicators, including poverty, food security, dietary quality, subjective wellbeing, and coping strategies. MAPS is a sub-sample survey with farming households from MHWS. This note is for the sixth round of MAPS. MAPS Rounds 1, 3, and 5 were conducted between January and March 2022 and 2024 and collect recall data on monsoon production. MAPS Round 2, 4 and 6 were conducted between June and September 2022 and 2024 and collect recall data on dry season production (post/pre-monsoon season). Phone surveys have several shortcomings including representativeness, enumerator trust, measurement error, and shortened survey length. To help ensure representativeness of our sample we set targets for MHWS data collection from rural, female, lower-educated, and farming households. While there are weaknesses of phone surveys, there are also advantages, particularly in Myanmar. Previous face-to-face socioeconomic surveys in Myanmar failed to reach many townships across the country either due to conflict or remoteness. Round 6 of MAPS includes 259 out of 324 townships. In this note, we provide details on the data collection and sample characteristics of the sixth-round of MAPS. First, we briefly describe the modules present in MAPS data. Second, we discuss the household sampling design of MHWS and each MAPS round and the differences between the datasets. Third, we discuss the calculation of weights for MAPS and provide descriptives of the weighted sample. Most comparisons throughout the paper are between MAPS round 4 and MAPS round 6 because both surveys were carried out following the post/pre-monsoon season.

Year published

2026

Authors

van Asselt, Joanna; Aung, Zin Wai; Ei Win, Hnin

Citation

van Asselt, Joanna; Aung, Zin Wai; Ei Win, Hnin. 2026. Myanmar Agricultural Performance Survey Round Six: Note on Sample Characteristics and Weighting. Data Paper. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183162

Country/Region

Myanmar

Keywords

South-eastern Asia; Asia; Household Surveys; Data; Rural Areas; Farmers; Welfare; Agricultural Production

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Data Paper

Data Paper

Myanmar Agricultural Performance Survey Round Seven: Note on Sample Characteristics and Weighting

2026van Asselt, Joanna; Aung, Zin Wai; Ei Win, Hnin
Details

Myanmar Agricultural Performance Survey Round Seven: Note on Sample Characteristics and Weighting

The Myanmar Agricultural Performance Survey (MAPS) is a nationally and sub-nationally representative phone survey with the objective of collecting bi-annual data on agricultural indicators including crop production and sales, input use, crop marketing, farm and livestock assets, and farm services. MAPS is a sub-sample survey that includes farming households from MHWS. There are seven Rounds of MAPS. MAPS Rounds 1, 3, and 5 were conducted between January and March 2022 and 2024 and collect recall data on monsoon production. MAPS Round 2, 4, 6, and 7 were conducted between June and October 2022 and 2025 and collect recall data on dry season production (post/pre-monsoon season). Phone surveys have several shortcomings including representativeness, enumerator trust, measurement error, and shortened survey length. To help ensure representativeness of our sample we set targets for MHWS data collection from rural, female, lower-educated, and farming households. While there are weaknesses of phone surveys, there are also advantages, particularly in Myanmar. Previous face-to-face socioeconomic surveys in Myanmar failed to reach many townships across the country either due to conflict or remoteness. Round 7 of MAPS includes 240 out of 324 townships. In this note, we provide details on the data collection of the seventh-round of MAPS. First, we briefly describe the modules present in MAPS data. Second, we discuss the household sampling design of MHWS and each MAPS round and the differences between the datasets. Third, we discuss the calculation of weights for MAPS and provide descriptives of the weighted sample. Most comparisons throughout the paper are between MAPS Round 6 and MAPS Round 7 because both surveys were carried out following the post/pre-monsoon season.

Year published

2026

Authors

van Asselt, Joanna; Aung, Zin Wai; Ei Win, Hnin

Citation

van Asselt, Joanna; Aung, Zin Wai; Ei Win, Hnin. 2026. Myanmar Agricultural Performance Survey Round Seven: Note on Sample Characteristics and Weighting. Data Paper. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183161

Country/Region

Myanmar

Keywords

Eastern Asia; Asia; Household Surveys; Data; Rural Areas; Farmers; Welfare; Agricultural Production

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Data Paper

Working Paper

Intensification without empowerment? Gendered time burdens in India’s livestock sector

2026Kumar, Anjani; Singh, Dhiraj K.; Kumar, Nalini Ranjan
Details

Intensification without empowerment? Gendered time burdens in India’s livestock sector

This paper provides a nationally representative assessment of changes in women’s work in livestock rearing in rural India using unit-level data from the Time Use Surveys (TUS) 2019 and 2024. By situating the analysis within debates on the feminization of agriculture, the study examines shifts in participation and time allocation in livestock rearing among rural working-age individuals (15–59 years). While women’s participation in economic work increased modestly between 2019 and 2024, this expansion continues to coexist with a persistently high burden of unpaid domestic and caregiving services. Within agriculture, livestock emerges as a relatively more dynamic and gendered domain of work. Using the 2016 International Classification of Activities for Time-Use Statistics (ICATUS), livestock activities are disaggregated into own use and market-oriented livestock activities. Descriptive evidence shows that women’s participation in livestock activities increased from 11 percent in 2019 to 15 percent in 2024, with a particularly notable rise in market-oriented livestock activities across several states and agroecological zones. Although crop husbandry continues to dominate agricultural employment, both incidence and intensity of participation of women in livestock rearing has visibly increased. Regression results indicate a positive and significant year effect for total livestock and livestock activities, but not for livestock own-use activities, suggesting that the observed increase is primarily associated with market-oriented engagement rather than subsistence expansion. Education exhibits a strong negative association with livestock time use, especially for women, indicating that livestock remains a fallback activity under constrained employment options. Gelbach decomposition further shows that changes in age composition and educational attainment account for a substantial share of the explained variation, while monthly per capita consumption expenditure has a stronger and more consistently significant association with women’s livestock time use than men’s. Overall, the findings point to incremental change within a persistently gendered structure of rural time allocation.

Year published

2026

Authors

Kumar, Anjani; Singh, Dhiraj K.; Kumar, Nalini Ranjan

Citation

Kumar, Anjani; Singh, Dhiraj K.; Kumar, Nalini Ranjan. 2026. Intensification without empowerment? Gendered time burden’s in India’s livestock sector. IFPRI Discussion Paper 2417. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183033

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Gender; Rural Women; Women Farmers; Livestock; Livestock Production; Livestock-raising; Feminization; Time Use Patterns; Working Hours; Agricultural Practices

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open Access

Record type

Working Paper

Working Paper

Varietal adoption, turnover, and concentration for major crops in Ethiopia: Evidence from household surveys and field sample genotyping

2026Jaleta, Moti; Abate, Gashaw T.; Yirga, Chilot; Kidane, Sisay; Hailu, Mekonnen; Shifa, Abdulaziz; Beyene, Habekristos; Mohammed, Abdu; Mohammed, Belay; Spielman, David J.
Details

Varietal adoption, turnover, and concentration for major crops in Ethiopia: Evidence from household surveys and field sample genotyping

Although continuous genetic improvement of crops cultivated by smallholder farmers is a well-known route to increasing agricultural productivity, our understanding of varietal adoption, turnover, and concentration in farmers’ fields is limited. Often, the greatest challenge to our understanding lies in the measurement approach (farmer self-reports versus DNA fingerprinting), as well as in the analysis and interpretation of the available data. To address this issue, we explore variety-level data on four main crops (wheat, maize, teff, and common bean) in Ethiopia. We estimate the area-weighted average varietal age (AWAVA) of each crop using data from a nationally representative sample survey of farm households and a unique genotyping dataset based on seed samples collected from the fields of sampled farm households. We also calculate indices to explore the concentration of varieties in farmers’ fields, which serves to substantiate the varietal age analysis. Overall, results show considerable variation in average varietal age across crops, ranging from 12.5 years for wheat to 28.2 years for common bean. Analysis of area shares of individual varieties for each crop indicates that slower varietal turnover (i.e., higher varietal age) is driven by the continued dominance of older varieties, despite the presence of newer varieties in the market. Slow varietal turnover in the presence of new varieties suggests the need for greater investment in the systems and markets through which seed is distributed to farmers. This includes stronger coordination of research and extension activities, improvement of variety-specific popularization and marketing efforts, and continued experimentation in seed sector development in Ethiopia.

Year published

2026

Authors

Jaleta, Moti; Abate, Gashaw T.; Yirga, Chilot; Kidane, Sisay; Hailu, Mekonnen; Shifa, Abdulaziz; Beyene, Habekristos; Mohammed, Abdu; Mohammed, Belay; Spielman, David J.

Citation

Jaleta, Moti; Abate, Gashaw T.; Kidance, Sisay; Hailu, Mekonnen; Shifa, Abdulaziz; et al. 2026. Varietal adoption, turnover, and concentration for major crops in Ethiopia: Evidence from household surveys and field sample genotyping. IFPRI Discussion Paper 2416. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/183034

Country/Region

Ethiopia

Keywords

Africa; Eastern Africa; Food Security; Food Systems; Fortified Foods; Cereal Products; Genotyping; Dna Fingerprinting

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open Access

Project

Seed Equal

Record type

Working Paper

Journal Article

Antimicrobial and other aquamedicine use for disease treatment in pond-based commercial tilapia farms in Bangladesh

2026
Rheman, Shafiq; Khor, Laura; Hossain, Sabrina; Delamare-Deboutteville, Jerome; Madsen, H.; Dalsgaard, A.; Murphy, Mike; Hoffmann, Vivian; Moodley, Arshnee; Verner-Jeffreys, David
…more Mohan, Chadag V.
Details

Antimicrobial and other aquamedicine use for disease treatment in pond-based commercial tilapia farms in Bangladesh

This study addresses the limited information on use of antimicrobials and other chemical use in commercial tilapia farms in Bangladesh. A retrospective cross-sectional survey was conducted in November 2022 in the Mymensingh district, a major tilapia production hub. Nearly half of the farms (46.6%) experienced fish mortality during the last production cycle, and 75.0% of farmers did not seek professional assistance during disease outbreaks. Among those who did, 68.0% relied on chemical or drug suppliers for guidance rather than veterinary experts. Biosecurity practices were inadequate, with 98.3% not implementing four basic monitored measures: disinfection of vehicles, footwear, hands, and equipment. Awareness of antimicrobial use (AMU) risks among respondents was low, with 56.0% unaware of its negative impacts and 88.8% unfamiliar with antimicrobial resistance (AMR). Antibiotic use was low, with only 15.5% of farms reporting antibiotic treatments, primarily oxytetracycline hydrochloride (23.8%), enrofloxacin (19.0%), and erythromycin–sulphadiazine–trimethoprim (19.0%). However, other chemicals with antimicrobial properties, such as disinfectants, were more commonly applied, reported by 39.7% of farms for disease management. The use of both antimicrobial and non-antimicrobial medicine varied significantly by location, being significantly less likely observed in Tarakanda (p < 0.05) and Fulbaria (p < 0.01), suggesting location-specific differences in disease management. The presence of clinical signs was significantly associated with increased use of both antimicrobials, non-antimicrobial medicine and use of overall aquamedicine (p < 0.001), while longer cultivation durations showed a weak association with reduced AMU. Imprudent use of antimicrobials and other chemicals may pose One Health risks, including disruption of pond microbial ecosystems, AMR development, chemical residues, and occupational hazards. In-depth qualitative studies are needed to further understand and optimize antimicrobial and other chemical use practices and determine how tilapia farmers may benefit from improved biosecurity, training, and veterinary access.

Year published

2026

Authors

Rheman, Shafiq; Khor, Laura; Hossain, Sabrina; Delamare-Deboutteville, Jerome; Madsen, H.; Dalsgaard, A.; Murphy, Mike; Hoffmann, Vivian; Moodley, Arshnee; Verner-Jeffreys, David; Mohan, Chadag V.

Citation

Rheman, S., Khor, L., Hossain, S., Delamare-Deboutteville, J., Madsen, H., Dalsgaard, A., Murphy, M., Hoffmann, V., Moodley, A., Verner-Jeffreys, D. and Mohan, C.V. 2026. Antimicrobial and other aquamedicine use for disease treatment in pond-based commercial tilapia farms in Bangladesh. Aquaculture 618:743814.

Country/Region

Bangladesh

Keywords

Asia; Southern Asia; Antimicrobial Resistance; Aquaculture; Fish; Tilapia

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-NC-4.0

Project

One Health

Record type

Journal Article

Report

IFPRI Malawi maize market report, April 2026

2026International Food Policy Research Institute; Benson, Anderson
Details

IFPRI Malawi maize market report, April 2026

Average retail prices of maize declined by most measures, with lowest prices registered in the Southern Region. Driven by increased domestic supply of newly harvested maize and cheap imports, maize retailed mostly below the government-mandated minimum farmgate price.

Year published

2026

Authors

International Food Policy Research Institute; Benson, Anderson

Citation

International Food Policy Research Institute. 2026. IFPRI Malawi monthly maize market report, April 2026. MaSSP Monthly Maize Market Report April 2026. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/182976

Country/Region

Malawi

Keywords

Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Southern Africa; Maize; Markets; Market Prices; Retail Prices; Food Prices

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open Access

Record type

Report

Working Paper

Farming in crisis: Livelihood challenges and resilience in conflict-affected Sudan: Insights from the Sudan 2024 Smallholder Farmers Survey

2026Mohamed, Shima; Kirui, Oliver K.; Abushama, Hala; Siddig, Khalid; Nigus, Halefom Yigzaw; Rakhy, Tarig
Details

Farming in crisis: Livelihood challenges and resilience in conflict-affected Sudan: Insights from the Sudan 2024 Smallholder Farmers Survey

Sudan’s agricultural sector in 2026 is facing unprecedented challenges due to the ongoing conflict, economic instability, and climate-related shocks. These overlapping crises have severely disrupted farming activities, market systems, and rural livelihoods across the country. The situation is particularly critical for smallholder farmers, who form the backbone of Sudan’s food production and rural economy. This report assesses the state of agriculture in conflict-affected Sudan, with a focus on input use, crop production, market access, and farming household-level challenges. It draws data from the Sudan 2024 Smallholder Farmers Survey, conducted across 13 of Sudan’s 18 states. The survey covered both the 2023/24 winter cropping season and preparations for the 2024 summer season. The findings reveal that Sudan’s agriculture sector has been severely disrupted by the ongoing conflict. Migration and displacement due to the conflict are reshaping the structure of farming households, while asset losses, reduced cultivated land, and declining livestock holdings undermine their resilience. Household incomes have contracted sharply. Engagement in agricultural activities has dropped, while reliance of farming households on non-agricultural businesses, casual labor, and humanitarian assistance has increased. Food insecurity has reached alarming levels—fewer than one in four households are food secure, while over half are severely food insecure. Food-insecure households are most prevalent in conflict-affected states, such as South Kordofan, North Kordofan, and Blue Nile. However, improvements were seen in access to input and output markets and the adoption of agricultural inputs in the 2023/24 winter season compared to the 2023 summer season. Farmers reported better availability of improved seed and fertilizer and more reliable input markets and crop-selling channels. However, these gains are overshadowed by growing uncertainty—a large portion of farmers indicated that they did not plan to cultivate crops during the 2024 summer season. Farmer’s access to finance and external assistance remained highly constrained. Farming households that used credit primarily relied on informal credit sources. More than three-quarters reported receiving no external assistance in 2024. Where support is available, its distribution remains uneven, with conflict-affected areas facing severe delivery challenges. Farmers report widespread exposure to both idiosyncratic and covariate shocks such as illness, flooding, theft, and violence—all of which compound their vulnerability. The coping strategies they use include selling household goods, reducing agricultural investment, or liquidating assets. Such choices provide short-term relief but jeopardize their long-term recovery. Perceptions of insecurity remain widespread, particularly in states experiencing active conflict. Overall, the findings paint a picture of a farming sector under extreme strain in Sudan. Without urgent, state-specific, and conflict-sensitive interventions, rural livelihoods will continue to deteriorate, further threatening national food security. The report concludes with recommendations to strengthen humanitarian support, revitalize agricultural input and finance systems, protect the assets of farming households, restore markets, and invest in building the resilience of farming households to both conflict and climate risks. Tailored interventions are needed to address state-level disparities, including food and security support in the Kordofan region, water and health services in Red Sea and Kassala states, and agricultural inputs in Aj Jazirah and River Nile. Long-term strategies must also invest in climate-smart agriculture, strengthen social protection systems, and ensure conflict-sensitive approaches that protect farmers and rebuild trust in rural communities.

Year published

2026

Authors

Mohamed, Shima; Kirui, Oliver K.; Abushama, Hala; Siddig, Khalid; Nigus, Halefom Yigzaw; Rakhy, Tarig

Citation

Mohamed, Shima; Kirui, Oliver K.; Abushama, Hala; Siddig, Khalid; Nigus, Halefom Yigzaw; and Rakhy, Tarig. 2026. Farming in crisis: Livelihood challenges and resilience in conflict-affected Sudan: Insights from the Sudan 2024 Smallholder Farmers Survey. SSSP Working Paper 26. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/182880

Country/Region

Sudan

Keywords

Africa; Northern Africa; Capacity Building; Farming; Livelihoods; Resilience; Armed Conflicts; Smallholders; Surveys

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open Access

Record type

Working Paper

Brief

The rise of ganyu in Malawi

2026De Weerdt, Joachim; Duquennois, Claire; Oliveres-Mallol, Adriana
Details

The rise of ganyu in Malawi

A quiet but important transformation is taking place in Malawi’s rural labor markets. Increasingly, rural Malawians are working fewer hours on their own farms and spending more time in ganyu – an informal labor arrangement based on day- or piece‑work, typically requiring very low levels of skill and offering low and uncertain pay. While ganyu has long existed in Malawi, its scale and role in rural livelihoods have changed markedly. It is no longer merely a short‑term coping strategy but has become a central source of employment for a growing share of the rural population. This shift is especially pronounced among men, young people, and individuals with little land and limited formal education. At the same time, those who rely more heavily on ganyu are finding it increasingly difficult to secure adequate and stable access to food. The rapid expansion of ganyu has important implications for the kind of policies that will advance inclusive development in Malawi.

Year published

2026

Authors

De Weerdt, Joachim; Duquennois, Claire; Oliveres-Mallol, Adriana

Citation

De Weerdt, Joachim; Duquennois, Claire; and Oliveres-Mallol, Adriana. 2026. The rise of ganyu in Malawi. MaSSP Policy Note 58. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/182878

Country/Region

Malawi

Keywords

Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Southern Africa; Informal Markets; Informal Economy; Labour Market; Policies

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Brief

Opinion Piece

C’est la Vie! How a popular West African edutainment series changed minds, but not behaviours

2026Dione, Malick; Heckert, Jessica; Hidrobo, Melissa; Le Port, Agnès; Peterman, Amber; Seye, Moustapha
Details

C’est la Vie! How a popular West African edutainment series changed minds, but not behaviours

A West African TV series in Senegal led to short- and medium-term gains in knowledge and attitudes around violence against women and sexual and reproductive health, though impacts on behaviours were limited, and a podcast version extending content during COVID-19 was ineffective.

Year published

2026

Authors

Dione, Malick; Heckert, Jessica; Hidrobo, Melissa; Le Port, Agnès; Peterman, Amber; Seye, Moustapha

Citation

Dione, Malick; Heckert, Jessica; Hidrobo, Melissa; Le Port, Agnès; Peterman, Amber; and Seye, Moustapha. 2026. C’est la Vie! How a popular West African edutainment series changed minds, but not behaviours. VoxDev. First published online on 12 May 2026. https://voxdev.org/topic/institutions-political-economy/cest-la-vie-how-popular-west-african-edutainment-series

Keywords

Africa; Western Africa; Gender; Education; Television; Social Impact Assessment; Randomized Controlled Trials; Gender-based Violence; Health

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open Access

Project

Policies, Institutions, and Markets

Record type

Opinion Piece

Brief

The impact of a nutrition-sensitive graduation model on child nutrition: Experimental evidence from Ethiopia

2026Gilligan, Daniel O.; Hirvonen, Kalle; Leight, Jessica; Mesfin, Hiwot; Mulford, Michael; Tesfaye, Haleluya
Details

The impact of a nutrition-sensitive graduation model on child nutrition: Experimental evidence from Ethiopia

This brief reports on a three-arm cluster randomized controlled trial of 3,015 households evaluating the effectiveness of SPIR II, a nutrition-sensitive graduation model implemented in Ethiopia. The full treatment package—combining nutrition-focused behavior change communication (BCC), village economics and savings associations, monthly maternal cash transfers of US$20, and a one-time livelihood grant of US$300—generates large, sustained improvements in child diet quality, household consumption, livestock holdings, and formal savings. A substantial reduction in childhood stunting (7 percentage points) is observed in the same sub-arm; BCC alone improves caregiver nutrition knowledge but does not lead to improved child feeding or growth. The benefit-cost ratio is nearly two, suggesting the program more than pays for itself.

Year published

2026

Authors

Gilligan, Daniel O.; Hirvonen, Kalle; Leight, Jessica; Mesfin, Hiwot; Mulford, Michael; Tesfaye, Haleluya

Citation

Gilligan, Daniel O.; Hirvonen, Kalle; Leight, Jessica; Mesfin, Hiwot; Mulford, Michael; and Tesfaye, Haleluya. 2026. The impact of a nutrition-sensitive graduation model on child nutrition: Experimental evidence from Ethiopia. IFPRI Project Note. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/182850

Country/Region

Ethiopia

Keywords

Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Eastern Africa; Impact; Nutrition; Child Nutrition; Modelling; Randomized Controlled Trials; Benefit-cost Ratio

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Brief

Working Paper

Gender, youth, and growth: Unpacking the productivity–transformation nexus in Rwanda

2026Aragie, Emerta A.; Escalante, Luis Enrique; Thurlow, James; Warner, James; Niyonsingiza, Josue
Details

Gender, youth, and growth: Unpacking the productivity–transformation nexus in Rwanda

The relationship between labor productivity and economic transformation, and their combined impact on labor market dynamics, remains insufficiently understood and highly country specific. This study applies an economywide analytical framework, using Rwanda as a case study, to examine how youth and women’s productivity influence economic growth and structural transformation, and how this transformation process, in turn, affects these groups. The results indicate that labor productivity gains—whether economywide or concentrated among youth—shift growth toward the industrial and service sectors, while growth in the agricultural sector is minimal. Increases in productivity of women’ labor generate more balanced growth across sectors and substantially enhance women’s industrial participation. Productivity gains of youth labor induce stronger structural shifts, as young workers move from agriculture to expanding industrial and service sectors, though this transition partially displaces adult workers. In general, labor income in these simulations rises broadly in line with GDP, with youth and women benefiting most under targeted scenarios. Sector-specific growth strategies yield distinct distributional effects, however: industry-led growth benefits women and adults, while service-led growth favors the versatile youth. Overall, productivity-driven structural transformation in Rwanda fosters welfare gains, although potential trade-offs between inclusiveness across gender and age groups and aggregate economic performance warrant further investigation. In conclusion, policy design in Rwanda should ensure that gains in aggregate economic growth are balanced with inclusive outcomes for women, youth, and adults.

Year published

2026

Authors

Aragie, Emerta A.; Escalante, Luis Enrique; Thurlow, James; Warner, James; Niyonsingiza, Josue

Citation

Aragie, Emerta; Escalante, Luis; Thurlow, James; Warner, James; and Niyonsingiza, Josue. 2026. Gender, youth, and growth: Productivity–Transformation Nexus in Rwanda. IFPRI Discussion Paper 2415. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/182847

Country/Region

Rwanda

Keywords

Africa; Sub-saharan Africa; Eastern Africa; Labour; Labour Productivity; Gender; Youth; Economic Growth; Transformation

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open Access

Record type

Working Paper

Report

Desafíos y oportunidades para el desarrollo equitativo y sostenible en Bolivia

2026Vos, Rob
Details

Desafíos y oportunidades para el desarrollo equitativo y sostenible en Bolivia

Este documento analiza los principales desafíos estructurales y las oportunidades estratégicas para avanzar hacia un desarrollo económico, social y ambientalmente sostenible en Bolivia, en un contexto marcado por una alta dependencia de los recursos naturales, vulnerabilidades macroeconómicas, informalidad laboral y riesgos ambientales crecientes. A partir de un diagnóstico integral, el estudio examina la dinámica macroeconómica reciente, los efectos de la enfermedad holandesa, las limitaciones a la diversificación productiva, la transición energética, el desempeño de los sectores agroalimentario y minero-energético, así como la evolución de la pobreza, el empleo y la desigualdad. El análisis identifica cinco retos centrales: diversificación productiva, reducción de la informalidad, estabilidad fiscal y externa, transición energética y gestión de riesgos ambientales; y a su vez explora oportunidades para impulsar una nueva dinámica productiva más competitiva, equitativa y sostenible, apoyada en políticas macroeconómicas anticíclicas, transformación sectorial, fortalecimiento del capital humano y una política social orientada al desarrollo humano.

Year published

2026

Authors

Vos, Rob

Citation

Vos, Rob. 2026. Desafíos y oportunidades para el desarrollo equitativo y sostenible en Bolivia. Development Bank of Latin America and the Caribbean. https://scioteca.caf.com/handle/123456789/2642

Country/Region

Bolivia

Keywords

South America; Development; Environment; Natural Resources; Productivity; Energy; Foods; Mining; Poverty; Employment

Language

Spanish

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-NC-ND-4.0

Record type

Report

Opinion Piece

Myth: Are subsidies the solution for “costly” small-scale irrigation technologies?

2026Ringler, Claudia; Lefore, Nicole
Details

Myth: Are subsidies the solution for “costly” small-scale irrigation technologies?

A common claim we hear in discussions about small-scale irrigation is that the technologies are simply too expensive, and that subsidies are therefore the only way to make them viable for smallholders. It’s a familiar argument–and on the surface, it sounds perfectly reasonable. If you search online, you’ll quickly find headlines reinforcing this idea. In India, farmers are described as unable to switch to solar-powered irrigation because the upfront costs are too steep; and in Kenya, affordability is raised as the key challenge to adoption. But once we look at actual field evidence, we find that reducing costs is far from the main—or only—solution for supporting smallholders in accessing irrigation technologies, and that subsidies are a blunt instrument for reducing farmers’ costs.

Year published

2026

Authors

Ringler, Claudia; Lefore, Nicole

Citation

Ringler, Claudia; and Lefore, Nicole. 2026. Myth: Are subsidies the solution for “costly” small-scale irrigation technologies? Daugherty Water for Food Global Institute Opinion Piece. https://waterforfood.nebraska.edu/news-and-events/news/2026/05/myth-are-subsidies-the-solution-for-costly-small-scale-irrigation-technologies

Keywords

Capacity Building; Investment; Irrigation; Small-scale Irrigation; Subsidies; Irrigation Technology

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open Access

Record type

Opinion Piece

Brochure

IFPRI’s research on true cost accounting: Unlocking the true value of food for sustainable agrifood systems

2026International Food Policy Research Institute
Details

IFPRI’s research on true cost accounting: Unlocking the true value of food for sustainable agrifood systems

Sustainable agrifood systems must ensure food security and nutrition while balancing economic, social, and environmental objectives. Yet food costs more than the consumer price, due to hidden costs to human health, the environment, and social and economic equality. Estimates suggest that these unaccounted‑for costs exceed US$11 trillion annually, representing nearly 10% of global GDP. Redesigning agrifood systems requires a clear understanding of external costs to inform policies that balance health, economic, social, and environmental goals. True Cost Accounting (TCA) methods measure and economically value the environmental, health, and social impacts of agrifood systems. By making these externalities visible, TCA supports more informed decision-making for governments, businesses, farmers, financial institutions, donors, and consumers. Without levers like TCA to align agrifood systems with climate, health, and equity agendas, policymakers enact policies drawn from incomplete or overly generalized analyses.

Year published

2026

Authors

International Food Policy Research Institute

Citation

International Food Policy Research Institute. 2026. IFPRI’s research on true cost accounting: Unlocking the true value of food for sustainable agrifood systems. IFPRI Brochure. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/182788

Keywords

Cost Analysis; Agrifood Systems; True Cost Accounting

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Brochure

Brief

Measuring artisanal fisheries using remote sensing: A deep-learning model piloted in Hadramawt

2026Ecker, Olivier; Guo, Zhe; Li, Hanxi; Di, Liping
Details

Measuring artisanal fisheries using remote sensing: A deep-learning model piloted in Hadramawt

An innovative remote sensing study piloted in two sites (Mukalla and Qusayir) in Hadramawt Governorate, Yemen, reveals the following key findings: Deep learning using very high resolution satellite imagery can accurately detect small artisanal fishing boats. The YOLO11 Oriented Bounding Boxes model performs best, with an overall accuracy of 96.9 percent, and enables measuring boat size and identifying boat types. Mukalla’s fleet numbered around 800 operational boats in 2021–2024, most of which were houris, while sanbuqs accounted for 6.9 percent. Qusayir’s fleet numbered 450 boats, all of which were houris. The composition of the combined Mukalla and Qusayir fleets by boat type and length class is similar to the composition of Hadramawt’s entire fleet, as shown by a recent landing site survey. Approximated fish-catch capacities of the Mukalla and Qusayir fleets indicate that current boat sizes are not a notable constraint to increasing the productivity of these artisanal fisheries. The proposed remote sensing approach is an important first step toward development of a cost-effective tool for monitoring and analyzing artisanal fishing activities in Southern Yemen and beyond.

Year published

2026

Authors

Ecker, Olivier; Guo, Zhe; Li, Hanxi; Di, Liping

Citation

Ecker, Olivier; Guo, Zhe; Li, Hanxi; and Di, Liping. 2026. Measuring artisanal fisheries using remote sensing: A deep-learning model piloted in Hadramawt. MENA Project Note 31. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/182787

Country/Region

Yemen

Keywords

Middle East; Asia; Fisheries; Artisanal Fisheries; Remote Sensing; Modelling; Cost Analysis; Measurement

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Brief

Journal Article

Scaling biofortified wheat production for agrifood and nutritional security in eastern India: Evidence from five years of multi-location field evaluations in Bihar

2026
Giri, Ravinder Kumar; Cherian, Binu; Mendali, Birendra; Virk, Parminder; Pfeifer, Wolfgang; Jat, Raj Kumar; Meena, Moti Lal; Durgude, Shubham; Banerjee, Koushik; Hasanain, Mohammad
…more Meena, Vijay Singh
Details

Scaling biofortified wheat production for agrifood and nutritional security in eastern India: Evidence from five years of multi-location field evaluations in Bihar

Year published

2026

Authors

Giri, Ravinder Kumar; Cherian, Binu; Mendali, Birendra; Virk, Parminder; Pfeifer, Wolfgang; Jat, Raj Kumar; Meena, Moti Lal; Durgude, Shubham; Banerjee, Koushik; Hasanain, Mohammad; Meena, Vijay Singh

Citation

Giri, Ravinder Kumar; Cherian, Binu; Mendali, Birendra; Virk, Parminder; Pfeifer, Wolfgang; et al. 2026. Scaling biofortified wheat production for agrifood and nutritional security in eastern India: Evidence from five years of multi-location field evaluations in Bihar. Field Crops Research 341(May 1 2026): 110393. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fcr.2026.110393

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Wheat; Biofortification; Nutrition Security; Food Security

Language

English

Access/Licence

Limited Access

Record type

Journal Article

Journal Article

Hidden one-stop shops in transforming agrifood value chains: Agro-input retailers in Myanmar

2026Goeb, Joseph; Minten, Bart; van Asselt, Joanna; Reardon, Thomas; Aung, Zin Wai; Htar, May Thet
Details

Hidden one-stop shops in transforming agrifood value chains: Agro-input retailers in Myanmar

Year published

2026

Authors

Goeb, Joseph; Minten, Bart; van Asselt, Joanna; Reardon, Thomas; Aung, Zin Wai; Htar, May Thet

Citation

Goeb, Joseph; Minten, Bart; van Asselt, Joanna; Reardon, Thomas; Aung, Zin Wai; and Htar, May Thet. 2026. Hidden one-stop shops in transforming agrifood value chains: Agro-input retailers in Myanmar. Food Policy 140(May 2026): 103079. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodpol.2026.103079

Country/Region

Myanmar

Keywords

Asia; South-eastern Asia; Agrifood Systems; Value Chains; Agricultural Value Chains; Farm Inputs; Agricultural Credit; Agricultural Extension; Agricultural Transformation

Language

English

Access/Licence

Limited Access

Record type

Journal Article

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