ESSP Working Paper 123, by Paul Dorosh, James Thurlow, Frehiwot Worku Kebede, Tadele Ferede, and Alemayehu S. Taffesse. Abstract: The effectiveness of agricultural growth in reducing poverty at the national level depends on several factors, including the productivity of the investments themselves and the structure of the economy – the level of urbanization, the share >> Read more Source: Ethiopia Strategy Support Program
Investing in wet mills and washed coffee in Ethiopia
ESSP Working Paper 121, by Seneshaw Tamru and Bart Minten. Abstract: Local value addition in developing countries is often aimed at for the upgrading of agricultural value chains since it is assumed that doing so will make farmers better off.
The Evolving Livestock Sector in Ethiopia: Growth by heads, not by productivity
ESSP Working Paper 122, by Fantu Bachewe, Bart Minten, Fanaye Tadesse, and Alemayehu S. Taffesse Abstract: Livestock is important in Ethiopia’s agricultural economy as almost all farmers own some livestock. Livestock assets are valued at 720 USD per farm on average. Overall livestock output has grown rapidly over the last decade, estimated at almost 6 percent per >> Read more Source: Ethiopia Strategy Support Program
Investing in wet mills and washed coffee in Ethiopia
ESSP Working Paper 121, by Seneshaw Tamru and Bart Minten. Abstract: Local value addition in developing countries is often aimed at for the upgrading of agricultural value chains since it is assumed that doing so will make farmers better off. However, transmission of the added value through the value chain and constraints to adoption of value-adding >> Read more Source: Ethiopia Strategy Support Program
Predicting high-magnitude, low-frequency crop losses using machine learning: An application to cereal crops in Ethiopia
ESSP Working Paper 120, by Michael L. Mann, James M. Warner, and Arun S. Malik. Abstract: Timely and accurate agricultural impact assessments for droughts are critical for designing appropriate interventions and policy. These assessments are often ad hoc, late, or spatially imprecise, with reporting at the zonal or regional level. This is problematic as we find >> Read more Source: Ethiopia Strategy Support Program
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