The Nexus Between Crop Productivity and Poverty in North Shewa: The Case of Lalo Midir Woreda

Authors

  • Tadesse Dosegnaw

Keywords:

Multidimensional poverty index, crop productivity, technical efficiency, logit model

Abstract

This paper used the Multidimensional Poverty Index approach to examine rural poverty (incidence and intensity) levels in Lalo Midir Woreda. OLS and Stochastic Cob-Douglass production frontier methods have been used to evaluate the drivers of crop productivity and technical efficiency level of the farmers respectively. Finally, the binary logit model has been used to examine the effect of crop productivity and other factors on poverty. In order to achieve these objectives, the study has used primary data collected from 151 rural household heads in four kebele's of Lalo Midir Woreda by deploying structured interview questions with multi-stage sampling techniques. The incidence of poverty or the percentage of people who are MPI poor was 63.4% and the average intensity of MPI poverty across the poor among the sampled households was 55.3%. The Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI) for the sampled households was 0.351. The research also finds that multidimensional poor households not only possess fewer resources but are also much less productive (6.56 quintal per hectare) and less efficient (65%). The binary logistic regression result reveals that crop productivity, technical efficiency, farm size, family size, dependency ratio, educational level, livestock holding in TLU, number of oxen holding, and annual income are significantly influenced by rural multidimensional poverty at the farm level. Finally, the study suggests crop productivity and efficiency play a positive role in poverty reduction, policy makers should design scaling-up strategies.

Published

2018-08-01

Issue

Section

Articles