Bayes Estimates of Distance-to-Market : Transactions Costs, Cooperatives and Milk-Market Development in the Ethiopian Highlands

Rationalizing non-participation as a resource deficiency in the household, this paper identifies strategies for milk-market development in the Ethiopian highlands. The additional amounts of covariates required for positive marketable surplus--distances-to market--are computed from a model in which production and sales are correlated; sales are left-censored at some unobserved threshold; production efficiencies are heterogeneous; and the data are in the form of a panel. Incorporating these features into the modeling exercise is important because they are fundamental to the data-generating environment. There are four reasons. First, because production and sales decisions are enacted within the same household, both decisions are affected by the same exogenous shocks, and production and sales are therefore likely to be correlated. Second, because selling involves time and time is arguably the most important resource available to a subsistence household, the minimum sales amount is not zero but, rather, some unobserved threshold that lies beyond zero. Third, the potential existence of heterogeneous abilities in management, ones that lie latent from the econometrician's perspective, suggest that production efficiencies should be permitted to vary across households. Fourth, we observe a single set of households during multiple visits in a single production year. The results convey clearly that institutional and production innovations alone are insufficient to encourage participation. Market-precipitating innovation requires complementary inputs, especially improvements in human capital and reductions in risk.

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Main Authors: Holloway, Garth, Ehui, Simeon, Teklu, Amare
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:EN
Published: 2008
Subjects:Model Construction and Estimation C510, Economic Development: Agriculture, Natural Resources, Energy, Environment, Other Primary Products O130, Agricultural Markets and Marketing, Cooperatives, Agribusiness Q130,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/5853
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spelling dig-okr-1098658532021-04-23T14:02:23Z Bayes Estimates of Distance-to-Market : Transactions Costs, Cooperatives and Milk-Market Development in the Ethiopian Highlands Holloway, Garth Ehui, Simeon Teklu, Amare Model Construction and Estimation C510 Economic Development: Agriculture Natural Resources Energy Environment Other Primary Products O130 Agricultural Markets and Marketing Cooperatives Agribusiness Q130 Rationalizing non-participation as a resource deficiency in the household, this paper identifies strategies for milk-market development in the Ethiopian highlands. The additional amounts of covariates required for positive marketable surplus--distances-to market--are computed from a model in which production and sales are correlated; sales are left-censored at some unobserved threshold; production efficiencies are heterogeneous; and the data are in the form of a panel. Incorporating these features into the modeling exercise is important because they are fundamental to the data-generating environment. There are four reasons. First, because production and sales decisions are enacted within the same household, both decisions are affected by the same exogenous shocks, and production and sales are therefore likely to be correlated. Second, because selling involves time and time is arguably the most important resource available to a subsistence household, the minimum sales amount is not zero but, rather, some unobserved threshold that lies beyond zero. Third, the potential existence of heterogeneous abilities in management, ones that lie latent from the econometrician's perspective, suggest that production efficiencies should be permitted to vary across households. Fourth, we observe a single set of households during multiple visits in a single production year. The results convey clearly that institutional and production innovations alone are insufficient to encourage participation. Market-precipitating innovation requires complementary inputs, especially improvements in human capital and reductions in risk. 2012-03-30T07:34:51Z 2012-03-30T07:34:51Z 2008 Journal Article Journal of Applied Econometrics 08837252 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/5853 EN http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo World Bank Journal Article Ethiopia
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language EN
topic Model Construction and Estimation C510
Economic Development: Agriculture
Natural Resources
Energy
Environment
Other Primary Products O130
Agricultural Markets and Marketing
Cooperatives
Agribusiness Q130
Model Construction and Estimation C510
Economic Development: Agriculture
Natural Resources
Energy
Environment
Other Primary Products O130
Agricultural Markets and Marketing
Cooperatives
Agribusiness Q130
spellingShingle Model Construction and Estimation C510
Economic Development: Agriculture
Natural Resources
Energy
Environment
Other Primary Products O130
Agricultural Markets and Marketing
Cooperatives
Agribusiness Q130
Model Construction and Estimation C510
Economic Development: Agriculture
Natural Resources
Energy
Environment
Other Primary Products O130
Agricultural Markets and Marketing
Cooperatives
Agribusiness Q130
Holloway, Garth
Ehui, Simeon
Teklu, Amare
Bayes Estimates of Distance-to-Market : Transactions Costs, Cooperatives and Milk-Market Development in the Ethiopian Highlands
description Rationalizing non-participation as a resource deficiency in the household, this paper identifies strategies for milk-market development in the Ethiopian highlands. The additional amounts of covariates required for positive marketable surplus--distances-to market--are computed from a model in which production and sales are correlated; sales are left-censored at some unobserved threshold; production efficiencies are heterogeneous; and the data are in the form of a panel. Incorporating these features into the modeling exercise is important because they are fundamental to the data-generating environment. There are four reasons. First, because production and sales decisions are enacted within the same household, both decisions are affected by the same exogenous shocks, and production and sales are therefore likely to be correlated. Second, because selling involves time and time is arguably the most important resource available to a subsistence household, the minimum sales amount is not zero but, rather, some unobserved threshold that lies beyond zero. Third, the potential existence of heterogeneous abilities in management, ones that lie latent from the econometrician's perspective, suggest that production efficiencies should be permitted to vary across households. Fourth, we observe a single set of households during multiple visits in a single production year. The results convey clearly that institutional and production innovations alone are insufficient to encourage participation. Market-precipitating innovation requires complementary inputs, especially improvements in human capital and reductions in risk.
format Journal Article
topic_facet Model Construction and Estimation C510
Economic Development: Agriculture
Natural Resources
Energy
Environment
Other Primary Products O130
Agricultural Markets and Marketing
Cooperatives
Agribusiness Q130
author Holloway, Garth
Ehui, Simeon
Teklu, Amare
author_facet Holloway, Garth
Ehui, Simeon
Teklu, Amare
author_sort Holloway, Garth
title Bayes Estimates of Distance-to-Market : Transactions Costs, Cooperatives and Milk-Market Development in the Ethiopian Highlands
title_short Bayes Estimates of Distance-to-Market : Transactions Costs, Cooperatives and Milk-Market Development in the Ethiopian Highlands
title_full Bayes Estimates of Distance-to-Market : Transactions Costs, Cooperatives and Milk-Market Development in the Ethiopian Highlands
title_fullStr Bayes Estimates of Distance-to-Market : Transactions Costs, Cooperatives and Milk-Market Development in the Ethiopian Highlands
title_full_unstemmed Bayes Estimates of Distance-to-Market : Transactions Costs, Cooperatives and Milk-Market Development in the Ethiopian Highlands
title_sort bayes estimates of distance-to-market : transactions costs, cooperatives and milk-market development in the ethiopian highlands
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/10986/5853
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