Finance and Hunger : Empirical Evidence of the Agricultural Productivity Channel

Using cross-country and panel regressions, the authors show that financial sector development significantly reduces undernourishment (hunger), largely through gaining farmers and others access to productivity-enhancing equipment, translating into beneficial income and general effects. They show specifically that a deeper financial sector leads to higher agricultural productivity, including higher cereal yields, through increased fertilizer and tractor use. Higher productivity in turn leads to lower undernourishment. The results are robust to various specifications and econometric tests and imply that a 1 percentage point increase in private credit to GDP reduces undernourishment by 0.22-2.45 percentage points, or about one-quarter the impact of GDP per capita.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Claessens, Stijn, Feijen, Erik
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2006-12
Subjects:AGGREGATE LEVEL, AGGREGATE MEASURE, AGRICULTURAL EMPLOYMENT, AGRICULTURAL OUTPUT, AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY, AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH, AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS, AGRICULTURAL SECTOR, AGRICULTURAL WORKERS, AGRICULTURAL YIELDS, AGRICULTURE, ARABLE LAND, AVERAGE LEVEL, AVERAGE PRODUCTIVITY, BENCHMARK, BUSINESS CYCLE, CALORIES PER PERSON, CALORIES PER PERSON PER DAY, CENTRAL BANK, CONSUMPTION LEVELS, CONSUMPTION SMOOTHING, COUNTRY CHARACTERISTICS, COUNTRY LEVEL, CROP PRODUCTION, CROP YIELDS, CROSS-COUNTRY DIFFERENCES, DEPENDENT VARIABLE, DESCRIPTIVE STATISTICS, DEVELOPED COUNTRIES, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, DEVELOPMENT GOALS, DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS, DROUGHT, ECONOMETRIC MODEL, ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, ECONOMIC GROWTH, EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE, EMPIRICAL LITERATURE, EMPIRICAL RESULTS, EMPIRICAL WORK, ESTIMATION TECHNIQUES, EXPORTS, EXTREME POVERTY, FARMERS, FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENT, FINANCIAL INTERMEDIARIES, FINANCIAL SECTOR, FINANCIAL SECTORS, FINANCIAL SYSTEMS, FIXED EFFECTS, FOOD CONSUMPTION, FOOD INTAKE, FOOD OUTPUT, FOOD PRICES, FOOD PRODUCTION, GDP, GDP DEFLATOR, GDP PER CAPITA, GINI COEFFICIENT, GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES, GROWTH INCREASE, GROWTH RATE, GROWTH RATES, HIGH INEQUALITY, HOUSEHOLD INCOME, IMPACT ON POVERTY, INCOME, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, INCOME GROWTH, INCOME LEVEL, INCOME POVERTY, INCOMES, INCREASES GROWTH, INDEPENDENT VARIABLE, INDICATORS OF POVERTY, INEQUALITY, INEQUALITY COEFFICIENT, INEQUALITY REDUCTION, INSURANCE, LIVESTOCK PRODUCTION, MALNUTRITION, MEAT, MICRO-FINANCE, NEGATIVE EFFECT, NEGATIVE IMPACT, NEGATIVE SIGN, PANEL REGRESSIONS, PER CAPITA GROWTH, PER CAPITA INCOME, POLICY RESEARCH, POOR, POOR COUNTRIES, POOR HOUSEHOLDS, POOR PEOPLE, POVERTY GAP, POVERTY LINE, POVERTY REDUCTION, POWER PARITY, PRIVATE SECTOR, PRODUCTIVE ASSETS, PRODUCTIVITY, PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH, PROPERTY RIGHTS, PUBLIC SECTOR, PURCHASING POWER, REDUCED INEQUALITY, REDUCING POVERTY, REDUCTION IN POVERTY, REGRESSION RESULTS, RELATIVE PRICES, RICH COUNTRIES, RURAL, RURAL AREAS, RURAL POPULATION, SAVINGS, SHEEP, SIGNIFICANCE LEVEL, SIGNIFICANT EFFECT, SIGNIFICANT REDUCTION, STANDARD DEVIATION, STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES, TRADE OPENNESS, VALUE ADDED, WORLD INEQUALITY,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2006/12/7245909/finance-hunger-empirical-evidence-agricultural-productivity-channel
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/8832
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!