Farm households’ preference for cash-based compensation versus livelihood-enhancing programs

In this paper we attempt to bridge the resilience school of thought and incentive compatibility in livestock disease control policies through a pilot choice experiment study conducted on 104 farm households in the Nasarawa state of Nigeria. The aim of this study was to shed light on farm households’...

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Main Authors: Oparinde, Adewale, Birol, Ekin
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ifpri.org/publication/farm-households-preference-cash-based-compensation-versus-livelihood-enhancing-programs
http://ebrary.ifpri.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15738coll2/id/124898
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spelling ftifpriir:oai:ebrary.ifpri.org:p15738coll2/124898 2023-05-15T15:34:21+02:00 Farm households’ preference for cash-based compensation versus livelihood-enhancing programs A choice experiment to inform avian flu compensation policy in Nigeria Oparinde, Adewale Birol, Ekin 2011 19 pages 1315215 Bytes http://www.ifpri.org/publication/farm-households-preference-cash-based-compensation-versus-livelihood-enhancing-programs http://ebrary.ifpri.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15738coll2/id/124898 English eng eng International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) Washington, D.C. IFPRI Discussion Paper 1072 IFPRIDP01072 http://www.ifpri.org/publication/farm-households-preference-cash-based-compensation-versus-livelihood-enhancing-programs 124898 http://ebrary.ifpri.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15738coll2/id/124898 Open Access IFPRI AFRICA AFRICA SOUTH OF SAHARA NIGERIA WEST AFRICA avian flu choice experiment method compensation scheme conditional logit model livestock disease random parameter logit model households Discussion paper 2011 ftifpriir 2020-07-31T06:25:50Z In this paper we attempt to bridge the resilience school of thought and incentive compatibility in livestock disease control policies through a pilot choice experiment study conducted on 104 farm households in the Nasarawa state of Nigeria. The aim of this study was to shed light on farm households’ valuation of various compensation plan attributes and trade-offs among these attributes. In the experiment presented here, compensation plan was defined broadly to include not just the traditional attributes, such as the number of days it takes to receive the payment, the compensation rate, and the method of payment, but also more diverse interventions, such as training in biosecurity measures and access to bank loans, which are expected to have longer-term impacts on households’ livelihood outcomes. We analyzed the data using various discrete choice models, the best-fitting of which was the random parameter (or mixed) logit model with interactions, which enabled us to capture both unobserved and observed heterogeneity in farm households’ preferences for the compensation plan attributes. The results reveal that overall, study households preferred compensation plans that made payment in fewer days, provided facilitated credit access, and offered biosecurity training. Households with better-educated heads and those with lower income levels valued compensation plans that provided credit access and biosecurity training the most. These findings are expected to inform the design of efficient, effective, equitable, and targeted compensation policies, which could not only reduce the livestock disease risk but also improve the resilience of poor farm households’ livelihoods against future poultry-related or other idiosyncratic shocks. Non-PR IFPRI1; GRP40 MTID Report Avian flu IFPRI Knowledge Collections (International Food Policy Research Institute)
institution Open Polar
collection IFPRI Knowledge Collections (International Food Policy Research Institute)
op_collection_id ftifpriir
language English
topic AFRICA
AFRICA SOUTH OF SAHARA
NIGERIA
WEST AFRICA
avian flu
choice experiment method
compensation scheme
conditional logit model
livestock disease
random parameter logit model
households
spellingShingle AFRICA
AFRICA SOUTH OF SAHARA
NIGERIA
WEST AFRICA
avian flu
choice experiment method
compensation scheme
conditional logit model
livestock disease
random parameter logit model
households
Oparinde, Adewale
Birol, Ekin
Farm households’ preference for cash-based compensation versus livelihood-enhancing programs
topic_facet AFRICA
AFRICA SOUTH OF SAHARA
NIGERIA
WEST AFRICA
avian flu
choice experiment method
compensation scheme
conditional logit model
livestock disease
random parameter logit model
households
description In this paper we attempt to bridge the resilience school of thought and incentive compatibility in livestock disease control policies through a pilot choice experiment study conducted on 104 farm households in the Nasarawa state of Nigeria. The aim of this study was to shed light on farm households’ valuation of various compensation plan attributes and trade-offs among these attributes. In the experiment presented here, compensation plan was defined broadly to include not just the traditional attributes, such as the number of days it takes to receive the payment, the compensation rate, and the method of payment, but also more diverse interventions, such as training in biosecurity measures and access to bank loans, which are expected to have longer-term impacts on households’ livelihood outcomes. We analyzed the data using various discrete choice models, the best-fitting of which was the random parameter (or mixed) logit model with interactions, which enabled us to capture both unobserved and observed heterogeneity in farm households’ preferences for the compensation plan attributes. The results reveal that overall, study households preferred compensation plans that made payment in fewer days, provided facilitated credit access, and offered biosecurity training. Households with better-educated heads and those with lower income levels valued compensation plans that provided credit access and biosecurity training the most. These findings are expected to inform the design of efficient, effective, equitable, and targeted compensation policies, which could not only reduce the livestock disease risk but also improve the resilience of poor farm households’ livelihoods against future poultry-related or other idiosyncratic shocks. Non-PR IFPRI1; GRP40 MTID
format Report
author Oparinde, Adewale
Birol, Ekin
author_facet Oparinde, Adewale
Birol, Ekin
author_sort Oparinde, Adewale
title Farm households’ preference for cash-based compensation versus livelihood-enhancing programs
title_short Farm households’ preference for cash-based compensation versus livelihood-enhancing programs
title_full Farm households’ preference for cash-based compensation versus livelihood-enhancing programs
title_fullStr Farm households’ preference for cash-based compensation versus livelihood-enhancing programs
title_full_unstemmed Farm households’ preference for cash-based compensation versus livelihood-enhancing programs
title_sort farm households’ preference for cash-based compensation versus livelihood-enhancing programs
publisher International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI)
publishDate 2011
url http://www.ifpri.org/publication/farm-households-preference-cash-based-compensation-versus-livelihood-enhancing-programs
http://ebrary.ifpri.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15738coll2/id/124898
genre Avian flu
genre_facet Avian flu
op_relation IFPRI Discussion Paper
1072
IFPRIDP01072
http://www.ifpri.org/publication/farm-households-preference-cash-based-compensation-versus-livelihood-enhancing-programs
124898
http://ebrary.ifpri.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15738coll2/id/124898
op_rights Open Access
IFPRI
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