Recommended Citation
Presented at the Centre for the Study of African Economies Conference 2009: Economic Development in Africa, March 22, 2009.
NOTE: At the time of publication, the author Charles F. Nicholson was not yet affiliated with Cal Poly.
Abstract
We investigate natural resource-based poverty traps using a simulation model of smallholder farms in highland Kenya. Simulation modeling allows for detailed examination of the complex interactions and feedback between farm-household economic decision-making and long-term soil dynamics, which may contribute to persistent poverty among smallholders in this region. We examine the effects of changing initial endowments of land, labour and stocks of on-farm soil organic matter on the long-term welfare of these households. We find that larger farms are better able to cope with both labour shocks and deteriorating natural capital than smaller farms, with smaller farms remaining poor and unable to invest into more diversified agricultural activities, like livestock. This suggests locally increasing returns to various combinations of economic and biophysical assets. Information obtained through such simulation model experiments may lead to better targeting of poverty alleviation programs as well as suggest a broader array of strategies that play off of the complex interactions between economic and biophysical assets.
Disciplines
Agribusiness | Agricultural and Resource Economics | Business
Copyright
2009 by the authors. Conference hosted by The Centre for the Study of African Economies
Number of Pages
36
URL: https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/agb_fac/65