Impact of soil and water conservation practices on household vulnerability to food insecurity in eastern Ethiopia: endogenous switching regression and propensity score matching approach

Governmental and developmental partners invest substantial resources to reduce land and water degradation in order to upgrade agricultural productivity, thus reducing food insecurity and related vulnerability in Sub-Saharan Africa. Understanding the impact of soil and water conservation on food inse...

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Veröffentlicht in:Food security 2019-08, Vol.11 (4), p.797-815
Hauptverfasser: Sileshi, Million, Kadigi, Reuben, Mutabazi, Khamaldin, Sieber, Stefan
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container_title Food security
container_volume 11
creator Sileshi, Million
Kadigi, Reuben
Mutabazi, Khamaldin
Sieber, Stefan
description Governmental and developmental partners invest substantial resources to reduce land and water degradation in order to upgrade agricultural productivity, thus reducing food insecurity and related vulnerability in Sub-Saharan Africa. Understanding the impact of soil and water conservation on food insecurity outcomes would be a significant step toward improving environmental conditions, while ensuring sustainable and increased agricultural production. Therefore, this article analyzes the impact of adopting soil and water conservation on food insecurity and related vulnerability outcomes of farming households using a sample of 408 households selected using a multi-stage stratified sampling procedure from three districts in eastern Ethiopia. Vulnerability as expected poverty (three-step Feasible General Least Squares) is employed to analyze the vulnerability of sample households in the context of food insecurity. In addition, endogenous switching regressions with propensity score matching methods are combined to obtain consistent impact estimates. The study findings reveal that education and sex of household head, use of irrigation and fertilizer, source of information, and cultivated land are the main factors influencing the adoption of soil and water conservation practices. Moreover, the adoption of soil and water conservation not only positively impacts the per capita food consumption expenditure and net crop value, but it also significantly reduces the probability of farmers being food insecure, vulnerable to food insecurity, as well as being transient and chronically food insecure. Therefore, policymakers and development organizations should consider soil and water conservation as a main strategy to reduce land degradation and improve the livelihoods of the rural farm households.
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subjects Agricultural production
Agriculture
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Conservation practices
Cultivated lands
Environment
Environmental conditions
Farms
Feasibility studies
Fertilizers
Food
Food consumption
Food production
Food Science
Food security
Households
Impact analysis
Land degradation
Land use
Life Sciences
Matching
Original Paper
Plant Sciences
Poverty
Regression analysis
Social Policy
Social Sciences
Soil conservation
Soil water
Soils
Statistical analysis
Sustainable agriculture
Switching
Water conservation
title Impact of soil and water conservation practices on household vulnerability to food insecurity in eastern Ethiopia: endogenous switching regression and propensity score matching approach
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