Abstract

Considering that rural poor are mostly subsistence farmers, it seems plausible that production diversity could lead to better nutrition for these farmers. The association between production and dietary diversity is complex, and this complexity demands rigorous empirical analyses and more attention to gendered aspects of intra-household decision-making. We employ panel data analyses of 363 Ethiopian smallholders surveyed in 2014 and 2016 to test for this phenomenon, and to explore the association of women’s participation in decision-making with both production and consumption diversity. Results show that, diversification can be a strategy to improve the diets, but only of rural poor who have limited non-farm income, who are distant to the markets and mostly subsistence oriented. Moreover, female participation in decision-making associates with higher diversity both in terms of production and consumption, but it does not modify the magnitude of the association between production and dietary diversity. Our analyses contribute to the enriching literature on the linkage between production diversification and dietary diversity. We study this complex relationship in-depth and show that the gendered aspect of intra-household decision-making is an important covariate for both production diversity and dietary quality.

Highlights

  • Achieving zero hunger is the second goal of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) of the United Nations Development Program (United Nations Development Programme 2019)

  • We contribute to the growing literature on the association between production diversity and dietary diversity; we explore the complexity of the association in detail, and investigate the importance of gendered aspects of intra-household decision-making with regard to both livelihood outcomes

  • Looking into intra-household decision-making, from the first to the second round, there has been a significant increase in the average share of households where males decide regarding expenditures

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Summary

Introduction

Achieving zero hunger is the second goal of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) of the United Nations Development Program (United Nations Development Programme 2019). Considering that rural poor are mostly subsistence oriented, encouraging diversified farm production is perceived to be a promising strategy to achieve better dietary outcomes. Against this background, the association between production diversity and dietary diversity is tested in different settings. The low magnitude of the reported association in these studies creates doubt if the strategy of increasing dietary diversity through production diversification would be effective. The significance and magnitude of the association are situation specific (Islam et al 2018; Sibhatu et al 2015) We look into this interaction in detail and estimate marginal effects of production diversity at different specifications. We adopt and employ an approach by Brambor et al (2006) that can be followed in future studies that aim to investigate the association between production and dietary diversity in detail

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