Land Policy and Food Prices: Evidence from a Land Consolidation Program in Rwanda
Nsabimana Aimable (),
Niyitanga Fidele (),
Weatherspoon Dave D. () and
Anwar Naseem ()
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Nsabimana Aimable: University of Rwanda, Kigali, Rwanda
Niyitanga Fidele: University of Rwanda, Kigali, Rwanda
Weatherspoon Dave D.: Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA
Journal of Agricultural & Food Industrial Organization, 2021, vol. 19, issue 1, 63-73
Abstract:
Rwanda’s “Crop Intensification Program (CIP)” is primarily a land consolidation program aimed at improving agricultural productivity and food security. The program, which began in 2007, focuses on monocropping and commercialization of six priority crops: maize, wheat, rice, white potato, beans, and cassava. CIP has facilitated easy access to improved seed stocks, fertilizer, extension services, and postharvest handling and storage services. Although studies have documented the impact of CIP on changes in farm yield, incomes, and productivity, less is known about its impact on food prices. In this study, we examine the crop-food price differences in intensive monocropped CIP and non-intensive monocropped CIP zones in Rwanda. Specifically, the study evaluates price variations of beans and maize along with complementary food crops in intensive and non-intensive monocropped zones before and after the introduction of the CIP policy. We find that the CIP policy is not associated with differences in CIP crop prices between the intensive and non-intensive monocropped zones. Over time, prices increased for CIP crops but generally, the crop prices in the two zones were cointegrated. Prices for non-CIP crops in the two different zones did show price differentials prior to the implementation of CIP, with the prices in intensive monocropped zones being greater than in the non-intensive monocropped zones. Moreover, the prices in intensive areas are cointegrated with prices in non-intensive areas for maize and beans and these prices are converging. This indicates that farmers who intensively produced one CIP crop were able to go to the market and purchase other food crops and that price differences between zones have decreased over time, potentially making the CIP intensive farmers better off.
Keywords: land policy; land consolidation; monocrop farming; food prices (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2021
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (2)
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DOI: 10.1515/jafio-2021-0010
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