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From bad to worse: Poverty impacts of food availability responses to weather shocks in Zambia

Author

Listed:
  • Koo, Jawoo
  • Mamun, Abdullah
  • Martin, Will

Abstract

Since Amartya Sen’s famous work on Poverty and Famines, economists have understood that policy responses to food market shocks should be guided by changes in households’ incomes and access to food, rather than by overall food availability. Perhaps because the household-level impacts are not directly observable, many policy makers have continued to rely on availability-oriented policies such as export bans. In the Zambia case considered in this paper, export bans imposed in response to an El Niño event exacerbated the poverty problems resulting from the output shock. The combination of household-level data and crop models used in this paper allows us to assess the impacts of weather and price shocks at the household level, and hence to evaluate the suitability of availability-based policies for dealing with weather shocks. These analytical techniques are also useful in identifying the households and regions adversely affected by food output shocks, and hence in designing policies to improve poor consumers’ access to food.

Suggested Citation

  • Koo, Jawoo & Mamun, Abdullah & Martin, Will, 2020. "From bad to worse: Poverty impacts of food availability responses to weather shocks in Zambia," IFPRI discussion papers 1923, International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI).
  • Handle: RePEc:fpr:ifprid:1923
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