Drought and Saving in West Africa: Are Livestock a Buffer Stock?

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
Drought and Saving in West Africa: Are Livestock a Buffer Stock?
Abstract
Households in the west African semi-arid tropics face substantial risk -- an inevitable consequence of engaging in rainfed agriculture in a drought-prone environment. It has long been hypothesized that these households keep livestock as a buffer stock to insulate their consumption from income fluctuations income. This paper tests this hypothesis. Results indicate that livestock transactions play less of a consumption smoothing role than often assumed. Livestock sales compensate for at most thirty percent, and probably closer to twenty percent of income shortfalls due to village-level shocks alone. We discuss possible explanations for these results and suggest directions for future work.
Publication
Social Science Research Network
Pages
-
Date
1998-01-01
ISSN
1556-5068
Call Number
openalex: W2158197704
Extra
openalex: W2158197704 mag: 2158197704
Citation
Fafchamps, M., Udry, C., & Czukas, K. (1998). Drought and Saving in West Africa: Are Livestock a Buffer Stock? Social Science Research Network. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.71374