Showing posts with label Nicaragua. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nicaragua. Show all posts

Apr 8, 2013

Nicaragua paper of the day (electrification)

This paper shows that rural electrification is associated with big changes in the time use of men and women in Nicaragua, even in the absence of labor-saving appliances. Electricity is shown to increase the propensity of rural Nicaraguan women to work outside the home by about 23%, but to have no impact on male employment. These findings suggest significant potential benefits to rural electrification that are not generally captured in cost–benefit analyses, such as greater women’s earnings and reduced deforestation.
That is from this paper by Grogan & Sadanand (March 2013). A draft (May 2012) is here

From the conclusions:
There is a strong negative association between electricity in the household and time spent in family agricultural activities or in firewood collection. P. 18.

Jan 4, 2012

Wal-mart and farmer economies in Nicaragua

This is a 2010 paper that looks at the effects of big retail, sucha as Wal-mart, on small farmer economies in Nicaragua - quite interesting:
In Nicaragua and elsewhere in Central America, small-scale farmers are weighing the risks of entering into contracts with supermarket chains. We use unique data on negotiated prices from Nicaraguan farm cooperatives supplying supermarkets to study the impact of supply agreements on producers’ mean output prices and price stability. We find that prices paid by the domestic retail chain approximate the traditional market in mean and variance. In contrast, we find that mean prices paid by Wal-mart are significantly lower than the traditional market but that Wal-Mart systematically reduces price volatility compared with the traditional market. We find some evidence, however, that farmers may be paying too much for this contractual insurance against price variation.
I have reported on other Wal-mart effects before. One should see these effects through "general equilibrium," meaning to take into account all the possible effects in all the different sectors through time - easier to say than it is to do.