combine@alvar.ug

Microcredit and Food Security: Evidence from Rural Households in Uganda

Microcredit and Food Security: Evidence from Rural Households in Uganda

Show simple record

dc.contributor.author Faith M. Namayengo
dc.contributor.author Gerrit Antonides
dc.contributor.author Francesco Cecchi
dc.date.accessioned 2021-01-10T11:55:35Z
dc.date.available 2021-01-10T11:55:35Z
dc.date.issued 2018
dc.identifier.issn 09638024
dc.identifier.issn 14643723
dc.identifier.uri https://combine.alvar.ug/handle/1/48981
dc.description.abstract This study investigates the effect of participation into a microcredit program on household food security parameters of female borrowers in a rural setting in Uganda. We explore the modes of food acquisition, dietary diversity, caloric and protein intake, and qualitative food insecurity measures for different categories of respondents. We conduct a cross-sectional analysis comparing old clients to newly registered first time borrowers. Next, we compare first time borrowers and non-borrowers using a panel design. While the cross-sectional analysis allows the comparison of women that similarly self-selected into borrowing, the panel analysis complements by providing insights into changes of food security parameters. In both cases, we use Kernel matching, or difference-in-difference with Kernel matching, to control for potential bias in observables, and perform a sensitivity analysis with respect to unobservables using Rosenbaum bounds as well as an individual fixed effects panel analysis. Results show a decline in food security following the uptake of microcredit. In particular, the analysis reveals robustly lower dietary diversity among long-time borrowers than new borrowers, and larger reductions in dietary diversity scores among new borrowers, after 1 year, compared to controls. The reduction in dietary diversity was traced to a reduction in animal-source food, fruit and sugar intake. We find indicative evidence that this is partly explained by a shift from own production to reliance on food purchase by households. Other household members relegating the burden of food provision to women after borrowing may also help explain the observed result.
dc.publisher Oxford University Press (OUP)
dc.relation.ispartof Journal of African Economies
dc.title Microcredit and Food Security: Evidence from Rural Households in Uganda
dc.type journal article
dc.identifier.doi 10.1093/jae/ejx043
dc.identifier.mag 2794279317
dc.identifier.lens 009-892-530-609-782
dc.identifier.volume 27
dc.identifier.issue 4
dc.identifier.spage 457
dc.identifier.epage 482
dc.subject.lens-fields Agriculture
dc.subject.lens-fields Subsistence agriculture
dc.subject.lens-fields Economics
dc.subject.lens-fields Panel design
dc.subject.lens-fields Dietary diversity
dc.subject.lens-fields Protein intake
dc.subject.lens-fields Demographic economics
dc.subject.lens-fields Food security
dc.subject.lens-fields Panel analysis
dc.subject.lens-fields Panel data


This record appears in the collections of the following institution(s)

Show simple record

Search Entire Database


Browse

My Account