Food aid's effect on individual agricultural labor: the case of Bangladesh after the 1998 flood

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Food aid's effect on individual agricultural labor: the case of Bangladesh after the 1998 flood

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Title: Food aid's effect on individual agricultural labor: the case of Bangladesh after the 1998 flood
Author: Fenley, Brandon
Abstract: Food aid is accused of causing labor disincentives, yet little empirical evidence tests this theory. In this paper, I use a panel survey from Bangladesh after the 1998 flood to investigate whether in-kind food aid created agricultural labor disincentives among individuals. Checking the robustness of my results and correcting for disadvantages associated with each model used, I employ three different models. I find that food aid had no effect in a fixed effects model; had a positive association six months after the flood in a tobit model; and, in OLS regressions, had a negative association immediately after the flood and a positive association six months after the flood. On the basis of these findings, I recommend that food aid should be used as Barrett and Maxwell (2005) suggest, in short-term food emergencies with markets unresponsive to demand. When well targeted, food aid mitigates possible labor disincentives and can be a safety net for disaster victims. More research is needed to determine the specific factors that hindered labor disincentives and caused the positive labor effect.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1961/4171
Date: 2007-04-18


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