Targeting rural development interventions: Empirical agent-based modeling in Nigerien villages

► Agent-based models (ABM) are relevant for development issues in developing countries. ► Many development actions fail in Sahel because their “markets” are overestimated. ► Social stratification & local biophysics determine a development action’s success. ► Our ABM show that poor savings &...

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Published in:Agricultural systems Vol. 104; no. 4; pp. 354 - 364
Main Authors: Saqalli, M., Gérard, B., Bielders, C.L., Defourny, P.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier Ltd 2011
[England]: Elsevier Science Ltd
Elsevier
Elsevier Masson
Series:Agricultural Systems
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Summary:► Agent-based models (ABM) are relevant for development issues in developing countries. ► Many development actions fail in Sahel because their “markets” are overestimated. ► Social stratification & local biophysics determine a development action’s success. ► Our ABM show that poor savings & livestock investment induce these actions’ failure. The aim of this article is to analyze the impact of development interventions on the population of three Nigerien villages that differ in terms of their agro-ecological, social and economic characteristics. This is performed by simulating the behavior of individuals in an agent-based modeling framework which integrates the village characteristics as well as the family internal rules that condition access to economic and production activities. Villagers are differentiated according to the social and agro-ecological constraints they are subjected to. Two development project interventions are simulated, assuming no land scarcity: increasing the availability of inorganic fertilizers for farmers and an inventory credit technique based on millet grain. Two distinct approaches were used to model the rationale of farmers’ decision making: gains or losses in economic value or gains or losses in within-village “reputation”. Our results show that village populations do not respond en masse to development interventions. Reputation has little effect on the population behavior and should be considered more as a local proxy for wealth amongst villagers, suggesting the monetization of these societies. Populations involve themselves in the two simulated development interventions only at sites where savings are possible. Some level of household food security and investment capacity is actually required to take part in the development interventions, which are largely conditioned by family manpower and size. As long as uncultivated land remains available in the village territory, support for inorganic fertilizers has little impact in the absence of any intensification process. Inventory credit engages a maximum of 25% of the population at the site with medium agro-ecological conditions. Therefore, both interventions should be viewed as a potential support tool for a limited part of the population capable of going beyond the survival level, but not as a generic poverty-alleviation panacea.
Bibliography:http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.agsy.2010.12.007
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ISSN:0308-521X
1873-2267
DOI:10.1016/j.agsy.2010.12.007