Dairy Producers’ Willingness to pay for advisory service in Debrezeit milkshed: Implications for Pluralistic Dairy Service Delivery Systems in Ethiopia
Presentation by Anteneh Girma, Mohamadou Fadiga & Ranjitha Puskur for the 5th All Africa Conference on Animal Agriculture and the 18th Annual Meeting of the Ethiopian Society of Animal Production (ESAP), Addis Ababa, October 25-28, 2010.
Elements of the Second Growth and Transformation Plan related to small rumina...
Ähnlich wie Dairy Producers’ Willingness to pay for advisory service in Debrezeit milkshed: Implications for Pluralistic Dairy Service Delivery Systems in Ethiopia
Approaches to pro-poor livestock market developmentILRI
Ähnlich wie Dairy Producers’ Willingness to pay for advisory service in Debrezeit milkshed: Implications for Pluralistic Dairy Service Delivery Systems in Ethiopia (20)
Apidays New York 2024 - Passkeys: Developing APIs to enable passwordless auth...
Dairy Producers’ Willingness to pay for advisory service in Debrezeit milkshed: Implications for Pluralistic Dairy Service Delivery Systems in Ethiopia
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14. Methods and Procedures … Fit Adapted : Birner et a1., 2006: Framework for Designing & Analyzing Pluralistic Agricultural Advisory Service
15. Methods and Procedures … Adapted from: Hagmann, Connolly, Ficarelli, and Ramaru, 2002. The Service Delivery Framework Pluralistic Dairy Service Delivery System Fiscal Arrangements for Decentralized Service Provision Quality Management Assurance of Service Provision Service Providers Types ( Pluralistic), Willingness to pay for services Dairy producers’ ability and willingnes s to pay Production System Market orientation and a ccess to dairy related services P latform Linkage and partnership b/n service providers and Learning alliance Effective Demand Quality of demand, Articulation of demand and accountability claim by the clients Policy Development and Legislation for services Capacity & management Service Providers staff capacity, motivation, and quality of service
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
Hinweis der Redaktion
Revitalization Demand-driven Extension Participatory Bottom-up planning Empowerment of farmers Decentralization Moving responsibility and/or funding to local levels such as districts. Decentralization can take many forms, such as deconcentration (accountability remains within the Department of Agriculture but to lower level), devolution to local governments (accountability to locally elected governments), or delegation to semi-autonomous services. Pro: believed to facilitate client participation in planning, co-financing, implementing, and evaluating programs. It is thought to lead to greater accountability , efficiency Con: capacity at the local level Pure privatization is the full transfer of ownership (usually by sale) from government to a private entity. Fee for Service : The provision of extension services for a cost; not for free. This type can be provided by government, non-government, or private organizations. Cost-sharing: When users of extension pay at least a partial amount of the cost. Contracting : One entity funds and one entity provides extension services In or out Leads to pluralism One organization contracts with another to perform extension functions. Contracting in is when the government is providing extension services for another group such as an NGO or a private organization; contracting out is when the government hires another organization to do extension for them. Obviously these types of arrangements lead to pluralism, where you have multiple extension providers Classic case- government agents with no funds- NGO brings funds & uses the government HR existing Scholars recommendation on pluralistic service delivery: Omamo et al ., 2002; Belay Simane., 2004; Mathewos and Chandargi, 2004; Berhanu et al ., 2006a; Habemariam K., 2005; Puskur and Hagmann, 2006; World Bank, 2006 and Byerlee et al ., 2007
There exists market oriented agricultural production Well developed infrastructures and institutional arrangements Growing number of private farms and agro processing industries Have good access to market and agricultural services Crop and livestock are well integrated Emergence of public private partnership to support the market orientation
Hypothetical market scenario was presented in two formats , distributed randomly and the result tested for possible existence of strategic biases in the WTP responses