Type | Working Paper |
Title | The impact of road access on the decision to enter the marketplace: A look at rural Ugandan households. |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2015 |
Abstract | Agriculture production, especially as done by small scale households, is an enterprise fraught with high transaction costs. The remoteness of production and the low value to weight ratios of both outputs and inputs can cause large price bands within which neither buying nor selling is beneficial to the household and a state of autarky exists. Increasing market participation by agricultural households has potential to help the individual households as well as the society as a whole. Easing the burden of transportation is one possible avenue to spur market participation. This paper estimates the impact of an expansion of public infrastructure on rural agricultural households’ decision to sell to the market. Specifically, we ask whether increased access to a reliable road network increases the likelihood of participating in the output market. To do this we use panel data from Uganda spanning from 2009 to 2012 which coincides with a large investment in Ugandan roads. We employ a difference-in-difference model to examine the impact of gaining access to an all-season road as well as test the strength of various distances for claiming road access. |
» | Uganda - National Panel Survey 2005-2009 |