4.6 Article

The role of poultry transfers in diet diversity: A cluster randomized intent to treat analysis

Journal

FOOD POLICY
Volume 107, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodpol.2021.102212

Keywords

Poultry production; Diet diversity; Animal-source foods; Randomized controlled; Sub-Saharan Africa

Funding

  1. United States Agency for International Development (USAID) [AID-FFP-A-16-00008]
  2. PIM
  3. World Vision
  4. CARE
  5. ORDA

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Poultry is seen as a promising value chain for women due to its accessibility, low start-up costs, and nutritional benefits for children. An experimental intervention in rural Ethiopia found that the transfer of poultry packages increased egg consumption and sales among children and adult women.
Poultry has gained renewed attention as a promising value chain for women because it is an asset that is widely accessible to women, has low start-up costs, and provides a good source of nutritious animal-sourced foods for children in chicken meat and, especially, eggs. The current study presents evidence from an experimental intervention that randomly provided women either a poultry package transfer of vaccinated, improved-breed chickens and related inputs, or a cash grant of equivalent value within a sample of households participating in a social safety net program. These transfers were embedded in a set of intensive livelihood and enhanced nutrition interventions as part of a broader experiment in rural Ethiopia. We assess the impact of the poultry package transfer as well as the enhanced nutrition intervention on the consumption of eggs by both children and adult women. We find that the poultry transfer increased the frequency of egg consumption as well as the sale of eggs, falling between the extreme of an autarkic household and one in which production decisions are fully separable from consumption choices.

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