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Levelling the playing field for the rural poor through inclusive agricultural value chains / Annette O. Pelkmans-Balaoing.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: UP CIDS discussion paper series ; 2019-01. Program on escaping the middle-income trap: chains for change. Description: 26 pages illustrations 23 cmISSN:
  • 2619-7448
Subject(s): Online resources: Abstract: Agricultural value chains are non-inclusive due to the breakdown of institutions and markets for goods and services, especially those most needed by the poor. The highest transaction costs are experienced by smallholders at the end of the value chain where the extent of market failures is typically most severe. Lead firms and other powerful players in the value chain have the capacity to influence the governance and the outcome of value chains for smallholders, potentially making them powerful forces for inclusion. Their decision to directly address market and institutional failures instead of merely ‘purchasing’ efficiency changes the whole dynamics of the value chain. The typical trickle-down growth mindset where efficiency is given priority over equity is reversed, thereby initiating the build-up of social investments for smallholders. This complementarity of private, public, and non-profit investments through sectoral partnerships is thus one of the basic pillars of inclusive value chains. This paper examines the transitions from non-inclusive to inclusive value chains and culls several lessons from three cases of inclusive business models in agricultural chains in the Philippines.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Vol info Status Date due Barcode
Book Book University Library Filipiniana Circulating HD 9016 P52 P44 2019 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1,2019 Available 3UPML00039001

Includes bibliographical references (pages 25-26)

Agricultural value chains are non-inclusive due to the breakdown of institutions and markets
for goods and services, especially those most needed by the poor. The highest transaction costs
are experienced by smallholders at the end of the value chain where the extent of market failures
is typically most severe. Lead firms and other powerful players in the value chain have the
capacity to influence the governance and the outcome of value chains for smallholders, potentially
making them powerful forces for inclusion. Their decision to directly address market and
institutional failures instead of merely ‘purchasing’ efficiency changes the whole dynamics of the
value chain. The typical trickle-down growth mindset where efficiency is given priority over
equity is reversed, thereby initiating the build-up of social investments for smallholders. This
complementarity of private, public, and non-profit investments through sectoral partnerships is
thus one of the basic pillars of inclusive value chains. This paper examines the transitions from
non-inclusive to inclusive value chains and culls several lessons from three cases of inclusive
business models in agricultural chains in the Philippines.

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