2017
DOI: 10.1108/s1574-871520170000017015
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The Coffee-Food Security Interface for Subsistence Households in Jimma Zone Ethiopia

Abstract: We investigate food security in three villages in rural Ethiopia for smallholder farmers growing staple crops and coffee, and facing variable coffee and commercial input prices. The surveys were conducted in the coffee growing region of Oromia ( Jimma Zone). Commercial input use among these smallholders remains sporadic, although most farmers use them occasionally. A major impediment to systematic usage is the price of these inputs. Policies lowering the unit cost and increasing the local availability of comme… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Empirical work by Mendez et al, 2 Bacon et al, 3 Fujaska, 4 Gross, 5 and Morris et al 6 confirm that more than 50% of farmers are not in a position to meet their basic food needs in the coffee-growing regions of some Latin American countries, including Nicaragua, Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, and the Dominican Republic. Beghin and Teshome 7 calculated that 43% of coffee-growing households experience food insecurity in Southwest Ethiopia.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Empirical work by Mendez et al, 2 Bacon et al, 3 Fujaska, 4 Gross, 5 and Morris et al 6 confirm that more than 50% of farmers are not in a position to meet their basic food needs in the coffee-growing regions of some Latin American countries, including Nicaragua, Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, and the Dominican Republic. Beghin and Teshome 7 calculated that 43% of coffee-growing households experience food insecurity in Southwest Ethiopia.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similarly, most coffee farmers faced a daily struggle to get sufficient income and to feed their families (Kuma et al, 2019). Particularly, coffee price volatility affects coffee farmers' food security (Beghin and Teshome, 2017). Lack of information on the level of food security in coffee-growing areas hinders policymakers to design interventions for improving food security.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The fifth, access, is mostly determined by external market forces, where householders have limited leverage. For agroforestry systems whose main component has a commercial value, fallback local food sourcing may be essential to bridge periods of unfavorable terms of trade (farmgate prices), as is the case with coffee in southern Ethiopia (Beghin and Teshome, 2016;Kuma et al, 2016;Shumeta and D'Haese, 2018).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%