Value addition and farmers: Evidence from coffee in Ethiopia

dc.creatorTamru, Seneshaw
dc.creatorMinten, Bart
dc.date2023-01-30
dc.date2024-03-14T12:08:49Z
dc.date2024-03-14T12:08:49Z
dc.date.accessioned2026-06-27T15:46:31Z
dc.descriptionLocal value-addition in developing countries is often aimed at for upgrading of agricultural value chains, since it is assumed that doing so will make farmers better off. However, transmission of the added value through the value chain and constraints to adoption of value-adding activities by farmers are not well understood. We look at this issue in the case of coffee in Ethiopia–the country’s most important export product–and value-addition in the coffee value-chain through ‘washing’ coffee, which is done in wet mills. Washed coffee is sold internationally with a significant premium compared to ‘natural’ coffee but the share of washed coffee in Ethiopia’s coffee exports has stagnated. Relying on a unique primary large-scale dataset and a combination of qualitative and quantitative methods, we examine the reasons for this puzzle. The reasons seemingly are twofold. First, labor productivity in producing red cherries, which wet mills require, is lower than for natural coffee, reducing incentives for adoption, especially for those farmers with higher opportunity costs of labor. Second, only impatient, often smaller, farmers sell red cherries, as more patient farmers use the storable dried coffee cherries as a rewarding savings instrument, given the negative real deposit rates in formal savings institutions.
dc.identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/10568/140010
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/123456789/114258
dc.languageen
dc.publisherPublic Library of Science
dc.rightsOpen Access
dc.sourceTamru, Seneshaw; and Minten, Bart. 2023. Value addition and farmers: Evidence from coffee in Ethiopia. PLoS ONE 18(1): e0273121. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0273121
dc.subjectvalue chains
dc.subjectexports
dc.subjectfarmers
dc.subjectagriculture
dc.subjectlabour productivity
dc.subjectdeveloping countries
dc.subjectvalue added tax
dc.subjectcoffee
dc.titleValue addition and farmers: Evidence from coffee in Ethiopia
dc.typeJournal Article

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