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Abstract
This paper is based on community-level data from 188 villages in rural Madagascar.
The survey that was conducted in 1997 made extensive use of long-term recall questions
ascertaining changes during the past 10 years in rice yields, wages, population, soil
fertility, and other pertinent variables of rural development. We find that—on average for
all villages—the yields of irrigated rice, the major food crop, and real agricultural wages
declined, while the communities expanded their upland area by nearly a quarter and
experienced deteriorating fertility of their upland soils. These patterns are consistent with
the wide-held belief that rural areas in Madagascar have witnessed increased poverty,
economic stagnation, and a continued degradation of the natural resources.
Yet, the five agroecological regions in our sample exhibit quite different patterns of
rural development, and at least one of them has experienced increases in yields and wages.
From a policy perspective, it is important to better understand the driving forces of such
diverse rural change. The overall decline in rural wages over the past 10 years is expected
to have contributed to increased poverty, food insecurity and malnutrition in rural areas, as
rural wage laborers traditionally belong to the poorest of the poor in Madagascar. In this
paper, we present an econometric analysis of the determinants of and interdependencies
between the three components of sustainable development: economic growth,
environmental sustainability, and poverty alleviation. We develop a two-stage, least-squares fixed-effect model that attempts to explain
rice yields, rural migration and wages, endogenous placement of microfinance institutions,
and the observed change in upland and soil fertility, with exogenous and policy variables,
such as the communities' social capital, their exposure to weather risks and their access to
commodity and financial markets and to public services. The paper concludes with a
number of implications for policy and future research.