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Abstract
This paper explores the implications of preference heterogeneity between wives
and husbands in nonresource-pooling rural West African households for the effect of crop
price changes on agricultural production, i.e., their supply response. A "semicooperative"
game-theoretic model of household decisionmaking, in which household
members make unilateral time and income allocation decisions and negotiate over who
controls these resources, is proposed. The model is used to show that Pareto efficiency in
both production and consumption do not hold. It is then employed to simulate the supply
response to cotton price increases accompanying agricultural sector liberalization in
Burkina Faso in the early 1980s. The simulated semi-cooperative model predicts the
cotton supply response of (monogamous) Burkinabé households to be 25 percent below
that which would ensue in households facing the same production constraints yet whose
members have identical preferences. The analysis indicates that in nonresource-pooling
agricultural households, preference heterogeneity can be expected to mute supply
response and may do so in a quantitatively significant manner. It illustrates how an
intrahousehold approach that allows for such heterogeneity and for disaggregation of
resource control by gender contributes to a better understanding of price effects.