The generation and distribution of rural prosperity: insights from longitudinal survey data.

Lead Research Organisation: University of Sheffield
Department Name: Informatics Collaboratory for Social Sci

Abstract

Numerous African economies are growing rapidly and there are signs of prosperity in rural and urban regions. Cheaper technology (mobile phones, motorbikes and improved seed varieties) are reaching all but the remotest parts of many countries. However it is not always clear how inclusive and pro-poor this growth is. It is all too easy for the benefits of improved agricultural production, for example, to be concentrated on relatively few wealthy farmers and even to be instrumental in creating rural deprivation and landlessness. The greater returns the wealthy enjoy enable them to concentrate land and resources. Those without land become a rural proletariat, their livelihoods part of the general trend towards deagrarianisation, but in the absence of viable alternatives to agriculture they are not characterized by prosperity and long term prospects. In this context the key issue is what assets the rural poor can build up during periods of national economic growth. Growth which is accompanied by loss of assets (loss of farmland or livestock), or a failure to accrue new assets (such as help children earn educational qualifications) among the poor, either across households, or within households (according to their gender dynamics) will not be inclusive.

Panel data-sets can provide some insights into these dynamics. However these are few, they can suffer from attrition, and they remain the almost exclusive preserve of quantitative analysis and modeling. The insights of qualitative data have rarely been brought to bear on panel data. Their absence reduces the scope for hypothesis generation, and the in-depth and emic insights into poverty dynamics that qualitative data can provide. Conversely the flaws of qualitative data are their idiosyncrasy and their small scale and the difficulties they present for extrapolation. Their presence is not always insightful beyond their immediate case studies.

This study will make use of unusually good records of survey data in Tanzania to provide the insights of qualitative data across a sufficiently large area to overcome the normal failings of qualitative data and contribute constructively to the findings of quantitative panel data. Tanzania has unique records of foreign researchers active in the country through the records of the Commission for Science and Technology. The East Africana collection contains theses written by masters and doctoral students in Tanzania. These, together with the strong networks that exist of researchers in and from Tanzania, provide a unique resource from which to identify former surveys. We will revisit a number of communities in different parts of Tanzania for whom data on household assets were collected in the 1990s. We will revisit a sample of these households, re-survey their assets and then explore through a detailed qualitative interview the reasons behind the changes (or lack of changes) in their fortunes. These data will provide a rich and detailed picture into the village and household and sub-household level dynamics of poverty and poverty reduction.

These methods have already been piloted. The PI has, this year, revisited a community surveyed by Loiske (co-I) in the early 1990s. This work has proved that the method is possible, and that it produces valuable insights. We need, however, a stronger comparative framework and data from other regions for this to be a powerful tool. That is the purpose of the proposed research. This work will be important methodologically and substantively, providing a toolkit and database for other researchers to use, as well as insights into the nature and factors that lie behind inclusive growth.

Planned Impact

Who will benefit from this research, and how?
The ultimate beneficiaries will be Tanzanians, their families and communities. This is because the primary goal of this research is to gain better insights into the practices, processes and policies which promote pro-poor growth. In part this will be, indirectly and over time, through the policies that we hope to influence through our findings. We expect these findings to promote pro-poor growth policies. But we will not only rely on those routes. Our pilot study we have found that our practice of disseminating initial findings for discussion and comment were welcome, and allowed villagers to learn the main facts of what we had learnt in their communities straight-away, and, if necessary, to act upon them.

Second, within Tanzania, we expect policy-makers government and advisors in the donor community to benefit from our substantive findings as it identifies factors which will facilitate pro-poor growth. This will make the task of making evidence-based policy decisions easier. We also hope that project officers and staff in the NGO community will learn from this and better target funds as a result. They will also benefit from the database of surveys we establish and the toolkit we build up should they be in a position to extend the surveys.

Third government policy-makers, project officers and the donor community in the broader region will benefit from the substantive findings, as their Tanzanian colleagues. Likewise the broader region will benefit from the methodological insights and techniques we develop. For these may well be applicable to other countries which also suffer form a paucity of panel data but which have welcomed diverse social scientists carrying out disparate surveys.

Finally our methodological work and substantive findings will contribute to the broader community of development studies researchers trying to learn more about the nature and circumstances supporting pro-poor growth.


What will be done to ensure that they have the opportunity to benefit from this activity?
We have several means of communicating with our potential beneficiaries - and in all cases our approach here is to build relationships with stakeholders. A significant proportion of staff time in the last year (and about 15% of the project budget overall) will be committed to this engagement.

At the village level we will introduce our work in public meetings when we begin, and communicate and discuss findings again in further public meetings with elders in order that they can learn our initial findings quickly and comment upon them.

At the national and international level we will hold meetings of stakeholders in government, the NGO community and the donor community in order to maximize awareness about this research and engagement with it. These are planned yearly. We have already set up the research website for this project (longtermlivelihoodchangeintanzania.wordpress.com/), and will build on it as a means of engaging stakeholders, releasing early findings, policy briefs and other project news.

Ultimately, the litmus test of the rigour of our findings will be the peer-reviewed journal papers which we will seek in the best journals of our disciplines, and which will form the backbone of the subsequent policy engagement that we will seek beyond the life of the project.
 
Title Exhibition of Paintings: Livelihood Change in Tanzania, the long view. 
Description We organised an exhibition of portaits of Tanzanians that was displayed at the Winter Gardens in Tanzania accompanied by text which conveyed some of the findings of the project. The paintings were on show for a week during the festival of Social Sciences. 
Type Of Art Artistic/Creative Exhibition 
Year Produced 2017 
Impact No specific impacts to mention. This was about raising awarenss. 
 
Description Our project attempts to understand change rural societies in data-poor contexts where the normal sources are unavailable. We work in Tanzania, where there has been strong economic growth for about 30 years, but where the impact of that growth on rural economies and societies is uncertain. The fear is that the benefits of growth have been poorly shared, but the means of determining whether they are or not is disputed. The central problem is that we don't have many studies of communities and how they have changed over the last 30 years.

We bring new sorts of data to bear on this debate. We have identified a series of communities which were surveyed in the 1990s onwards. We have contacted the original researchers who conducted those studies and with them revisited the original communities and the same families who took part in the first survey. We have revisted over 20 such villages in this way.

Our work is also different because of what we collect data about. Data on wealth and poverty are commonly given in the form of poverty line data which are built on consumption baskets. We use local definitions of wealth and poverty which are built around assets.

Our findings are:

1. Methodological. This was high risk research as it was not clear whether the method was possible. We have demonstrated that it can be but we have also written an conceptual paper which examines the risks and assumptions of undertaking this work.

2. On the meaning of wealth in Tanzania. As part of the research process we conduct focus group discussions with men and women separately as to the meaning of wealth in the different sites. Using a sub-sample of 17 villages from 7 regions we have compared what it means to be rich and poor in these different locations. This process has revealed some common threads, but also important differences which will make generalised wealth indices hard to construct, especially across urban and rural areas.

3. On changing wealth profiles. Most of the families and communities that we have revisited are wealthier in terms of their assets. They do not always feel better off, but there has been some fairly significant investments into houses, education, farm equipment and so on.

4. On the drivers of change. The stories that we can tell across the study sites are marked by their divergence. It is hard to make one narrative out of it all. We can come up with a framework that provides a set of common factors. But the paths to prosperity and poverty through these factors are multiple and varied. While many families in many locations are better off because of the crops they are growing, which crops are entailed varies from place to place. There are also a host of different environmental and social context factors at work which also vary from place to place. This means that it is currently hard to specify policy recommendations given context matters so much.
Exploitation Route Our findings are relevant for people who are attempting to measure wealth and poverty in poor rural societies. They are relevant for people who are trying to understand better poverty dynamics in rural areas.
Sectors Agriculture, Food and Drink,Government, Democracy and Justice,Other

URL http://livelihoodchangeta.wixsite.com/tanzania/project-summary
 
Description We held three stakeholder meetings in Dar es Salaam to which we invited a wide variety of participants from civil society, government, multilaterals and donors. These were at the launch of the project, at the end of the second year and towards the end of the third. We were able to leverage further funds from the University of Sheffield and to collaborate with other DEGRP projects in order to scale up these workshops. We started holding feedback meetings early (year 2) when it became apparent that our findings (more wealth than we anticipated in rural areas in terms of assets) were unexpected and we sought advice as to how and to whom to communicate those results. Those meetings lead to further meetings between Dan Brockington and staff at the National Bureau of Statistics in Dodoma where we talked about their implications for the measurement of poverty and the NBS' ongoing efforts to try to improve the measurement of poverty multi-dimensionally. At present we have a draft memorandum of understanding, drawn up at the request of NBS staff which will form the basis of further collaborations and follow up from this research. It is still too early to say what has changed as a result of this work. We are at the very earlist phase of the impact path.
First Year Of Impact 2018
Sector Government, Democracy and Justice
Impact Types Societal

 
Description Stakeholder workshop in Dar es Saslaam 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Policymakers/politicians
Results and Impact We joined with two other projects supported by the funder who are also working in Tanzania and invited government, multilaterals, doors and civil society organisations to hear early findings. We did this because they were concordant and surprising and we wanted to see what the reception they might get when the projects close. The feedback was useful and will shape the next final end of project meeting that we will hold in April. For that meeting, and the subsequent meeting coming up we have raised further funds from the ODI and the University of Sheffield.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2017