Aid for food security: does it work?
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to contribute to existing literature by examining whether development aid has any measurable impact on food security, whether the impact is conditioned on the quality of governance and whether it differs based on the type of aid provided.
Design/methodology/approach
Panel-data analysis of 85 developing countries between 1994 and 2011, using generalized method of moments and two-stage least squares estimators.
Findings
The paper finds that aid in general has a small positive impact on food security; that multilateral aid, grants and social and economic aid have a positive effect on food security in their own right, and that bilateral aid, loans and agricultural aid are more conditioned on the quality of governance that other aid.
Research limitations/implications
The main limitations rest with the imperfect nature of cross-country data on food security and governance, which I have tried to overcome through a series of robustness tests.
Practical implications
The findings suggest that aid, despite its many deficiencies, can play a positive role in strengthening food security. Furthermore, they indicate that concessional loans, bilateral aid and agricultural aid are likely to foster food security only in countries with better governance.
Originality/value
The paper constitutes a novel contribution to existing literature because it is one of the first to use cross-country data to explore the impact of aid on food security and because it utilizes a relatively complex aid categorization, which allows its conclusions to be more nuanced.
Keywords
Citation
Petrikova, I. (2015), "Aid for food security: does it work?", International Journal of Development Issues, Vol. 14 No. 1, pp. 41-59. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJDI-07-2014-0058
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2015, Emerald Group Publishing Limited