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An Investigation Of Yam Ingestion Customs In Ghanaian Urban Communities  


Abstract Category: Accounts and Economics
Course / Degree: Doctor of Philosophy, Economics
Institution / University: Atlantic International University, United States
Published in: 2014


Dissertation Abstract / Summary:

This study examined the major factors that drive changes in yam consumption patterns across income groups, seasons and urban centers in Ghana to inform food policy formulation. The study, among other things, sought to provide evidence on whether or not yam had become a luxury food commodity in Ghanaian urban communities.
Special attention was also given to the question of whether household income allocation between males and females had any significant effect on yam consumption. The study estimated yam expenditure elasticities for the pooled/aggregate data and the four different urban centers across different income groups to test Engel's law.
Results of the study showed that majority (>80%) of yam consumers in Ghanaian urban communities preferred white yam to yellow and water yams, and the most important reason for their preference was taste. Boiled yam (ampesi) was the most preferred yam product in Ghanaian urban centers followed by pounded yam (fufu). Rice was identified as the most important substitute for yam in urban communities. In a typical Ghanaian urban center, household food budget formed about 51% of the total household budget.
Yam constituted about 12% of household at-home food budget and 13% of its away-from-home food budget. The shares of food budget that households allocated to yam generally increased during the peak harvest season and dropped during lean season across all urban centers in Ghana. Yam expenditure elasticity for the pooled sample was found to be inelastic (0.76), suggesting that yam is a basic food commodity in a typical Ghanaian urban center. Yam expenditure elasticity was lowest for Tamale (0.64), a less urbanized center, and highest for Accra (1.01), a more urbanized centre.
However, in each particular urban center, Engel's law was affirmed; yam expenditure elasticity was higher for low-income households and lower for high-income households. Yam expenditure elasticity was found to vary across seasons; yam was expenditure elastic during the lean season and expenditure inelastic during the harvest season.
Women's share of household income was found to be positively related to household yam budget share. Evidence from this study did not support the hypothesis of economies of household size with respect to household yam budget share when the pooled data was used for analysis.
However, the hypothesis of economies of household size was supported in the seasonal consumption analysis where households were found to enjoy economies of size during the relatively yam abundant period of August to December and diseconomies of size during the lean season.

The study showed that yam budget share was down-price elastic but expenditure inelastic. Urban households were more responsive to changes in yam prices than changes in household income, implying that the substitution effect is stronger than the income effect.

The high price elasticity for yam budget share stresses the importance of food price changes for households, and it is important that households' reactions are taken into account in the development of comprehensive agricultural and food policies in Ghana.
Based on the findings of the study, recommendations have been made to help improve the Ghanaian yam sector and household food security in urban centers.


Dissertation Keywords/Search Tags:
Investigation of Yaw Cosumption

This Dissertation Abstract may be cited as follows:
Adesini, A. A. (1978): "Structural patterns and intertemporal comparison of household food expenditure in an African Semi-urban center; A case study of Ile-Ife, Nigeria": African Journal of Agricultural Sciences, volume 2: 11-16.
Ahmed N., M. Brzozowski, and T. F. Crossley (2005): Measurement errors in recall food expenditure data, QSEP Research Report No. 396. Research Institute for Quantitative Studies in Economics and Population (QSEP), McMaster University, Canada.
Agbola, F. W (2003). Estimation of food demand patterns in South Africa based on a survey of households, Journal of Agricultural and Applied Economics, 35 (3): 662 - 670.
Alderman, Harold (1986). The effect offood price and income changes on the acquisition offood by low-income households, International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington D.C.
ANB-BIA SUPPLEMENT (2003): Improving yam production technology in West Africa, Weekly news, Issue/Edition No. 463, 2003.
Asenso-Okyere W.K., F.A. Asante and M. Nube (1997): "Determinants of health & nutritional status of children in Ghana" - In Sustainable Food Security in W/Africa; Klunder Academic publishers, pp. 198-200.
Asuming-Brempong, S. (1994). Yam for foreign exchange: potentials and prospects in Ghana; ISHS Acta Horticulture 380, Symposium on tropical root crops in a developing economy, November 1994; Edited by F. Ofori and S.K Hahn.
Asumugha, G.N., Njoku, M.E., Asumugha, V.U., Tokula, M. and Nwosu, K.I. (2009). Consumption Patterns for Yam Products among Urban Households in Nigeria; In: Securing Livelihoods through Yams, Nkamleu, Annang and Bacco (Editors); Proceedings of a Technical Workshop on Progress in Yam Research for Development in West and Central Africa held in Accra, Ghana, 11-13 September, 2007, International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA), 2009.
Babaleye, T. (2005): Improving livelihood through yam production systems, an IITA Publication, International Institute of Tropical Agriculture, Ibadan, Nigeria.
Balcombe, K. G. and J. R. Davids (1996). An application of cointegration theory in the estimation of the Almost Ideal Demand System for food consumption in Bulgaria, Agricultural Economics 76: 781 - 793.


Submission Details: Dissertation Abstract submitted by Dr. David Ackah from Ghana on 06-Dec-2014 14:46.
Abstract has been viewed 1496 times (since 7 Mar 2010).

Dr. David Ackah Contact Details: Email: drdavidackah@gmail.com Phone: +233244218418



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