Forest Ecosystem Resources for Alleviating Household Poverty in Eastern Mau, Kenya
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.2200/aerj.v3i2.176Keywords:
Forests, Ecosystem, Poverty, Livelihoods, Sustainability, Mau, KenyaAbstract
Forest ecosystem resources are critical to forest-fringe rural households who depend on it to sustain their livelihood outcome like alleviating household poverty. The importance of forest ecosystem resources has long been recognized but has seldom been quantified and analyzed. In this paper, we examine distributional and poverty effects of forest ecosystem resource extraction among households living along forest peripheries in Eastern Mau forest reserve. Primary data was collected from forest-fringe rural households living four kilometers from the forest margin. This study site was purposively selected to be within six-administrative locations that straddle Molo and Njoro sub-counties. Semi-structured questionnaire survey instruments and interviews were used to generate the data. The main objective of the study was to determine the effect of forest-based income in poverty alleviation on forest-fringe rural households. The marginal impact of forest-based income on total household income was computed to analyze the effect of forest-based income on household poverty. Similarly, Foster-Greer-Thorbecke (FGT (α)) poverty indices were used to decompose diverse household income components. The model was used to determine the impact of each household income component on (FGT (α)) poverty indices. The (FGT (α)) poverty indices revealed the marginal impact of forest-based income on household headcount poverty (FGT (α=0)) which reduced from 0.497 to 0.421, indicating a reduction in measured household poverty by 15.86%. Also, forest ecosystem resources contribute approximately 12% to total household income. The paper concludes that forest ecosystem resources have a significant role in alleviating household poverty. As such, it recommends to state-actors to formulate governance structures and policies that concomitantly enhance efficient conservation and management of forest ecosystem resources while embedding sustainable household livelihood outcomes.
References
Alkire, S., Roche, J. M., Ballon, P., Foster, J., Santos, M. E. & Seth, S. (2015). Multidimensional poverty measurement and analysis. USA: Oxford University Press.
Arnold, M. (1998). Assessing the potential of forest product activities to contribute to rural incomes in Africa. ODI, Natural Resource Perspectives, No. 37, 4.
Babulo, B., Muys, B., Nega, F., Tollens, E., Nyssen, J., Deckers, J. & Mathijs, E. (2008). Household livelihood strategies and forest dependence in the highlands of Tigray, Northern Ethiopia. Agricultural Systems, 98(2), 147–155.
Babulo, B., Muys, B., Nega, F., Tollens, E., Nyssen, J., Deckers, J. & Mathijs, E. (2009). The economic contribution of forest resource use to rural livelihoods in Tigray, Northern Ethiopia. Forest Policy and Economics, 11(2), 109–117.
Barbier, E. B. (2010). Poverty, development and environment. Environment and Development Economics, 15(6), 635–660.
Bassioni, H. A., Price, A. D. & Hassan, T. M. (2003). The development of a comprehensive framework for measuring business performance in construction. In Proceedings of 2003 1st Scottish conference for Postgraduate Researchers of the Built and Natural Environment (PRoBE 2003), Glasgow, Great Britain, 18-19 November 2003, pp.447-456.
Biyase, M. & Zwane, T. (2018). An Empirical Analysis of the Determinants of poverty and household welfare in South Africa. The Journal of Developing Areas, 52(1), 115–130.
Boafo, Y. A., Saito, O., Jasaw, G. S., Otsuki, K. & Takeuchi, K. (2016). Provisioning ecosystem services-sharing as a coping and adaptation strategy among rural communities in Ghana’s semi-arid ecosystem. Ecosystem Services, 19, 92–102.
Bouda, H., Savadogo, P., Tiveau, D. & Ouedraogo, B. (2011). State, forest and community: Challenges of democratically decentralizing forest management in the Centre‐West Region of Burkina Faso. Sustainable Development, 19(4), 275–288.
Brocklesby, M. A., & Fisher, E. (2003). Community development in sustainable livelihoods approaches–an introduction. Community Development Journal, 38(3), 185–198.
Brown, D. R. & Brown, D. R. (2006). Livelihood strategies in the rural Kenyan highlands. Cornell University.
Burger, R. P., Klasen, S. & Zoch, A. (2016). Estimating income mobility when income is measured with error: The case of South Africa. Economic Research Southern Africa Working Paper, 607.
Burtraw, D. & Woerman, M. (2013). Economic ideas for a complex climate policy regime. Energy Economics, 40, S24–S31.
Cavendish, W. & Campbell, B. (2008). Poverty, environmental income and rural inequality: A case study from Zimbabwe. Managing the Miombo Woodlands of Southern Africa: Policies, Incentives and Options for the Rural Poor. Washington, DC: World Bank.
Cavendish, W. (2000). Empirical regularities in the poverty-environment relationship of rural households: Evidence from Zimbabwe. World Development, 28(11), 1979–2003.
Chitiga-Mabugu, M., Mupela, E., Ngwenya, P. & Zikhali, P. (2016). Inequality, poverty and the state: The case of South Africa 2006-2011.
Costanza, R., de Groot, R., Sutton, P., van der Ploeg, S., Anderson, S. J., Kubiszewski, I. & Turner, R. K. (2014). Changes in the global value of ecosystem services. Global Environmental Change, 26, 152–158.
Das, N. & Sarker, D. (2008). Distributional aspect of forest income: A study on JFM and non-JFM Forest Dependent Households.
Ebenezer, M. & Abbyssinia, M. (2018). Livelihood Diversification and Its Effect on Household Poverty in Eastern Cape Province, South Africa. The Journal of Developing Areas, 52(1), 235–249.
Ezzat, A. M. & Ezzat, A. M. (2018). Trade Openness: An Effective tool for Poverty Alleviation or an Instrument for Increasing Poverty Severity? Presented at the Economic Research Forum Working Papers.
Farinola, L., Famuyide, O., Nosiru, M. & Ogunsola, A. (2014). Survey of Identified Non Timber Forest Products and Their Role in the Rural Livelihood of Inhabitants of Omo Forest Reserve, Ogun State. International Journal of Agriculture and Forestry, 4(4), 317–324.
Ferreira, F. H., Chen, S., Dabalen, A., Dikhanov, Y., Hamadeh, N., Jolliffe, D., … Sangraula, P. (2015). A global count of the extreme poor in 2012. Policy Research Working Paper, 7432.
Fisher, M. (2004). Household welfare and forest dependence in Southern Malawi. Environment and Development Economics, 9(2), 135–154.
Foster, J. E. & Shorrocks, A. F. (1988). Poverty orderings. Econometrica: Journal of the Econometric Society, 173–177.
Foster, J., Greer, J. & Thorbecke, E. (1984). A class of decomposable poverty measures. Econometrica: Journal of the Econometric Society, 761–766.
Gecho, Y., Ayele, G., Lemma, T. & Alemu, D. (2014). Rural household livelihood strategies: Options and determinants in the case of Wolaita Zone, Southern Ethiopia. Social Sciences, 3(3), 92.
Gibson, J. (2016). Poverty measurement: We know less than policy makers realize. Asia & the Pacific Policy Studies, 3(3), 430–442.
Grandval, S. & Vergnaud, S. (2006). Interrelationships among business units as a way to leverage resources.
Greer, J. & Thorbecke, E. (1986). Food poverty profile applied to Kenyan smallholders. Economic Development and Cultural Change, 35(1), 115–141.
Hermans-Neumann, K., Gerstner, K., Geijzendorffer, I. R., Herold, M., Seppelt, R. & Wunder, S. (2016). Why do forest products become less available? A pan-tropical comparison of drivers of forest-resource degradation. Environmental Research Letters, 11(12), 125010.
Hojas-Gascon, L., Cerutti, P. O., Eva, H., Nasi, R. & Martius, C. (2015). Monitoring deforestation and forest degradation in the context of REDD+: Lessons from Tanzania (124). CIFOR.
Illukpitiya, P. & Gopalakrishnan, C. (2015). Rural households’ decision-making in fuelwood collection. A case study of natural forest margins in the tropics. Journal of Natural Resources Policy Research, 7(2–3), 125–138.
Illukpitiya, P. & Yanagida, J. F. (2010). Farming vs forests: Trade-off between agriculture and the extraction of non-timber forest products. Ecological Economics, 69(10), 1952–1963.
Ingram, V. J. (2014). Win-wins in forest product value chains? How governance impacts the sustainability of livelihoods based on non-timber forest products from Cameroon.
Jagger, P., Luckert, M. K., Banana, A. & Bahati, J. (2012). Asking questions to understand rural livelihoods: Comparing disaggregated vs. Aggregated approaches to household livelihood questionnaires. World Development, 40(9), 1810–1823.
Jodha, N. S. (1990). Rural common property resources: Contributions and crisis. Economic and Political Weekly, A65–A78.
Jolliffe, D., & Prydz, E. B. (2017). Societal poverty: A relative and relevant measure. The World Bank.
Kamanga, P., Vedeld, P. & Sjaastad, E. (2009). Forest incomes and rural livelihoods in Chiradzulu District, Malawi. Ecological Economics, 68(3), 613–624.
Keenan, R. J., Reams, G. A., Achard, F., de Freitas, J. V., Grainger, A. & Lindquist, E. (2015). Dynamics of global forest area: Results from the FAO Global Forest Resources Assessment 2015. Forest Ecology and Management, 352, 9–20.
Kiplagat, A. K., Mburu, J. & Mugendi, D. N. (2010). Assessing Tropical Forests’ Contribution to Local Communities Livelihoods Using Forest Product Substitutes: A Case Study. International Journal of Ecological Economics and StatisticsTM, 17(P10), 51–65.
Kumar, B. (2019). Remittances, Poverty and Welfare: Evidence from Cumilla, Bangladesh. American Journal of Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery, 4(1), 46–52.
Lambin, E. F. & Meyfroidt, P. (2011). Global land use change, economic globalization, and the looming land scarcity. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 108(9), 3465–3472.
Langat, D., Maranga, E., Aboud, A. & Cheboiwo, J. (2016). Role of forest resources to local livelihoods: The case of East Mau forest ecosystem, Kenya. International Journal of Forestry Research, 2016, 1-10.
Lin, J., Zhang, Z. & Lv, L. (2019). The Impact of Program Participation on Rural Household Income: Evidence from China’s Whole Village Poverty Alleviation Program. Sustainability, 11(6), 1545.
Lopez-Feldman, A., Mora, J. & Taylor, J. E. (2007). Does natural resource extraction mitigate poverty and inequality? Evidence from rural Mexico and a Lacandona Rainforest Community. Environment and Development Economics, 12(02), 251–269.
Lybbert, T. J., Barrett, C. B. & Narjisse, H. (2002). Market-based conservation and local benefits: The case of argan oil in Morocco. Ecological Economics, 41(1), 125–144.
Maloma, I. (2016). The socioeconomic determinants of household poverty status in a low-income settlement in South Africa. International Journal of Social Sciences and Humanity Studies, 8(2), 122–131.
Mamo, G., Sjaastad, E. & Vedeld, P. (2007). Economic dependence on forest resources: A case from Dendi District, Ethiopia. Forest Policy and Economics, 9(8), 916–927.
Megbowon, E. T. (2018). Multidimensional Poverty Analysis of Urban and Rural Households in South Africa. Studia Universitatis Babeș-Bolyai Oeconomica, 63(1), 3–19.
Mutenje, M. J., Ortmann, G. F. & Ferrer, S. R. (2011). Management of non-timber forestry products extraction: Local institutions, ecological knowledge and market structure in South-Eastern Zimbabwe. Ecological Economics, 70(3), 454–461.
Ngema, P., Sibanda, M. & Musemwa, L. (2018). Household food security status and its determinants in Maphumulo local municipality, South Africa. Sustainability, 10(9), 3307.
Ouedraogo, B. & Ferrari, S. (2015). Incidence of forest activities on poverty and income inequalities: Evidence from forest dependent households in managed forests’ areas in Burkina Faso. International Journal of Sustainable Development, 18(3), 143–160.
Popoola, L. (2015). African forests and forestry: Pathways to relevance and sustainability. Nature & Faune, 29(2), 2–7.
Pramova, E., Locatelli, B., Djoudi, H. & Somorin, O. A. (2012). Forests and trees for social adaptation to climate variability and change. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change, 3(6), 581–596.
Pretty, J. (2008). Agricultural sustainability: Concepts, principles and evidence. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 363(1491), 447–465.
Pretty, J., Toulmin, C., & Williams, S. (2011). Sustainable intensification in African agriculture. International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability, 9(1), 5–24.
Randall, S. & Coast, E. (2015). Poverty in African households: The limits of survey and census representations. The Journal of Development Studies, 51(2), 162–177.
Reddy, S. & Chakravarty, S. (1999). Forest dependence and income distribution in a subsistence economy: Evidence from India. World Development, 27(7), 1141–1149.
Ricker-Gilbert, J., Jumbe, C., & Chamberlin, J. (2014). How does population density influence agricultural intensification and productivity? Evidence from Malawi. Food Policy, 48, 114–128.
Riera, P., Signorello, G., Thiene, M., Mahieu, P.-A., Navrud, S., Kaval, P., … Meyerhoff, J. (2012). Non-market valuation of forest goods and services: Good practice guidelines. Journal of Forest Economics, 18(4), 259–270.
Robinson, E. J. (2016). Resource-Dependent Livelihoods and the Natural Resource Base. Annual Review of Resource Economics, 8, 281–301.
Schaafsma, M., Morse-Jones, S., Posen, P., Swetnam, R., Balmford, A., Bateman, I. … Freeman, T. (2014). The importance of local forest benefits: Economic valuation of Non-Timber Forest Products in the Eastern Arc Mountains in Tanzania. Global Environmental Change, 24, 295–305.
Shackleton, S., Delang, C. O., & Angelsen, A. (2011). From subsistence to safety nets and cash income: Exploring the diverse values of non-timber forest products for livelihoods and poverty alleviation. In Non-timber forest products in the global context (pp. 55–81). Springer.
Soares-Filho B., Nepstad, D., Curran, L., Cerqueira, G., Garcia, R., Ramos, C., Voll, E., Pittman, A., Lefebvre, P. & Schlesinger, P. (2006). Modeling conservation in the Amazon basin. Nature, 440, 520–523.
Soltani, A., Angelsen, A., Eid, T., Naieni, M. S. N., & Shamekhi, T. (2012). Poverty, sustainability, and household livelihood strategies in Zagros, Iran. Ecological Economics, 79, 60–70.
Sujakhu, N. M., Ranjitkar, S., Niraula, R. R., Salim, M. A., Nizami, A., Schmidt-Vogt, D. & Xu, J. (2018). Determinants of livelihood vulnerability in farming communities in two sites in the Asian Highlands. Water International, 43(2), 165–182.
Tesfaye, Y., Roos, A., Campbell, B. M. & Bohlin, F. (2011). Livelihood strategies and the role of forest income in participatory-managed forests of Dodola area in the bale highlands, southern Ethiopia. Forest Policy and Economics, 13(4), 258–265.
Thondhlana, G. & Muchapondwa, E. (2014). Dependence on environmental resources and implications for household welfare: Evidence from the Kalahari drylands, South Africa. Ecological Economics, 108, 59–67.
Tolessa, T., Senbeta, F. & Abebe, T. (2017). Land use/land cover analysis and ecosystem services valuation in the central highlands of Ethiopia. Forests, Trees and Livelihoods, 26(2), 111–123.
Van Hecken, G., Bastiaensen, J. & Huybrechs, F. (2013). Towards an institutional approach to payments for ecosystem services: Perspectives from two Nicaraguan cases. In Governing the Provision of Ecosystem Services (pp. 357–375). Springer.
Vedeld, P., Angelsen, A., Bojö, J., Sjaastad, E. & Berg, G. K. (2007). Forest environmental incomes and the rural poor. Forest Policy and Economics, 9(7), 869–879.
Walelign, S. Z., Pouliot, M., Larsen, H. O. & Smith-Hall, C. (2017). Combining household income and asset data to identify livelihood strategies and their dynamics. The Journal of Development Studies, 53(6), 769–787.
Wang, Z. (2019). Is income growth among children pro-poor? The case of rural China. Applied Economics Letters, 1–5.
Ward, C. D. & Shackleton, C. M. (2016). Natural resource use, incomes, and poverty along the rural–urban continuum of two medium-sized, South African towns. World Development, 78, 80–93.
Worden, J., Western, D. & Waruingi, L. (2009). Exploring potential economic and livelihood impacts of climate change and possible adaptation mechanisms in the Kenyan rangelands, African Conservation Centre, Nairobi. African Conservation Centre.
Wunder, S. (2001). Poverty alleviation and tropical forests—What scope for synergies? World Development, 29(11), 1817–1833.