ILRI 1996

ILRI 1996
Author: International Livestock Research Institute
Publisher: ILRI (aka ILCA and ILRAD)
Total Pages: 66
Release: 1997-01-01
Genre: Livestock
ISBN: 9291460206

Potencial vaccine enters field testing; Building national capacity for market-oriented smallholder dairy research and development; The grass is always greener ... ; Forage legumes boost livestock and crop production; Maker-assisted breeding programmes; Networking - building for the future.

ILRI 1997

ILRI 1997
Author: International Livestock Research Institute
Publisher: ILRI (aka ILCA and ILRAD)
Total Pages: 81
Release: 1998-01-01
Genre: Biotechnology
ISBN: 9291460370

Livestock and nutrient cycling: maintaining a balance; Making sense - and use - of genetic diversity; Aspects of biotechnology research at ILRI; Smallholder dairying - intimate links between people and livestock; Diagnostics and the environment; Impact of trypanosomosis control; ILRI in Latin America; Balancing human needs, livestock and the environment.

Using the Economic Surplus Model to Measure Potential Returns to International Livestock Research

Using the Economic Surplus Model to Measure Potential Returns to International Livestock Research
Author: Patricia Kristjanson
Publisher: ILRI (aka ILCA and ILRAD)
Total Pages: 37
Release: 1999-01-01
Genre: African trypanosomiasis
ISBN: 9291460540

This study has developed a methodology that builds on the approach to measuring agricultural research returns suggested by Alston et al (1995). We have integrated a herd model to measure the potential size of impact of a new technology, GIS, to predict where this impacts is likely to be felt, and the economic surplus model to estimate some of the costs of trypanosomosis, the potential benefits of controlling it, and potential returns to vaccine research. The advantage of this approach is that it uses field data and GIS analysis to determine where and how much impact research will have on livestock productivity, rather than 'guesstimates' by researchers, as has often been done in previous studies of returns to agricultural research. It is an approach, however, that requires much data and the type of information that is still scarce in many developing countries. This includes evidence of the productivity impacts of a given livestock technology at the herd, rather than individual animal level, and access to GIS data at the lowest adminstrative level possible (e.g. district). Ideally, household level survey data are used to complement the GIS data and verify the recommendation domain. Thus this approach will be enhanced in future analyses by the availability of a wider range of data collected at the household level from different livestock production systems to examine more closely the question 'Impact on whom?'