Study of the Ethiopian Live Cattle and Beef Value Chain

Author(s)
GebreMariam, Sintayehu
Amare, Samuel
Baker, Derek
Solomon, Ayele
Davies, Ryan
Publication Date
2013
Abstract
<p>Ethiopia is a largely rural country with an agrarian economy. Livestock are of economic and social importance both at the household and national levels, and have in the past provided significant export earnings. Although estimates vary widely,1 livestock is thought to contribute 15-17% of Ethiopian gross domestic product (GDP), 35-40% of agricultural GDP and 37-87% of the household incomes; the large variations are due directly or indirectly to climatic variation. Livestock have multiple uses aside from income generation, including cash storage for those beyond the reach of the banking system, draught and pack services, and manure for fuel and fertilizer. In addition to these non-market values, a thriving informal export trade in live animals further emphasizes the significance, albeit unrecognized by official statistics, of livestock (and particularly cattle) in the Ethiopian economy.</p><p> The country is ecologically diverse, featuring 18 distinct agroclimatic zones, but it has two major recognized livestock production systems: highland with predominantly mixed farming; and lowland pastoral and agropastoral systems. Ethiopia borders half a dozen countries in the Horn of Africa, and in all cases cultural, linguistic, clan and family links span the boundaries. Such connections employ physical and organizational trading arrangements that predate modern frontiers, and serve Middle Eastern markets for imported cattle and beef.</p>
ISBN
929146306X
Link
Language
en
Publisher
International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI)
Series
ILRI Discussion Paper
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported
Title
Study of the Ethiopian Live Cattle and Beef Value Chain
Type of document
Working Paper
Entity Type
Publication

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