The Impact of Village Savings and Loan Associations as a Financial and Climate Resilience Strategy for Mitigating Food Insecurity in Northern Ghana

IF 2 Q2 BUSINESS, FINANCE
Risks Pub Date : 2024-03-25 DOI:10.3390/risks12040058
Cornelius K. A. Pienaah, Isaac Luginaah
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Abstract

In semi-arid Northern Ghana, smallholder farmers face food insecurity and financial risk due to climate change. In response, the Village Savings and Loan Association (VSLA) model, a community-led microfinance model, has emerged as a promising finance and climate resilience strategy. VSLAs offer savings, loans, and other financial services to help smallholder farmers cope with climate risks. In northern Ghana, where formal financial banking is limited, VSLAs serve as vital financial resources for smallholder farmers. Nevertheless, it remains to be seen how VSLAs can bridge financial inclusion and climate resilience strategies to address food insecurity. From a sustainable livelihoods framework (SLF) perspective, we utilized data from a cross-sectional survey of 517 smallholder farmers in northern Ghana’s Upper West Region to investigate how VSLAs relate to food insecurity. Results from an ordered logistic regression show that households with membership in a VSLA were less likely to experience severe food insecurity (OR = 0.437, p < 0.01). In addition, households that reported good resilience, owned land, had higher wealth, were female-headed, and made financial decisions jointly were less likely to experience severe food insecurity. Also, spending time accessing the market increases the risk of severe food insecurity. Despite the challenges of the VSLA model, these findings highlight VSLAs’ potential to mitigate food insecurity and serve as a financially resilient and climate-resilient strategy in resource-poor contexts like the UWR and similar areas in Sub-Saharan Africa. VSLAs could contribute to achieving SDG2, zero hunger, and SDG13, climate action. However, policy interventions are necessary to support and scale VSLAs as a sustainable development and food security strategy in vulnerable regions.
村储蓄和贷款协会作为减轻加纳北部粮食不安全的金融和气候复原战略的影响
在加纳北部半干旱地区,小农面临着气候变化带来的粮食不安全和金融风险。为此,乡村储蓄和贷款协会(VSLA)模式作为一种社区主导的小额信贷模式,已成为一种前景广阔的金融和气候抗御战略。村储蓄和贷款协会提供储蓄、贷款和其他金融服务,帮助小农应对气候风险。在正规金融银行业务有限的加纳北部,VSLA 成为小农的重要金融资源。然而,VSLA 如何在金融包容性和气候抗御战略之间架起桥梁,以解决粮食不安全问题,仍有待观察。从可持续生计框架(SLF)的角度出发,我们利用对加纳上西部地区北部 517 名小农户的横截面调查数据,研究了 VSLA 与粮食不安全之间的关系。有序逻辑回归的结果表明,拥有 VSLA 成员资格的家庭经历严重粮食不安全的可能性较低(OR = 0.437,p < 0.01)。此外,抗灾能力强、拥有土地、财富较多、女户主家庭和共同做出财务决定的家庭也不太可能出现严重的粮食不安全问题。此外,花时间进入市场也会增加严重粮食不安全的风险。尽管VSLA模式面临挑战,但这些研究结果凸显了VSLA在缓解粮食不安全方面的潜力,并可作为一种在资源匮乏的情况下(如西伯利亚地区和撒哈拉以南非洲的类似地区)具有财务弹性和气候抗御能力的战略。自愿主权服务领域协会可为实现可持续发展目标 2 "零饥饿 "和可持续发展目标 13 "气候行动 "做出贡献。然而,有必要采取政策干预措施,以支持和扩大脆弱性服务领域,将其作为脆弱地区的可持续发展和粮食安全战略。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Risks
Risks Economics, Econometrics and Finance-Economics, Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
22.70%
发文量
205
审稿时长
11 weeks
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