Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-x5gtn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-26T07:53:18.165Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Transfer of Trust: Ethnicities as Economic Institutions in the Livestock Trade in West and East Africa

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 March 2011

Abstract

This article explores the role of ethnic identity in the framework of the livestock trade in West and East Africa. It argues that ethnic identity was used as an instrument to build trust relationships that were vital to the development of pre-colonial livestock trade networks. With the onset of colonial rule, alternative marketing channels developed, none of which proved to be capable of providing reliable and low transaction cost services to both livestock producer and consumer. Nevertheless, the ethnic trade monopolies were threatened by the advent of formal colonial marketing institutions and the progressive ‘opening up’ of the market. This situation remained basically unchanged during the post-colonial era and with recent livestock and meat trade liberalisations. The evidence from Benin and Kenya demonstrates, however, that ethnic identity continues to determine the organisation of the livestock trade, albeit in a different way. The transfer of trust remains crucial to minimise transaction costs in a market that is characterised by a mobile commodity, long distances, and delayed payment in the absence of adequate financial institutions. In addition, it is argued that the specificity of the market environment equally facilitates the use of ethnicity for commercial purposes such as the delimitation of market niches.

Résumé

Cet article étudie le rôle de l'identité ethnique dans le cadre du commerce du bétail en Afrique occidentale et orientale. Il montre que l'identité ethnique servait d'instrument pour forger les relations de confiance qui étaient essentielles au développement de réseaux précoloniaux de commerce du bétail. Avec l'arrivée du régime colonial, d'autres circuits de commercialisation se sont développés, aucun ne s'avérant capable d'offrir, tant au producteur de bétail qu'au consommateur, des services fiables à faible coût de transaction. Pourtant, l'avènement d'institutions coloniales formelles de commercialisation et l'≪ouverture≫ progressive du marché ont menacé les monopoles commerciaux ethniques. Cette situation demeura quasiment inchangée au cours de la période post-coloniale et avec la libéralisation récente des marchés du bétail et de la viande. Les données recueillies au Bénin et au Kenya montrent, cependant, que l'identité ethnique continue de déterminer l'organisation du commerce du bétail, quoique de mani ère différente. Le transfert de confiance demeure essentiel pour minimiser les coûts de transaction dans un marché caractérisé par une marchandise mobile, des distances importantes et un paiement ralenti en l'absence d'institutions financières adaptées. De plus, l'article montre que la spécificité de l'environnement de marché facilite tout autant l'utilisation de l'ethnicité à des fins commerciales telles que la délimitation de créneaux spécialisés.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International African Institute 2004

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Bates, D. G., and Lees, S. H.. 1977. ‘The role of exchange in productive specialisation’, American Anthropologist 79: 924–840.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baud, M., Koonings, K., Oostindie, G., Ouweneel, A., and Silva, P.. 1994. Etniciteit als strategie in Latijns-Amerika en de Caraïben. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bebbington, A. 1999. ‘Capitals and capabilities: a framework for analysing peasant viability, rural livelihoods and poverty’, World Development 7 (12): 2021–2044.Google Scholar
Bekure, S., de Leeuw, P. N., Grandin, B. E., and Neate, P. J. H.. 1991. Maasai Herding: an analysis of the livestock production system of Maasai pastoralists in eastern Kajiado District, Kenya. ILCA Systems Study 4. Addis Ababa: ILCA (International Livestock Centre for Africa).Google Scholar
Blench, R. 1997. Aspects of Resource Conflict in Semi-arid Africa. Natural Resource Perspectives No.16. London: ODI (Overseas Development Institute).Google Scholar
Bourgeot, A. 1981. ‘Nomadic pastoral society and the market: the penetration of the Sahel by commercial relations’, Journal of Asian and African Studies 16 (1–2): 114127.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boutrais, J. 2001. ‘Du pasteur au boucher: le commerce du betail en Afrique de l'Ouest et du Centre’, Autrepart 19: 4970.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cohen, A. 1965. ‘The social organization of credit in a West African cattle market’, Africa 35 (1): 820.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cohen, A. 1971. ‘Cultural strategies in the organisation of trading diasporas’, in C., Meillassoux (ed.), The Development of Indigenous Trade and Markets in West Africa. L'évolution du commerce africain depuis le XIXe siècle en Afrique de l'ouest. London: Oxford University Press, for the International African Institute.Google Scholar
Cook, A. 1991. ‘Nigerian Markets for Livestock and Meat: prospects for Niger’. Report prepared for USAID, Niamey.Google Scholar
Coste, J., Ancey, V., and Egg, J.. 1993. Politiques de commerce extérieur desproduits d'origine animale en Afrique de l'ouest et du centre. Rapport de synthese. Paris: SOLAGRAL, IRAM, Ministère de la Coopération.Google Scholar
Curtin, M. 1984. Cross-Cultural Trade in World History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Degen, A. A., Nunow, A., Zaal, A. F. M., Otieno, D. A., and Hoorweg, J. C.. 2000. Market Dependence of Pastoralists in Kenya and Israel. NIRP Research for Policy Series, No. 8. The Hague: NIRP (Netherlands-Israel Development Research Programme).Google Scholar
De Haan, L., Ufford, P. Quarles van, and Zaal, F.. 1999. ‘Cross-border cattle marketing in Sub-Saharan Africa since 1900: geographical patterns and government induced change’, in Laan, H. Laurens van der, Dijkstra, Tjalling, and Tilburg, Aad van (eds), Agricultural Marketing in Tropical Africa: contributions from the Netherlands. African Studies Centre, Leiden, Research Series 15. Aldershot: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Delgado, C. L., Rosegrant, M., Steinfeld, H., Ehui, S., and Courbois, C.. 1999. Livestock to 2020: the next food revolution. Discussion paper no. 28. Washington DC: IFPRI (International Food Policy Research Institute).Google Scholar
Dijkstra, T. 1997. Trading the Fruits of the Land: horticultural marketing channels in Kenya. African Studies Centre, Leiden, Research Series 11. Aldershot: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Dijkstra, T. 1999. ‘Horticultural marketing in Kenya: why potato farmers need collecting wholesalers’, in Laan, H. Laurens van der, Dijkstra, Tjalling, and Tilburg, Aad van (eds), Agricultural Marketing in Tropical Africa: contributions from the Netherlands. African Studies Centre, Leiden, Research Series 15. Aldershot: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Ensminger, J. 1996. Making a Market: the institutional transformation of an African society. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Evers, H.-D. 1994. ‘The traders' dilemma: a theory of the social transformation of markets and society’, in Evers, H.-D. and Schrader, H. (eds), The Moral Economy of Trade: ethnicity and developing markets. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Evers, H.-D., and Schrader, H. (eds). 1994. The Moral Economy of Trade: ethnicity and developing markets. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Freeman-Grenville, G. S. P. 1988. The Swahili Coast, 2nd to 19th centuries: Islam. Christianity and commerce in Eastern Africa. London: Variorum Reprints.Google Scholar
Goldschmidt, W. 1981. ‘The failure of pastoral economic development programmes in Africa’, in Galaty, J. G., Aronson, D., Salzmanm, P. C., and Couinard, A. (eds), The Future of Pastoral Peoples: proceedings of a conference held in Nairobi, Kenya, 4–8 August 1980. Ottawa: IDRC (International Development Research Centre).Google Scholar
Grégoire, E. 1993. ‘La trilogie des réseaux marchands haoussas: un clientélisme social, religieux et étatique’, in Grégoire, E. and Labazée, P. (eds), Grands commerçants d'Afrique de l'ouest. Logiques et pratiques d'un groupe d'hommes d'affaires contemporains. Paris: Karthala.Google Scholar
Gregoire, E., and Labazée, P. (eds). 1993. Grands commerçants d'Afrique de l'ouest. Logiques et pratiques d'un groupe d'hommes d'affaires contemporains. Paris: Karthala.Google Scholar
Harriss-White, B. 1998. ‘The cultural and social regulation of agricultural markets: gender and class in the fundamental markets for grain’, in Tilburg, A. van, Moll, H., and Kuyvenhoven, A. (eds), Agricultural Markets beyond Liberalization. Proceedings of the 57th European Association of Agricultural Economists seminar, Wageningen University, The Netherlands, 2326 September. Boston and London: Kluwer Academic Pulishers.Google Scholar
Holtzman, J. S., Kulibaba, N., and Stathacos, C. J. D.. 1992. Livestock Marketing and Trade in the Central Corridor of West Africa. Report for Agricultural Marketing Improvement Strategies Project. Washington DC: USAID.Google Scholar
Homewood, K. 1997. Land Use, Household Viability and Migration in the Sahel. Final report to the Commission of the European Community. DG XIII INCO-DC.Google Scholar
Hugon, A. 1993. The Exploration of Africa: from Cairo to the Cape. London: Thames and Hudson.Google Scholar
ILCA. 1983. Pastoral Systems Research in Sub-Saharan Africa: proceedings of the IRDC/ILCA workshop held at ILCA, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, 21 to 24 March 1983. Addis Ababa: ILCA (International Livestock Centre for Africa).Google Scholar
Josserand, H., and Sullivan, G.. 1979. Livestock and Meat Marketing in West Africa: Benin. Ann Arbor: CRED (Center for Research on Economic Development), University of Michigan.Google Scholar
Kerven, C. 1992. Customary Commerce: a historical reassessment of pastoral livestock marketing in Africa. Agricultural Occasional Paper 15. London: ODI (Overseas Development Institute).Google Scholar
Launay, R. 1982. Traders without Trade: responses to change in two Dyula communities. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lovejoy, P. 1980. Caravans of Kola: the Hausa kola trade, 1700–1900. Zaria: Ahmadu Bello University Press.Google Scholar
McCorkle, C., Strathacos, C., and Maxwell, J.. 1995. ‘Cross-border trade and ethnic groups in West Africa’. Report to USAID, Washington.Google Scholar
Middleton, J. 1997. ‘The world of the Swahili: an African mercantile civilisation’, Reviews in Anthropology 26 (1).Google Scholar
North, D. C. 1989. ‘Institutions and economic growth: an historical introduction’, World Development 17 (9): 13191333.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Quarles van Ufford, P. 1999. Trade and Traders: the makingof the cattle market in Benin. Amsterdam: Thela Thesis.Google Scholar
Reda Bhacker, M., and Freeman-Grenville, G. S. P.. 1994. ‘Trade and empire in Muscat and Zanzibar: roots of British domination’, The Journal of the Royal Society of Great Britain and Ireland 4 (1): 9798.Google Scholar
Schilder, K., and Binsbergen, W. Van. 1993. ‘Recent Dutch and Belgian approaches to ethnicity in Africa’, Afrika Focus 9 (1–2): 315.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schipper, M. 1999. Imagining Insiders: Africa and the question of belonging. London and New York: Cassell. (1995. De boomstam en de krokodil: kwesties van ras, cultuur en wetenschap. Amsterdam: Van Gennep.)Google Scholar
Scoones, I. (ed.). 1995. Living with Uncertainty: new directions in pastoral development in Africa. London: Intermediate Technology Publications.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Swift, J. 1986. ‘The economics of production and exchange in West African pastoral societies’, in Adamu, M. and Kirk-Greene, A. H. M. (eds), Pastoralists of the West African Savanna: selected studies presented and discussed at the fifteenth International African Seminar held at Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, July 1979. Manchester: Manchester University Press, for the International African Institute.Google Scholar
van der Laan, L., Dijkstra, T., and Tilburg, A. van (eds). 1999. Agricultural Marketing in Tropical Africa: contributions from the Netherlands. African Studies Centre, Leiden, Research Series 15. Aldershot: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Warms, R. 1994. ‘Commerce and community: paths to success for Malian merchants’, African Studies Review 37 (2): 97120.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zaal, F. 1993. ‘The cattle marketing system in Kajiado District, Kenya: preliminary results of a market information study’. Unpublished paper. University of Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Zaal, F. 1998. Pastoralism in a Global Age: livestock marketing and pastoral commercial activities in Kenya and Burkina Faso. Amsterdam: Thela Thesis.Google Scholar