| dc.description.abstract | Small-scale irrigation is among the feasible way in which agricultural production and 
productivity can be boosted to meet the ever-growing food demand of least developed countries 
like Ethiopia. But, unlike the irrigation potential, the utilization level and its impact on food 
security were not empirically analyzed in specific areas of the country. This study was conducted 
to identify factors affecting household participation in small-scale irrigation, factors affecting 
household food security and assessing the impact of small-scale irrigation on household food 
security in Walmara district, Finfinnee surrounding Oromia special zone. Both primary and 
secondary data were used. Primary data were collected from 220 irrigation users and non-users. 
Descriptive, inferential and econometric data analysis were executed. The logistic regression 
applied to estimate factors affecting participation in small scale irrigation revealed that age, 
livestock holding, sex, family size, land owned, occurrence of crop pests and diseases, distance 
from irrigation site and access to credit services were the variables that significantly affected.
Similarly, the logistic regression applied to estimate factors affecting household food security 
revealed that sex of the head, family size, dependency ratio, livestock holding, land holding, 
access to extension contact, access to irrigation services and access to credit services were the 
variables that significantly affected. To analyze the impact of small-scale irrigation on 
households’ food security, PSM method was applied. Radius matching with band width of 0.1
was the matching algorithm used. The quality of covariate balancing was checked using pseudo 
R
2
, mean bias and t-test. Finally, ATT was estimated and the result revealed that family members 
of irrigation user households on average consumed more calories of 529 kcal than irrigation 
non-users, and this result is statistically significant. Sensitivity analysis was done and the 
estimated ATT was insensitive to unobserved bias up to 200%. Therefore, policy interventions
giving priority to the variables mentioned above to increase participation in small-scale 
irrigation and also improve household food security status are recommended. | en_US |