Can market systems development build resilience in fragile contexts? Lessons from a comparative three-country analysis in South and Southeast Asia
This learning brief aims to help practitioners understand where and how to apply market systems development (MSD) approaches to resilience-building in fragile contexts. It assesses the relationship between the MSD and resilience models in three MSD-focused programs in South and Southeast Asia. All three programs - Making Vegetable Markets Work for the Poor (MVMW) in Myanmar, Effective Seed Storage (ESS) in Timor-Leste and Managing Risk Through Economic Development (M-RED) in Nepal - operated in fragile contexts characterized by weak governance, thin markets and frequent exposure to a range of economic, ecological and social shocks and stresses.
The following common recommendations emerged across the three diverse contexts:
- Assess economic, ecological and social risk holistically to inform market sector and partner selection and market intervention design.
- Analyze, leverage and build strong social capital among local actors to make markets work for resilience.
- Pair interventions that strategically address immediate, significant risks with facilitative models to build resilient market systems.
- Address social norms—especially those related to gender—that limit MSD’s resilience-building potential.
- Harness market systems change—investing in the right sectors, actors and partnerships—to catalyze risk reduction and build resilience at scale.
Separate case studies, going into greater depth on each country project, are also available below.