Wealth-related inequalities in adoption of drought-tolerant maize and conservation agriculture in Zimbabwe

This paper concerns Drought-Tolerant Maize (DTM) and Conservation Agriculture (CA) practices that were introduced into smallholder maize-based farming systems in Zimbabwe to enhance the productivity of maize and food security under a changing climate. Although these technologies are technically appr...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Makate, Clifton, Makate, Marshall, Mango, Nelson
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Springer 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/102458
_version_ 1855538007596072960
author Makate, Clifton
Makate, Marshall
Mango, Nelson
author_browse Makate, Clifton
Makate, Marshall
Mango, Nelson
author_facet Makate, Clifton
Makate, Marshall
Mango, Nelson
author_sort Makate, Clifton
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This paper concerns Drought-Tolerant Maize (DTM) and Conservation Agriculture (CA) practices that were introduced into smallholder maize-based farming systems in Zimbabwe to enhance the productivity of maize and food security under a changing climate. Although these technologies are technically appropriate, there are difficulties with their use by smallholder farmers of relatively low socio-economic status, as measured through ownership of farm or household assets and endowments. Thus, we sought to quantify and explain wealth-related inequalities in the adoption of DTM and CA in smallholder farming communities and discuss their implications for food security. The analysis used cross-sectional household-level data gathered from 601 smallholder farmers from four districts in Zimbabwe. We found evidence of a pro-rich distribution of inequalities in the adoption of DTM and CA that were mostly explained by differences in household wealth, access to agricultural extension services and size of farm land. No meaningful differences in DTM adoption disparities were found across districts. Significant gender differences were observed for CA, and meaningful differences by district were noted. Results suggest the need for decision makers to consider implementing policies that focus on the poorer segments of the farming society to alleviate differences in the adoption of such agricultural technologies. For example, subsidizing the uptake of improved maize varieties including DTM and prioritizing equitable land distribution, coupled with specialised extension services for the poor in a cereal-based CA farming system, could reduce the observed gap between rich and poor in the uptake of these innovations and consequently improve food security.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace102458
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2019
publishDateRange 2019
publishDateSort 2019
publisher Springer
publisherStr Springer
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1024582025-11-12T05:59:01Z Wealth-related inequalities in adoption of drought-tolerant maize and conservation agriculture in Zimbabwe Makate, Clifton Makate, Marshall Mango, Nelson climate-smart agriculture agricultura climáticamente inteligente food security seguridad alimentaria smallholder farmers This paper concerns Drought-Tolerant Maize (DTM) and Conservation Agriculture (CA) practices that were introduced into smallholder maize-based farming systems in Zimbabwe to enhance the productivity of maize and food security under a changing climate. Although these technologies are technically appropriate, there are difficulties with their use by smallholder farmers of relatively low socio-economic status, as measured through ownership of farm or household assets and endowments. Thus, we sought to quantify and explain wealth-related inequalities in the adoption of DTM and CA in smallholder farming communities and discuss their implications for food security. The analysis used cross-sectional household-level data gathered from 601 smallholder farmers from four districts in Zimbabwe. We found evidence of a pro-rich distribution of inequalities in the adoption of DTM and CA that were mostly explained by differences in household wealth, access to agricultural extension services and size of farm land. No meaningful differences in DTM adoption disparities were found across districts. Significant gender differences were observed for CA, and meaningful differences by district were noted. Results suggest the need for decision makers to consider implementing policies that focus on the poorer segments of the farming society to alleviate differences in the adoption of such agricultural technologies. For example, subsidizing the uptake of improved maize varieties including DTM and prioritizing equitable land distribution, coupled with specialised extension services for the poor in a cereal-based CA farming system, could reduce the observed gap between rich and poor in the uptake of these innovations and consequently improve food security. 2019-08 2019-08-06T18:33:20Z 2019-08-06T18:33:20Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/102458 en Open Access application/pdf Springer Makate, Clifton; Makate, Marshall & Mango, Nelson. (2019). Wealth-related inequalities in adoption of drought-tolerant maize and conservation agriculture in Zimbabwe. Food Security, 1-16 p.
spellingShingle climate-smart agriculture
agricultura climáticamente inteligente
food security
seguridad alimentaria
smallholder
farmers
Makate, Clifton
Makate, Marshall
Mango, Nelson
Wealth-related inequalities in adoption of drought-tolerant maize and conservation agriculture in Zimbabwe
title Wealth-related inequalities in adoption of drought-tolerant maize and conservation agriculture in Zimbabwe
title_full Wealth-related inequalities in adoption of drought-tolerant maize and conservation agriculture in Zimbabwe
title_fullStr Wealth-related inequalities in adoption of drought-tolerant maize and conservation agriculture in Zimbabwe
title_full_unstemmed Wealth-related inequalities in adoption of drought-tolerant maize and conservation agriculture in Zimbabwe
title_short Wealth-related inequalities in adoption of drought-tolerant maize and conservation agriculture in Zimbabwe
title_sort wealth related inequalities in adoption of drought tolerant maize and conservation agriculture in zimbabwe
topic climate-smart agriculture
agricultura climáticamente inteligente
food security
seguridad alimentaria
smallholder
farmers
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/102458
work_keys_str_mv AT makateclifton wealthrelatedinequalitiesinadoptionofdroughttolerantmaizeandconservationagricultureinzimbabwe
AT makatemarshall wealthrelatedinequalitiesinadoptionofdroughttolerantmaizeandconservationagricultureinzimbabwe
AT mangonelson wealthrelatedinequalitiesinadoptionofdroughttolerantmaizeandconservationagricultureinzimbabwe