Demand for agricultural credit by rural smallholder farmers: A case of climate smart agriculture villages in Nyando Basin, Kenya

The effect of climate change and variability on agricultural production systems cannot be underestimated especially in rural areas. Farmers more than often experience increased agricultural losses and reduced productivity due to weather vagaries, little or no investment in their farms etc. Rural sm...

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Autor principal: Musembi, Elly Kyalo
Formato: Tesis
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/107002
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author Musembi, Elly Kyalo
author_browse Musembi, Elly Kyalo
author_facet Musembi, Elly Kyalo
author_sort Musembi, Elly Kyalo
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The effect of climate change and variability on agricultural production systems cannot be underestimated especially in rural areas. Farmers more than often experience increased agricultural losses and reduced productivity due to weather vagaries, little or no investment in their farms etc. Rural smallholder farmers are most affected and are faced with a number of challenges such as lack of insurance services, limited access to credit facilities especially from formal sources, among many others problems as they try to adapt and mitigate the impact of changing climatic conditions and effects of global warming. With the absence of insurance and limited access to financial resources (agricultural credit) the ability of the farmers to adopt smart farming technologies that can cushion them from such losses is threatened. In order to inform policy a lot of research work has been done on agricultural credit but resulted to inconsistent findings and conclusions in different regions. With such in mind, more research is needed on credit market participation, the intensity of participation and the choice of credit market more so in specific regions of the developing countries. The findings of these studies will augment the already existing knowledge and policies that actually reflect the needs of those particular communities for rural sustainable development in general and agriculture in particular. This research paper assessed loan facilities demanded by smallholder farmers‟, factors affecting borrowing decisions and the subsequent factors that influence the intensity of borrowing by these farmers in climate-smart villages of Nyando, Kisumu in an attempt to finance agricultural production and adopt smart farming practices. By use of stratified sampling a 120 households were sampled from participating and non-participating households. Data on individual, institutional and socioeconomic characteristics was collected from these farm households by university of Nairobi masters students in conjunction with CCAFS using structured questionnaire. Data analysis employed descriptive and quantitative methods using double hurdle model. The findings show that loan repayment period, number of groups household members are into and collateral influence positively the household decision to borrow with the intensity of participation being positively and significantly influenced by loan repayment period and household wealth endowment. Therefore groups should be used to finance farmers and unlock their economic potential.
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spelling CGSpace1070022024-01-23T12:03:53Z Demand for agricultural credit by rural smallholder farmers: A case of climate smart agriculture villages in Nyando Basin, Kenya Musembi, Elly Kyalo climate change smallholders climate-smart agriculture agricultural credit food security agriculture The effect of climate change and variability on agricultural production systems cannot be underestimated especially in rural areas. Farmers more than often experience increased agricultural losses and reduced productivity due to weather vagaries, little or no investment in their farms etc. Rural smallholder farmers are most affected and are faced with a number of challenges such as lack of insurance services, limited access to credit facilities especially from formal sources, among many others problems as they try to adapt and mitigate the impact of changing climatic conditions and effects of global warming. With the absence of insurance and limited access to financial resources (agricultural credit) the ability of the farmers to adopt smart farming technologies that can cushion them from such losses is threatened. In order to inform policy a lot of research work has been done on agricultural credit but resulted to inconsistent findings and conclusions in different regions. With such in mind, more research is needed on credit market participation, the intensity of participation and the choice of credit market more so in specific regions of the developing countries. The findings of these studies will augment the already existing knowledge and policies that actually reflect the needs of those particular communities for rural sustainable development in general and agriculture in particular. This research paper assessed loan facilities demanded by smallholder farmers‟, factors affecting borrowing decisions and the subsequent factors that influence the intensity of borrowing by these farmers in climate-smart villages of Nyando, Kisumu in an attempt to finance agricultural production and adopt smart farming practices. By use of stratified sampling a 120 households were sampled from participating and non-participating households. Data on individual, institutional and socioeconomic characteristics was collected from these farm households by university of Nairobi masters students in conjunction with CCAFS using structured questionnaire. Data analysis employed descriptive and quantitative methods using double hurdle model. The findings show that loan repayment period, number of groups household members are into and collateral influence positively the household decision to borrow with the intensity of participation being positively and significantly influenced by loan repayment period and household wealth endowment. Therefore groups should be used to finance farmers and unlock their economic potential. 2019-10-01 2020-02-07T13:31:18Z 2020-02-07T13:31:18Z Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/10568/107002 en Open Access application/pdf Musembi EK. 2019. Demand for agricultural credit by rural smallholder farmers: A case of climate smart agriculture villages in Nyando Basin, Kenya. Master Thesis: School of Economics (University of Nairobi). Nairobi, Kenya.
spellingShingle climate change
smallholders
climate-smart agriculture
agricultural credit
food security
agriculture
Musembi, Elly Kyalo
Demand for agricultural credit by rural smallholder farmers: A case of climate smart agriculture villages in Nyando Basin, Kenya
title Demand for agricultural credit by rural smallholder farmers: A case of climate smart agriculture villages in Nyando Basin, Kenya
title_full Demand for agricultural credit by rural smallholder farmers: A case of climate smart agriculture villages in Nyando Basin, Kenya
title_fullStr Demand for agricultural credit by rural smallholder farmers: A case of climate smart agriculture villages in Nyando Basin, Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Demand for agricultural credit by rural smallholder farmers: A case of climate smart agriculture villages in Nyando Basin, Kenya
title_short Demand for agricultural credit by rural smallholder farmers: A case of climate smart agriculture villages in Nyando Basin, Kenya
title_sort demand for agricultural credit by rural smallholder farmers a case of climate smart agriculture villages in nyando basin kenya
topic climate change
smallholders
climate-smart agriculture
agricultural credit
food security
agriculture
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/107002
work_keys_str_mv AT musembiellykyalo demandforagriculturalcreditbyruralsmallholderfarmersacaseofclimatesmartagriculturevillagesinnyandobasinkenya