Can fruit and vegetable aggregation systems better balance improved producer livelihoods with more equitable distribution?

The need for food systems to generate sustainable and equitable benefits for all is a global imperative. However, whilst ample evidence exists linking smallholder farmer coordination and aggregation (i.e. the collective transport and marketing of produce on behalf of multiple farmers) to improved ma...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Cooper, G.S., Shankara, B., Rich, Karl M., Ratna, N.N., Alam, M.J., Singh, N., Kadiyala, S.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/115218
_version_ 1855516826948075520
author Cooper, G.S.
Shankara, B.
Rich, Karl M.
Ratna, N.N.
Alam, M.J.
Singh, N.
Kadiyala, S.
author_browse Alam, M.J.
Cooper, G.S.
Kadiyala, S.
Ratna, N.N.
Rich, Karl M.
Shankara, B.
Singh, N.
author_facet Cooper, G.S.
Shankara, B.
Rich, Karl M.
Ratna, N.N.
Alam, M.J.
Singh, N.
Kadiyala, S.
author_sort Cooper, G.S.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The need for food systems to generate sustainable and equitable benefits for all is a global imperative. However, whilst ample evidence exists linking smallholder farmer coordination and aggregation (i.e. the collective transport and marketing of produce on behalf of multiple farmers) to improved market participation and farmer incomes, the extent to which interventions that aim to improve farmer market engagement may co-develop equitable consumer benefits remains uncertain. This challenge is pertinent to the horticultural systems of South Asia, where the increasing purchasing power of urban consumers, lengthening urban catchments, underdeveloped rural infrastructures and inadequate local demands combine to undermine the delivery of fresh fruits and vegetables to smaller, often rural or semi-rural markets serving nutritionally insecure populations. To this end, we investigate the potential for aggregation to be developed to increase fruit and vegetable delivery to these neglected smaller markets, whilst simultaneously improving farmer returns. Using an innovative system dynamics modelling approach based on an aggregation scheme in Bihar, India, we identify potential trade-offs between outcomes relating to farmers and consumers in smaller local markets. We find that changes to aggregation alone (i.e. scaling-up participation; subsidising small market transportation; mandating quotas for smaller markets) are unable to achieve significant improvements in smaller market delivery without risking reduced farmer participation in aggregation. Contrastingly, combining aggregation with the introduction of market-based cold storage and measures that boost demand improves fruit and vegetable availability significantly in smaller markets, whilst avoiding farmer-facing trade-offs. Critically, our study emphasises the benefits that may be attained from combining multiple nutrition-sensitive market interventions, and stresses the need for policies that narrow the fruit and vegetable cold storage deficits that exist away from more lucrative markets in developing countries. The future pathways and policy options discovered work towards making win–win futures for farmers and disadvantaged consumers a reality.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace115218
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2021
publishDateRange 2021
publishDateSort 2021
publisher Elsevier
publisherStr Elsevier
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1152182024-10-03T07:40:47Z Can fruit and vegetable aggregation systems better balance improved producer livelihoods with more equitable distribution? Cooper, G.S. Shankara, B. Rich, Karl M. Ratna, N.N. Alam, M.J. Singh, N. Kadiyala, S. markets nutrition vegetables fruit food systems development The need for food systems to generate sustainable and equitable benefits for all is a global imperative. However, whilst ample evidence exists linking smallholder farmer coordination and aggregation (i.e. the collective transport and marketing of produce on behalf of multiple farmers) to improved market participation and farmer incomes, the extent to which interventions that aim to improve farmer market engagement may co-develop equitable consumer benefits remains uncertain. This challenge is pertinent to the horticultural systems of South Asia, where the increasing purchasing power of urban consumers, lengthening urban catchments, underdeveloped rural infrastructures and inadequate local demands combine to undermine the delivery of fresh fruits and vegetables to smaller, often rural or semi-rural markets serving nutritionally insecure populations. To this end, we investigate the potential for aggregation to be developed to increase fruit and vegetable delivery to these neglected smaller markets, whilst simultaneously improving farmer returns. Using an innovative system dynamics modelling approach based on an aggregation scheme in Bihar, India, we identify potential trade-offs between outcomes relating to farmers and consumers in smaller local markets. We find that changes to aggregation alone (i.e. scaling-up participation; subsidising small market transportation; mandating quotas for smaller markets) are unable to achieve significant improvements in smaller market delivery without risking reduced farmer participation in aggregation. Contrastingly, combining aggregation with the introduction of market-based cold storage and measures that boost demand improves fruit and vegetable availability significantly in smaller markets, whilst avoiding farmer-facing trade-offs. Critically, our study emphasises the benefits that may be attained from combining multiple nutrition-sensitive market interventions, and stresses the need for policies that narrow the fruit and vegetable cold storage deficits that exist away from more lucrative markets in developing countries. The future pathways and policy options discovered work towards making win–win futures for farmers and disadvantaged consumers a reality. 2021-12 2021-09-28T15:49:25Z 2021-09-28T15:49:25Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/115218 en Open Access Elsevier Cooper, G.S., Shankara, B., Rich, Karl M., Ratna, N.N., Alam, M.J., Singh, N. and Kadiyala, S. 2021. Can fruit and vegetable aggregation systems better balance improved producer livelihoods with more equitable distribution? World Development 148:105678.
spellingShingle markets
nutrition
vegetables
fruit
food systems
development
Cooper, G.S.
Shankara, B.
Rich, Karl M.
Ratna, N.N.
Alam, M.J.
Singh, N.
Kadiyala, S.
Can fruit and vegetable aggregation systems better balance improved producer livelihoods with more equitable distribution?
title Can fruit and vegetable aggregation systems better balance improved producer livelihoods with more equitable distribution?
title_full Can fruit and vegetable aggregation systems better balance improved producer livelihoods with more equitable distribution?
title_fullStr Can fruit and vegetable aggregation systems better balance improved producer livelihoods with more equitable distribution?
title_full_unstemmed Can fruit and vegetable aggregation systems better balance improved producer livelihoods with more equitable distribution?
title_short Can fruit and vegetable aggregation systems better balance improved producer livelihoods with more equitable distribution?
title_sort can fruit and vegetable aggregation systems better balance improved producer livelihoods with more equitable distribution
topic markets
nutrition
vegetables
fruit
food systems
development
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/115218
work_keys_str_mv AT coopergs canfruitandvegetableaggregationsystemsbetterbalanceimprovedproducerlivelihoodswithmoreequitabledistribution
AT shankarab canfruitandvegetableaggregationsystemsbetterbalanceimprovedproducerlivelihoodswithmoreequitabledistribution
AT richkarlm canfruitandvegetableaggregationsystemsbetterbalanceimprovedproducerlivelihoodswithmoreequitabledistribution
AT ratnann canfruitandvegetableaggregationsystemsbetterbalanceimprovedproducerlivelihoodswithmoreequitabledistribution
AT alammj canfruitandvegetableaggregationsystemsbetterbalanceimprovedproducerlivelihoodswithmoreequitabledistribution
AT singhn canfruitandvegetableaggregationsystemsbetterbalanceimprovedproducerlivelihoodswithmoreequitabledistribution
AT kadiyalas canfruitandvegetableaggregationsystemsbetterbalanceimprovedproducerlivelihoodswithmoreequitabledistribution