Potential impact of groundnut production technology on welfare of smallholder farmers in Ghana

This study was conducted to assess the potential impact of applying a new groundnut planting density on welfare of smallholder farmers in northern Ghana. We used data from on-farm experiments, focus group discussions, and a household survey. We followed three steps in our analysis. First, we conduct...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kotu, Bekele Hundie, Nurudeen, A.R., Muthoni, Francis K., Hoeschle-Zeledon, Irmgard, Kizito, Fred
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/118107
_version_ 1855535862547218432
author Kotu, Bekele Hundie
Nurudeen, A.R.
Muthoni, Francis K.
Hoeschle-Zeledon, Irmgard
Kizito, Fred
author_browse Hoeschle-Zeledon, Irmgard
Kizito, Fred
Kotu, Bekele Hundie
Muthoni, Francis K.
Nurudeen, A.R.
author_facet Kotu, Bekele Hundie
Nurudeen, A.R.
Muthoni, Francis K.
Hoeschle-Zeledon, Irmgard
Kizito, Fred
author_sort Kotu, Bekele Hundie
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This study was conducted to assess the potential impact of applying a new groundnut planting density on welfare of smallholder farmers in northern Ghana. We used data from on-farm experiments, focus group discussions, and a household survey. We followed three steps in our analysis. First, we conducted cost-benefit analysis in which we showed the economic advantage of the new technology over the farmers’ practice. Second, we predicted adoption rates along timeline using the Adoption and Diffusion Outcome Prediction Tool (ADOPT). Third, using the results of the first and the second steps, we estimated the potential impact of the technology on poverty at household level using a combination of methods such as economic surplus model and econometric model. The cost-benefit analysis shows that increasing plant density increases farmers’ financial returns i.e., the benefit-cost-ratio increases from 1.05 under farmers’ practice to 1.87 under the best plant density option, which is 22 plants/sqm. The adoption prediction analysis shows that the maximum adoption rate for the best practice will be 62% which will take about nine years to reach. At the maximum adoption rate the incidence of extreme poverty will be reduced by about 3.6% if farmers have access to the international groundnut market and by about 2% if they do not have. The intervention will also reduce poverty gap and poverty severity. The results suggest that policy actions which can improve farmers’ access to the international market will enhance farmers’ welfare more than the situation in which farmers have access to domestic markets only. Furthermore, promoting a more integrated groundnut value-chain can broaden the demand base of the produce resulting in higher and sustainable impact of the technology on the welfare of groundnut producers and beyond.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace118107
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1181072025-10-26T12:56:23Z Potential impact of groundnut production technology on welfare of smallholder farmers in Ghana Kotu, Bekele Hundie Nurudeen, A.R. Muthoni, Francis K. Hoeschle-Zeledon, Irmgard Kizito, Fred smallholders groundnuts plant population intensification farming systems agricultural workers finance ghana crops agriculture cost benefit analysis africa planting This study was conducted to assess the potential impact of applying a new groundnut planting density on welfare of smallholder farmers in northern Ghana. We used data from on-farm experiments, focus group discussions, and a household survey. We followed three steps in our analysis. First, we conducted cost-benefit analysis in which we showed the economic advantage of the new technology over the farmers’ practice. Second, we predicted adoption rates along timeline using the Adoption and Diffusion Outcome Prediction Tool (ADOPT). Third, using the results of the first and the second steps, we estimated the potential impact of the technology on poverty at household level using a combination of methods such as economic surplus model and econometric model. The cost-benefit analysis shows that increasing plant density increases farmers’ financial returns i.e., the benefit-cost-ratio increases from 1.05 under farmers’ practice to 1.87 under the best plant density option, which is 22 plants/sqm. The adoption prediction analysis shows that the maximum adoption rate for the best practice will be 62% which will take about nine years to reach. At the maximum adoption rate the incidence of extreme poverty will be reduced by about 3.6% if farmers have access to the international groundnut market and by about 2% if they do not have. The intervention will also reduce poverty gap and poverty severity. The results suggest that policy actions which can improve farmers’ access to the international market will enhance farmers’ welfare more than the situation in which farmers have access to domestic markets only. Furthermore, promoting a more integrated groundnut value-chain can broaden the demand base of the produce resulting in higher and sustainable impact of the technology on the welfare of groundnut producers and beyond. 2022-01-14 2022-02-14T07:30:49Z 2022-02-14T07:30:49Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/118107 en Open Access Kotu, B. H., Nurudeen, A. R., Muthoni, F., Hoeschle-Zeledon, I., & Kizito, F. (2022). Potential impact of groundnut production technology on welfare of smallholder farmers in Ghana. In G. Kruseman (Ed.), PLOS ONE (Vol. 17, Issue 1, p. e0260877). Public Library of Science (PLoS). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0260877
spellingShingle smallholders
groundnuts
plant population
intensification
farming systems
agricultural workers
finance
ghana
crops
agriculture
cost benefit analysis
africa
planting
Kotu, Bekele Hundie
Nurudeen, A.R.
Muthoni, Francis K.
Hoeschle-Zeledon, Irmgard
Kizito, Fred
Potential impact of groundnut production technology on welfare of smallholder farmers in Ghana
title Potential impact of groundnut production technology on welfare of smallholder farmers in Ghana
title_full Potential impact of groundnut production technology on welfare of smallholder farmers in Ghana
title_fullStr Potential impact of groundnut production technology on welfare of smallholder farmers in Ghana
title_full_unstemmed Potential impact of groundnut production technology on welfare of smallholder farmers in Ghana
title_short Potential impact of groundnut production technology on welfare of smallholder farmers in Ghana
title_sort potential impact of groundnut production technology on welfare of smallholder farmers in ghana
topic smallholders
groundnuts
plant population
intensification
farming systems
agricultural workers
finance
ghana
crops
agriculture
cost benefit analysis
africa
planting
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/118107
work_keys_str_mv AT kotubekelehundie potentialimpactofgroundnutproductiontechnologyonwelfareofsmallholderfarmersinghana
AT nurudeenar potentialimpactofgroundnutproductiontechnologyonwelfareofsmallholderfarmersinghana
AT muthonifrancisk potentialimpactofgroundnutproductiontechnologyonwelfareofsmallholderfarmersinghana
AT hoeschlezeledonirmgard potentialimpactofgroundnutproductiontechnologyonwelfareofsmallholderfarmersinghana
AT kizitofred potentialimpactofgroundnutproductiontechnologyonwelfareofsmallholderfarmersinghana