The use of mobile phones and the heterogeneity of banana farmers in Rwanda

Information and communications technologies (ICTs) play a key role in improving agricultural production, enhancing socio-ecological resilience, and mitigating rural poverty. However, the use of ICTs for agricultural development among smallholder farmers, especially in the least developed countries,...

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Main Authors: Kabirigi, M., Sekabira, H., Sun, Z., Hermans, F.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Springer 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/129662
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author Kabirigi, M.
Sekabira, H.
Sun, Z.
Hermans, F.
author_browse Hermans, F.
Kabirigi, M.
Sekabira, H.
Sun, Z.
author_facet Kabirigi, M.
Sekabira, H.
Sun, Z.
Hermans, F.
author_sort Kabirigi, M.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Information and communications technologies (ICTs) play a key role in improving agricultural production, enhancing socio-ecological resilience, and mitigating rural poverty. However, the use of ICTs for agricultural development among smallholder farmers, especially in the least developed countries, still lags behind. It is therefore critical to understand distinct attitudes among heterogeneous smallholder farmers that determine use of ICTs, such as mobile phones. Moreover, data-driven empirical studies on the use of mobile phones in smallholder settings are still scarce. We bridge this knowledge gap by evaluating the link between the use of mobile phones and various farming types of smallholder farmers in Rwanda. Using the principal component and cluster analysis, we analyzed 690 banana farming households across eight of the 10 major agro-ecological zones of Rwanda and developed a typology of banana farms. We identified three distinct farm types based on a combination of various farmer characteristics and farm operations and endowments, namely the beer banana, livestock-based, and the cooking banana farm types. These farm types clearly differ in terms of ownership and use of both basic and smart mobile devices. Farmers in the cooking banana farm type are far more likely to own and use smart mobile phones than in other types. Regression results further indicated that farm type, gender, and education have significant correlations with the perceived usefulness of mobile phones in agriculture. Major barriers to using ICT-based agricultural services were 1) low awareness of the existence of ICT services, 2) limited availability of ICT services, 3) lack of technical know-how, 4) relatively high prices of ICT devices, and 5) low levels of ICT literacy. This empirical study provides strategically important insights for the transition to digital agriculture in the context of smallholder farming systems.
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spelling CGSpace1296622025-12-08T09:54:28Z The use of mobile phones and the heterogeneity of banana farmers in Rwanda Kabirigi, M. Sekabira, H. Sun, Z. Hermans, F. information and communication technology agricultural productivity bananas smallholders farmers rwanda agricultural extension systems Information and communications technologies (ICTs) play a key role in improving agricultural production, enhancing socio-ecological resilience, and mitigating rural poverty. However, the use of ICTs for agricultural development among smallholder farmers, especially in the least developed countries, still lags behind. It is therefore critical to understand distinct attitudes among heterogeneous smallholder farmers that determine use of ICTs, such as mobile phones. Moreover, data-driven empirical studies on the use of mobile phones in smallholder settings are still scarce. We bridge this knowledge gap by evaluating the link between the use of mobile phones and various farming types of smallholder farmers in Rwanda. Using the principal component and cluster analysis, we analyzed 690 banana farming households across eight of the 10 major agro-ecological zones of Rwanda and developed a typology of banana farms. We identified three distinct farm types based on a combination of various farmer characteristics and farm operations and endowments, namely the beer banana, livestock-based, and the cooking banana farm types. These farm types clearly differ in terms of ownership and use of both basic and smart mobile devices. Farmers in the cooking banana farm type are far more likely to own and use smart mobile phones than in other types. Regression results further indicated that farm type, gender, and education have significant correlations with the perceived usefulness of mobile phones in agriculture. Major barriers to using ICT-based agricultural services were 1) low awareness of the existence of ICT services, 2) limited availability of ICT services, 3) lack of technical know-how, 4) relatively high prices of ICT devices, and 5) low levels of ICT literacy. This empirical study provides strategically important insights for the transition to digital agriculture in the context of smallholder farming systems. 2023-06 2023-03-15T11:38:04Z 2023-03-15T11:38:04Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/129662 en Open Access application/pdf Springer Kabirigi, M., Sekabira, H., Sun, Z. & Hermans, F. (2022). The use of mobile phones and the heterogeneity of banana farmers in Rwanda. Environment, Development and Sustainability, 1-21.
spellingShingle information and communication technology
agricultural productivity
bananas
smallholders
farmers
rwanda
agricultural extension systems
Kabirigi, M.
Sekabira, H.
Sun, Z.
Hermans, F.
The use of mobile phones and the heterogeneity of banana farmers in Rwanda
title The use of mobile phones and the heterogeneity of banana farmers in Rwanda
title_full The use of mobile phones and the heterogeneity of banana farmers in Rwanda
title_fullStr The use of mobile phones and the heterogeneity of banana farmers in Rwanda
title_full_unstemmed The use of mobile phones and the heterogeneity of banana farmers in Rwanda
title_short The use of mobile phones and the heterogeneity of banana farmers in Rwanda
title_sort use of mobile phones and the heterogeneity of banana farmers in rwanda
topic information and communication technology
agricultural productivity
bananas
smallholders
farmers
rwanda
agricultural extension systems
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/129662
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