Dairy input agri-entrepreneurs’ practices and their effect on inputs market participation by smallholder farmers in Tanzania

Dairy productivity per cow remains lower than the production ability amid increasing population. Among major reasons for this is the lower uptake of improved dairy inputs by smallholder dairy farmers. We characterized dairy input providers' business practices using Latent class analysis (LCA) and de...

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Autores principales: Kundu, R.N., Bett, H.K., Rao, E.J.O.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/139881
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author Kundu, R.N.
Bett, H.K.
Rao, E.J.O.
author_browse Bett, H.K.
Kundu, R.N.
Rao, E.J.O.
author_facet Kundu, R.N.
Bett, H.K.
Rao, E.J.O.
author_sort Kundu, R.N.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Dairy productivity per cow remains lower than the production ability amid increasing population. Among major reasons for this is the lower uptake of improved dairy inputs by smallholder dairy farmers. We characterized dairy input providers' business practices using Latent class analysis (LCA) and determined the effect of these business practices on the uptake of inputs by smallholder dairy farmers in Tanga and Kilimanjaro regions using OLS. From LCA, Bayesian Information Criteria (BIC) revealed a 3-class model as the most parsimonious and best fit (2153.071). The latent class (LC) membership of the input/service entrepreneurs for classes I, II, and III was 37.6% (35), 9.7% (9), and 52.7% (49), respectively. Using item response probabilities, we classified class I, II and III as ‘High business activities and business promotional practices’, ‘Low business activities, medium business promotional activities’, and ‘Medium business activities, Low business promotional activities’. Extension services provision was significant across all the classes with probability values greater than 0.5. The OLS model revealed that LC I and II were significant at 1% while LC III was significant at 5%. Education level and Moshi Rural District were negatively significant. Technical training of input entrepreneurs and capacity building on bundling relevant information alongside inputs is necessary for knowledge sharing with farmers. Networking, collaborations, and alliances among input/service entrepreneurs and between entrepreneurs and dairy farmers should be fostered for adequacy in technical information sharing and connecting farmers to other input suppliers. There is need for entrepreneurs to invest in rural areas and improve information and input access by the farmers. The study explored private dairy entrepreneurs as alternative extension services providers as a business strategy to enhance uptake of improved inputs by smallholder farmers. This study is relevant in making workable decisions towards implementing programmes geared towards increasing the improved input uptake in developing countries.
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spelling CGSpace1398812025-10-26T12:53:12Z Dairy input agri-entrepreneurs’ practices and their effect on inputs market participation by smallholder farmers in Tanzania Kundu, R.N. Bett, H.K. Rao, E.J.O. agriculture dairying entrepreneurs farmers smallholders Dairy productivity per cow remains lower than the production ability amid increasing population. Among major reasons for this is the lower uptake of improved dairy inputs by smallholder dairy farmers. We characterized dairy input providers' business practices using Latent class analysis (LCA) and determined the effect of these business practices on the uptake of inputs by smallholder dairy farmers in Tanga and Kilimanjaro regions using OLS. From LCA, Bayesian Information Criteria (BIC) revealed a 3-class model as the most parsimonious and best fit (2153.071). The latent class (LC) membership of the input/service entrepreneurs for classes I, II, and III was 37.6% (35), 9.7% (9), and 52.7% (49), respectively. Using item response probabilities, we classified class I, II and III as ‘High business activities and business promotional practices’, ‘Low business activities, medium business promotional activities’, and ‘Medium business activities, Low business promotional activities’. Extension services provision was significant across all the classes with probability values greater than 0.5. The OLS model revealed that LC I and II were significant at 1% while LC III was significant at 5%. Education level and Moshi Rural District were negatively significant. Technical training of input entrepreneurs and capacity building on bundling relevant information alongside inputs is necessary for knowledge sharing with farmers. Networking, collaborations, and alliances among input/service entrepreneurs and between entrepreneurs and dairy farmers should be fostered for adequacy in technical information sharing and connecting farmers to other input suppliers. There is need for entrepreneurs to invest in rural areas and improve information and input access by the farmers. The study explored private dairy entrepreneurs as alternative extension services providers as a business strategy to enhance uptake of improved inputs by smallholder farmers. This study is relevant in making workable decisions towards implementing programmes geared towards increasing the improved input uptake in developing countries. 2024-03 2024-03-10T16:38:20Z 2024-03-10T16:38:20Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/139881 en Open Access Elsevier Kundu, R.N., Bett, H.K. and Rao, E.J.O. 2024. Dairy input agri-entrepreneurs’ practices and their effect on inputs market participation by smallholder farmers in Tanzania. Journal of Agriculture and Food Research 15, 100992.
spellingShingle agriculture
dairying
entrepreneurs
farmers
smallholders
Kundu, R.N.
Bett, H.K.
Rao, E.J.O.
Dairy input agri-entrepreneurs’ practices and their effect on inputs market participation by smallholder farmers in Tanzania
title Dairy input agri-entrepreneurs’ practices and their effect on inputs market participation by smallholder farmers in Tanzania
title_full Dairy input agri-entrepreneurs’ practices and their effect on inputs market participation by smallholder farmers in Tanzania
title_fullStr Dairy input agri-entrepreneurs’ practices and their effect on inputs market participation by smallholder farmers in Tanzania
title_full_unstemmed Dairy input agri-entrepreneurs’ practices and their effect on inputs market participation by smallholder farmers in Tanzania
title_short Dairy input agri-entrepreneurs’ practices and their effect on inputs market participation by smallholder farmers in Tanzania
title_sort dairy input agri entrepreneurs practices and their effect on inputs market participation by smallholder farmers in tanzania
topic agriculture
dairying
entrepreneurs
farmers
smallholders
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/139881
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