Patterns of systemic problems in Ghana's poultry value chain: A group model building approach

Ghana's poultry sector faces different interrelated systemic challenges, often diagnosed in isolation, leading to interventions that neglect unintended consequences across the value chain. Consequently, a holistic prognosis of the impact of these systemic problems that considers the different facets...

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Autores principales: Aboah, Joshua, Enahoro, Dolapo K., Mensah, Charles, Agyemang, Nana Adwoa, Kondo, E., Ayertey, D.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2025
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/173947
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author Aboah, Joshua
Enahoro, Dolapo K.
Mensah, Charles
Agyemang, Nana Adwoa
Kondo, E.
Ayertey, D.
author_browse Aboah, Joshua
Agyemang, Nana Adwoa
Ayertey, D.
Enahoro, Dolapo K.
Kondo, E.
Mensah, Charles
author_facet Aboah, Joshua
Enahoro, Dolapo K.
Mensah, Charles
Agyemang, Nana Adwoa
Kondo, E.
Ayertey, D.
author_sort Aboah, Joshua
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Ghana's poultry sector faces different interrelated systemic challenges, often diagnosed in isolation, leading to interventions that neglect unintended consequences across the value chain. Consequently, a holistic prognosis of the impact of these systemic problems that considers the different facets of the poultry industry is required. This paper aims to examine the system archetypes emerging from the inherent industry-level and farm-level problems in Ghana's poultry sector. Adopting a participatory group model building process, causal loop diagrams and feedback loop analyses were applied to understand the interacting factors in four systemic problems prioritised by stakeholders in Ghana's poultry value chain. Four causal loop diagrams were mapped for these systemic problems; (i) inadequate research funding (ii) low adherence to biosecurity measures at the farm level; (iii) lack of access to credit; and (iv) the competition from cheap imports of poultry meat products. The findings highlight three emerging problem archetypes. First, the underachievement archetype, specifically the limit to growth, emerges when technology adoption due to increased research funding interacts with the non-adherence to biosecurity measures as a cost-cutting strategy at the farm level. Second, the out-of-control archetype emerges when the misuse of antimicrobials due to the non-adherence of biosecurity measures interacts with the industry's collapse and the consequential surge in chicken imports into the country. Third, the relative achievement archetype emerges from the reinforcing feedback loop which centres around the surge in imported chicken as a response to looming food insecurity concerns arising from insufficient domestic supply. The “success to the successful” archetype is thus created, where importers in the poultry value chain become more prosperous at the expense of the entire industry. The paper presents solutions to the emerging problem archetypes, providing stakeholders with a chance to evaluate the unintended consequences of proposed government policies aimed at rejuvenating local poultry production.
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spelling CGSpace1739472025-12-08T09:54:28Z Patterns of systemic problems in Ghana's poultry value chain: A group model building approach Aboah, Joshua Enahoro, Dolapo K. Mensah, Charles Agyemang, Nana Adwoa Kondo, E. Ayertey, D. poultry value chains animal production policies Ghana's poultry sector faces different interrelated systemic challenges, often diagnosed in isolation, leading to interventions that neglect unintended consequences across the value chain. Consequently, a holistic prognosis of the impact of these systemic problems that considers the different facets of the poultry industry is required. This paper aims to examine the system archetypes emerging from the inherent industry-level and farm-level problems in Ghana's poultry sector. Adopting a participatory group model building process, causal loop diagrams and feedback loop analyses were applied to understand the interacting factors in four systemic problems prioritised by stakeholders in Ghana's poultry value chain. Four causal loop diagrams were mapped for these systemic problems; (i) inadequate research funding (ii) low adherence to biosecurity measures at the farm level; (iii) lack of access to credit; and (iv) the competition from cheap imports of poultry meat products. The findings highlight three emerging problem archetypes. First, the underachievement archetype, specifically the limit to growth, emerges when technology adoption due to increased research funding interacts with the non-adherence to biosecurity measures as a cost-cutting strategy at the farm level. Second, the out-of-control archetype emerges when the misuse of antimicrobials due to the non-adherence of biosecurity measures interacts with the industry's collapse and the consequential surge in chicken imports into the country. Third, the relative achievement archetype emerges from the reinforcing feedback loop which centres around the surge in imported chicken as a response to looming food insecurity concerns arising from insufficient domestic supply. The “success to the successful” archetype is thus created, where importers in the poultry value chain become more prosperous at the expense of the entire industry. The paper presents solutions to the emerging problem archetypes, providing stakeholders with a chance to evaluate the unintended consequences of proposed government policies aimed at rejuvenating local poultry production. 2025-04 2025-04-01T05:39:26Z 2025-04-01T05:39:26Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/173947 en Open Access Elsevier Aboah, J., Enahoro, D., Mensah, C., Agyemang, Nana, A., Kondo, E. and Ayertey, D. 2025. Patterns of systemic problems in Ghana's poultry value chain: A group model building approach. Journal of Agriculture and Food Research 20:101738.
spellingShingle poultry
value chains
animal production
policies
Aboah, Joshua
Enahoro, Dolapo K.
Mensah, Charles
Agyemang, Nana Adwoa
Kondo, E.
Ayertey, D.
Patterns of systemic problems in Ghana's poultry value chain: A group model building approach
title Patterns of systemic problems in Ghana's poultry value chain: A group model building approach
title_full Patterns of systemic problems in Ghana's poultry value chain: A group model building approach
title_fullStr Patterns of systemic problems in Ghana's poultry value chain: A group model building approach
title_full_unstemmed Patterns of systemic problems in Ghana's poultry value chain: A group model building approach
title_short Patterns of systemic problems in Ghana's poultry value chain: A group model building approach
title_sort patterns of systemic problems in ghana s poultry value chain a group model building approach
topic poultry
value chains
animal production
policies
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/173947
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