Digital finance and agri-food value chains: Case studies from Kenya

Kenya’s agrifood systems are broad and diverse, including both staple food crops and high-value exports which are essential to the economic and social advancement of the nation. The agricultural sector em ploys more than 40 percent of Kenya's workforce, including more than 70 percent of rural reside...

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Main Author: Wairimu, Edith
Format: Informe técnico
Language:Inglés
Published: International Food Policy Research Institute 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175448
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author Wairimu, Edith
author_browse Wairimu, Edith
author_facet Wairimu, Edith
author_sort Wairimu, Edith
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Kenya’s agrifood systems are broad and diverse, including both staple food crops and high-value exports which are essential to the economic and social advancement of the nation. The agricultural sector em ploys more than 40 percent of Kenya's workforce, including more than 70 percent of rural residents, and accounts for about 33 percent of the country's GDP (FAO, 2023a; FAO, n.d.). The growth of Kenya’s agrifood system is largely driven by domestic market demand rather than exports, a trend driven by rapid urbanization and rising income opportunities in the rural nonfarm sector, which are leading to shifts in dietary preferences and are expected to further influence ongoing structural transformation (Diao et al., 2023). Kenya’s agricultural sector is characterized by several value chains that significantly support economic output, job creation, and trade. Tea is Kenya's most significant agricultural export, contributing about 2 percent to the overall GDP and 4 percent to GDP in agriculture. Managed predominantly by the Kenya Tea Development Agency (KTDA), which oversees over 60 percent of national tea production, the sector supports approximately 6.5 million people (Tea Board of Kenya, 2024). Tea also contributes around 21 percent of Kenya's export earnings, which makes it the third-largest source of foreign exchange earnings in the nation after diaspora remittances and tourism (Kilimo News, 2024).
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spelling CGSpace1754482025-11-06T05:10:39Z Digital finance and agri-food value chains: Case studies from Kenya Wairimu, Edith value chains agrifood systems agricultural sector digital technology finance Kenya’s agrifood systems are broad and diverse, including both staple food crops and high-value exports which are essential to the economic and social advancement of the nation. The agricultural sector em ploys more than 40 percent of Kenya's workforce, including more than 70 percent of rural residents, and accounts for about 33 percent of the country's GDP (FAO, 2023a; FAO, n.d.). The growth of Kenya’s agrifood system is largely driven by domestic market demand rather than exports, a trend driven by rapid urbanization and rising income opportunities in the rural nonfarm sector, which are leading to shifts in dietary preferences and are expected to further influence ongoing structural transformation (Diao et al., 2023). Kenya’s agricultural sector is characterized by several value chains that significantly support economic output, job creation, and trade. Tea is Kenya's most significant agricultural export, contributing about 2 percent to the overall GDP and 4 percent to GDP in agriculture. Managed predominantly by the Kenya Tea Development Agency (KTDA), which oversees over 60 percent of national tea production, the sector supports approximately 6.5 million people (Tea Board of Kenya, 2024). Tea also contributes around 21 percent of Kenya's export earnings, which makes it the third-largest source of foreign exchange earnings in the nation after diaspora remittances and tourism (Kilimo News, 2024). 2025-07-02 2025-07-02T17:46:31Z 2025-07-02T17:46:31Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175448 en https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175447 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175446 Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Wairimu, Edith. 2025. Digital finance and agri-food value chains: Case studies from Kenya. IFPRI Project Paper July 2025. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175448
spellingShingle value chains
agrifood systems
agricultural sector
digital technology
finance
Wairimu, Edith
Digital finance and agri-food value chains: Case studies from Kenya
title Digital finance and agri-food value chains: Case studies from Kenya
title_full Digital finance and agri-food value chains: Case studies from Kenya
title_fullStr Digital finance and agri-food value chains: Case studies from Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Digital finance and agri-food value chains: Case studies from Kenya
title_short Digital finance and agri-food value chains: Case studies from Kenya
title_sort digital finance and agri food value chains case studies from kenya
topic value chains
agrifood systems
agricultural sector
digital technology
finance
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175448
work_keys_str_mv AT wairimuedith digitalfinanceandagrifoodvaluechainscasestudiesfromkenya