Profitability analysis of commercial chemical and biological crop products among farm households in agroecological zones of West Africa

This paper evaluates the costs and returns incurred by the use of chemical and biological crop products among households in five selected Compro communities in the derived, Southern Guinea, Northern Guinea, Sudan and Sahel Savanna agro-ecological zones (AEZs) in West Africa. Sixty households were ra...

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Autores principales: Bamire, A., Abaidoo, Robert C., Jemo, M., Abdoulaye, Tahirou, Yusuf, A.A., Nwoke, C.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Academic Journals 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/77426
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author Bamire, A.
Abaidoo, Robert C.
Jemo, M.
Abdoulaye, Tahirou
Yusuf, A.A.
Nwoke, C.
author_browse Abaidoo, Robert C.
Abdoulaye, Tahirou
Bamire, A.
Jemo, M.
Nwoke, C.
Yusuf, A.A.
author_facet Bamire, A.
Abaidoo, Robert C.
Jemo, M.
Abdoulaye, Tahirou
Yusuf, A.A.
Nwoke, C.
author_sort Bamire, A.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This paper evaluates the costs and returns incurred by the use of chemical and biological crop products among households in five selected Compro communities in the derived, Southern Guinea, Northern Guinea, Sudan and Sahel Savanna agro-ecological zones (AEZs) in West Africa. Sixty households were randomly selected in each of the communities to give a total of 300 households. Data were collected on the characteristics of the chemical products, households’ socio-economic variables such as age and education, as well as, on farm input and output quantities and prices in the 2009/2010 periods using a pre-tested questionnaire. Data were analyzed with descriptive statistics and budgetary techniques. The Results obtained show a male dominant, fairly literate farming household, with small landholdings (comprising mainly cereal and legume fields) that are predominantly inherited and located far away from the homestead. Inorganic fertilizers, organic manure, improved seeds and pesticides are known as commercial inputs/ products used on farmers’ fields, while agrolizer, apron plus and boost extra are the emerging products. The average quantity of inputs applied varied across the zones. The total quantity of inorganic fertilizer applied on the fields was highest in the NGS (924 kg) and lowest in the Sudan (676 kg). However, fertilizer application per hectare by respondents was below recommended dosages across the zones. The emerging chemical inputs (Agrolizer, Boost Extra and Apron Plus) were used only in Compro communities in the derived savanna (DS) and southern guinea savanna (SGS) by a small number of households. The results obtained from budgetary analysis show that gross margin per hectare was highest in the SGS ($ 254) where the emerging inputs were used by 41.7% of the households and lowest in the Sahel ($ 76). Organic fertilizer was used only in small quantities in the AEZs.Total variable costs accounted for more than 30% of revenue generated, and labour and fertilizer accounted for the highest percentage of these costs. The study concludes that promoting the emerging chemical inputs through increased accessibility and farmers’ training on their appropriate agronomic use would increase farmers’ income generating potentials for sustainable crop production across the AEZs.
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spelling CGSpace774262024-04-25T06:01:36Z Profitability analysis of commercial chemical and biological crop products among farm households in agroecological zones of West Africa Bamire, A. Abaidoo, Robert C. Jemo, M. Abdoulaye, Tahirou Yusuf, A.A. Nwoke, C. profitability crop production This paper evaluates the costs and returns incurred by the use of chemical and biological crop products among households in five selected Compro communities in the derived, Southern Guinea, Northern Guinea, Sudan and Sahel Savanna agro-ecological zones (AEZs) in West Africa. Sixty households were randomly selected in each of the communities to give a total of 300 households. Data were collected on the characteristics of the chemical products, households’ socio-economic variables such as age and education, as well as, on farm input and output quantities and prices in the 2009/2010 periods using a pre-tested questionnaire. Data were analyzed with descriptive statistics and budgetary techniques. The Results obtained show a male dominant, fairly literate farming household, with small landholdings (comprising mainly cereal and legume fields) that are predominantly inherited and located far away from the homestead. Inorganic fertilizers, organic manure, improved seeds and pesticides are known as commercial inputs/ products used on farmers’ fields, while agrolizer, apron plus and boost extra are the emerging products. The average quantity of inputs applied varied across the zones. The total quantity of inorganic fertilizer applied on the fields was highest in the NGS (924 kg) and lowest in the Sudan (676 kg). However, fertilizer application per hectare by respondents was below recommended dosages across the zones. The emerging chemical inputs (Agrolizer, Boost Extra and Apron Plus) were used only in Compro communities in the derived savanna (DS) and southern guinea savanna (SGS) by a small number of households. The results obtained from budgetary analysis show that gross margin per hectare was highest in the SGS ($ 254) where the emerging inputs were used by 41.7% of the households and lowest in the Sahel ($ 76). Organic fertilizer was used only in small quantities in the AEZs.Total variable costs accounted for more than 30% of revenue generated, and labour and fertilizer accounted for the highest percentage of these costs. The study concludes that promoting the emerging chemical inputs through increased accessibility and farmers’ training on their appropriate agronomic use would increase farmers’ income generating potentials for sustainable crop production across the AEZs. 2012-06 2016-10-27T08:30:32Z 2016-10-27T08:30:32Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/77426 en Limited Access Academic Journals Bamire, A., Abaidoo, R., Jemo, M., Abdoulaye, T., Yusuf, A.A. & Nwoke, C. (2012). Profitability analysis of commercial chemical and biological crop products among farm households in agro-ecological zones of West Africa. African Journal of Agricultural Research, 7(23), 3385-3394.
spellingShingle profitability
crop production
Bamire, A.
Abaidoo, Robert C.
Jemo, M.
Abdoulaye, Tahirou
Yusuf, A.A.
Nwoke, C.
Profitability analysis of commercial chemical and biological crop products among farm households in agroecological zones of West Africa
title Profitability analysis of commercial chemical and biological crop products among farm households in agroecological zones of West Africa
title_full Profitability analysis of commercial chemical and biological crop products among farm households in agroecological zones of West Africa
title_fullStr Profitability analysis of commercial chemical and biological crop products among farm households in agroecological zones of West Africa
title_full_unstemmed Profitability analysis of commercial chemical and biological crop products among farm households in agroecological zones of West Africa
title_short Profitability analysis of commercial chemical and biological crop products among farm households in agroecological zones of West Africa
title_sort profitability analysis of commercial chemical and biological crop products among farm households in agroecological zones of west africa
topic profitability
crop production
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/77426
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