The marketing of sheep and goats from two pastoral systems in Kenya: a comparison of market offtake from Maasailand and Baringo.

The problem of sub-optimal offtake of sheep and boats from the Maasai production system is investigated. The study uses a comparative approach, taking the Baringo livestock production system as an example from which offtake of sheep and goats has largely been commercialised. Forty-six I ivestock pro...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Chabari, F.N.
Formato: Tesis
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: University of Nairobi 1986
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/79682
_version_ 1855531061929312256
author Chabari, F.N.
author_browse Chabari, F.N.
author_facet Chabari, F.N.
author_sort Chabari, F.N.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The problem of sub-optimal offtake of sheep and boats from the Maasai production system is investigated. The study uses a comparative approach, taking the Baringo livestock production system as an example from which offtake of sheep and goats has largely been commercialised. Forty-six I ivestock producers (sellers) and fifty-six buyers were interviewed as they transacted livestock at the Baringo and Kajiado markets. A structure - Conduct - Performance model has been applied in comparing the resul t s, Further, ordinary least squares regression and analysis of v~riance (ANOVA) techniques have been applied in analysing the main v ar iabl es that determine pr ices and I i v eweights of the small ruminants transacted in Baringo auction markets. A total of 1481 ruminant market transactions were used in these analyses. The results showed that Baringo producers routinely sold their small ruminants at competitive auction markets spread in the major production areas of the district. The concentration of the sellers at these markets was low and the buyers were moderately concentrated. The Kajiado small ruminant markets were characterised by irre&ular and insufflcient supptres~ tfon-Maasai t.r ader-s rarely had direct access to the producers in Kajiado and market prices were a.etermined through a one-to-one bargaining method at all the livestock markets. M~rketing efficiencies were largely determined by the mode employed in transporting livestock and the extent to which traders integrated vertically. Body condition, a proxy for weight and meat quality, was a major determinant of market pr ice. Consequent 1 y. the castrates, most of them in good to excellent body condition, commanded premium pr ices.
format Tesis
id CGSpace79682
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 1986
publishDateRange 1986
publishDateSort 1986
publisher University of Nairobi
publisherStr University of Nairobi
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace796822023-02-15T11:16:53Z The marketing of sheep and goats from two pastoral systems in Kenya: a comparison of market offtake from Maasailand and Baringo. Chabari, F.N. livestock pastoralism production The problem of sub-optimal offtake of sheep and boats from the Maasai production system is investigated. The study uses a comparative approach, taking the Baringo livestock production system as an example from which offtake of sheep and goats has largely been commercialised. Forty-six I ivestock producers (sellers) and fifty-six buyers were interviewed as they transacted livestock at the Baringo and Kajiado markets. A structure - Conduct - Performance model has been applied in comparing the resul t s, Further, ordinary least squares regression and analysis of v~riance (ANOVA) techniques have been applied in analysing the main v ar iabl es that determine pr ices and I i v eweights of the small ruminants transacted in Baringo auction markets. A total of 1481 ruminant market transactions were used in these analyses. The results showed that Baringo producers routinely sold their small ruminants at competitive auction markets spread in the major production areas of the district. The concentration of the sellers at these markets was low and the buyers were moderately concentrated. The Kajiado small ruminant markets were characterised by irre&ular and insufflcient supptres~ tfon-Maasai t.r ader-s rarely had direct access to the producers in Kajiado and market prices were a.etermined through a one-to-one bargaining method at all the livestock markets. M~rketing efficiencies were largely determined by the mode employed in transporting livestock and the extent to which traders integrated vertically. Body condition, a proxy for weight and meat quality, was a major determinant of market pr ice. Consequent 1 y. the castrates, most of them in good to excellent body condition, commanded premium pr ices. 1986 2017-02-03T11:04:33Z 2017-02-03T11:04:33Z Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/10568/79682 en Limited Access University of Nairobi Chabari, F. N. 1986. The marketing of sheep and goats from two pastoral systems in Kenya: a comparison of market offtake from Maasailand and Baringo. MSc thesis in Agricultural Economics. University of Nairobi.
spellingShingle livestock
pastoralism
production
Chabari, F.N.
The marketing of sheep and goats from two pastoral systems in Kenya: a comparison of market offtake from Maasailand and Baringo.
title The marketing of sheep and goats from two pastoral systems in Kenya: a comparison of market offtake from Maasailand and Baringo.
title_full The marketing of sheep and goats from two pastoral systems in Kenya: a comparison of market offtake from Maasailand and Baringo.
title_fullStr The marketing of sheep and goats from two pastoral systems in Kenya: a comparison of market offtake from Maasailand and Baringo.
title_full_unstemmed The marketing of sheep and goats from two pastoral systems in Kenya: a comparison of market offtake from Maasailand and Baringo.
title_short The marketing of sheep and goats from two pastoral systems in Kenya: a comparison of market offtake from Maasailand and Baringo.
title_sort marketing of sheep and goats from two pastoral systems in kenya a comparison of market offtake from maasailand and baringo
topic livestock
pastoralism
production
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/79682
work_keys_str_mv AT chabarifn themarketingofsheepandgoatsfromtwopastoralsystemsinkenyaacomparisonofmarketofftakefrommaasailandandbaringo
AT chabarifn marketingofsheepandgoatsfromtwopastoralsystemsinkenyaacomparisonofmarketofftakefrommaasailandandbaringo