Land and technology requirements for economically prosperous smallholder farming in sub-Saharan Africa: Evidence from Tanzania

IF 3.5 3区 经济学 Q1 AGRICULTURE, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Outlook on Agriculture Pub Date : 2024-05-13 DOI:10.1177/00307270241248667
D. Harris, K. Mausch, J. Chamberlin
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Abstract

Making a living from a small farm is difficult in sub-Saharan Africa. In this paper, we quantify how difficult, using a simple, robust, relation between per capita daily income from farming (FPDI), land per capita and whole-farm net profitability per hectare. This relation allows the calculation of the land area required to generate various levels of household income as a function of farm performance. We use nationally representative household data for Tanzania to investigate the range of whole-farm profitability and to estimate an upper limit for it. For 6818 cases where households with land reported figures for gross crop and livestock revenues and for costs in any of the three years 2009, 2011 or 2013, actual median whole-farm net profitability was only $454/ha/y even without including the opportunity cost of family labour. When those were considered, median net profitability was negative $238/ha/y, i.e. a net loss. The maximum whole-farm profitability achieved was $4485/ha/y without family labour costs and $2742/ha/y with it. We evaluated actual and potential farm performance for their ability to generate a range of values of FPDI up to $10 per person per day. Most farms are not very profitable, particularly when household labour costs are considered, and few would be considered economically prosperous. Our analysis underscores the fact that improving their operations or adopting new technologies alone is unlikely to lift many smallholder farmers out of poverty in developing countries, given typical farm size distributions and reasonable assumptions about the realized economic returns to adoption of currently available agricultural technologies. While continued agricultural R&D investments are certainly worthwhile, such efforts alone will be insufficient to meaningfully address welfare needs of the world's rural poor. This suggests that agricultural development programs should expand their attention to incorporate off-farm and non-farm components of the rural economy.
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撒哈拉以南非洲经济繁荣的小农农业对土地和技术的要求:坦桑尼亚的证据
在撒哈拉以南的非洲地区,靠小农场谋生非常困难。在本文中,我们利用人均每日农业收入 (FPDI)、人均土地和每公顷整个农场净利润之间简单、稳健的关系,量化了这种困难的程度。通过这种关系,可以计算出产生不同水平家庭收入所需的土地面积,并将其作为农场绩效的函数。我们使用坦桑尼亚具有全国代表性的家庭数据来调查整个农场的盈利范围,并估算其上限。在 2009、2011 或 2013 这三年中的任何一年,6818 个有土地的家庭报告了作物和牲畜总收入以及成本的数字,即使不包括家庭劳动力的机会成本,实际的全农场净利润率中位数也仅为 454 美元/公顷/年。如果考虑到这些因素,净利润中位数为负 238 美元/公顷/年,即净亏损。在不考虑家庭劳动力成本的情况下,整个农场的最高盈利能力为 4485 美元/公顷/年,在考虑家庭劳动力成本的情况下,最高盈利能力为 2742 美元/公顷/年。我们对实际和潜在的农场绩效进行了评估,看其能否产生一系列 FPDI 值,最高可达每人每天 10 美元。大多数农场的利润都不高,特别是在考虑家庭劳动力成本的情况下,很少有农场可以称得上经济繁荣。我们的分析强调了这样一个事实,即考虑到典型的农场规模分布以及对采用现有农业技术的实际经济回报的合理假设,仅靠改善经营或采用新技术不太可能使发展中国家的许多小农摆脱贫困。尽管持续的农业研发投资肯定是值得的,但仅靠这些努力还不足以切实解决世界农村贫困人口的福利需求。这表明,农业发展计划应扩大其关注范围,纳入农村经济的非农和非农组成部分。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Outlook on Agriculture
Outlook on Agriculture 农林科学-农业综合
CiteScore
5.60
自引率
13.30%
发文量
38
审稿时长
>36 weeks
期刊介绍: Outlook on Agriculture is a peer reviewed journal, published quarterly, which welcomes original research papers, research notes, invited reviews and commentary for an international and interdisciplinary readership. Special attention is paid to agricultural policy, international trade in the agricultural sector, strategic developments in food production, the links between agricultural systems and food security, the role of agriculture in social and economic development, agriculture in developing countries and environmental issues, including natural resources for agriculture and climate impacts.
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