Effect of social capital on productivity of cassava farmers in Ogun State, Nigeria
Nigeria is an agriculturally labor-intensive economy and the protection and utilization of the labor resource to guarantee the highest productivity are of immense vitality to the growth of the agricultural sector. This study assessed the relationship between the social capital and the productivity o...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of agricultural sciences (Belgrade, Serbia) Serbia), 2018, Vol.63 (1), p.99-112 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Nigeria is an agriculturally labor-intensive economy and the protection and
utilization of the labor resource to guarantee the highest productivity are
of immense vitality to the growth of the agricultural sector. This study
assessed the relationship between the social capital and the productivity of
cassava farmers in Ijebu North-East Local Government Area of Ogun State. A
purposive sampling procedure was employed in the study. Data were collected
from one hundred and thirty-nine cassava farmers by the use of a
well-structured questionnaire. Data were analyzed using descriptive
statistics, total factor productivity and ordinary least squares model. The
mean age and household size of cassava farmers were 44.2?9.9 years and
6.0?3.1 respectively. The density of memberships in associations was
2.7?1.3. The average meeting attendance index by farmer was three out of
four meetings (77.2%). The association membership was moderately diversified
with a heterogeneity index of 59.2% and farmers participated in one out of
four decision making processes of their associations. A monthly cash
contribution of farmers to associations was low (N132.04?N107.67) and the
trust index was 0.296. Farmers cultivated an average of 1.25 ha with total
factor productivity of 0.096kg/N. Results show that age of the farmer, age
squared (life cycle), household size, farm size, cash contribution and
decision making significantly determined the productivity of cassava farmers
in the study area. Social capital variables significantly influenced cassava
farmers? productivity. It is therefore suggested that policy makers
interested in farmers? production output should make active participation in
local level institutions compulsory.
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ISSN: | 1450-8109 2406-0968 |
DOI: | 10.2298/JAS1801099B |