Agricultural advisory and financial services; farm level access, outreach and impact in a mixed cropping district of Punjab, Pakistan

•Outreach and access to advisory and financial services is restricted due various socio-economic barriers.•Farmers often use agricultural credit for non-farm purposes.•Limited economic opportunities, household dependence and increasing cost of production are the reasons behind credit misuse.•Access...

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Veröffentlicht in:Land use policy 2018-02, Vol.71, p.249-260
Hauptverfasser: Elahi, Ehsan, Abid, Muhammad, Zhang, Liqin, ul Haq, Shams, Sahito, Jam Ghulam Murtaza
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container_end_page 260
container_issue
container_start_page 249
container_title Land use policy
container_volume 71
creator Elahi, Ehsan
Abid, Muhammad
Zhang, Liqin
ul Haq, Shams
Sahito, Jam Ghulam Murtaza
description •Outreach and access to advisory and financial services is restricted due various socio-economic barriers.•Farmers often use agricultural credit for non-farm purposes.•Limited economic opportunities, household dependence and increasing cost of production are the reasons behind credit misuse.•Access and use of agricultural advisory services improves crop productivity.•Productivity gains of using agricultural credit depend on its proper utilization for on-farm purposes. Current agricultural growth in most of the developing countries including Pakistan is stagnant due to huge gaps between actual and potential crop productivity. Better access to agricultural advisory and financial services may play an important role in enhancing crop productivity. Using a dataset of 240 farmers collected through face-to-face interviews in 48 villages of district Sargodha in Punjab, Pakistan, this study analyzes farmers’ access to and use of farm advisory and financial services, its impact on wheat productivity and barriers to their access. The results of the study revealed that farmers rely more on informal sources for agricultural advisory and credit services than public or private sources. However, the quality of private advisory and credit services was reported better than other sources due to its easy availability and processing. Small land holdings, lack of education and high interest rates were some of the key barriers that restrict farmers’ access to both services. Further, the study also found that majority of the farmers (accessors) use agricultural credit for non-farm activities for several reasons. Moreover, the study found significant differences in the wheat productivity for farmers who had simultaneous access to both services compared to those who have access to at least one or none of the services. The study findings showed that access to agricultural advisory services improves wheat productivity. However, productivity gains of using agricultural credit are mainly associated with its proper utilization for agricultural purposes. The study suggests enhancing the outreach and quality of public advisory services through hiring and training extension staff. Furthermore, misuse of agricultural credit and barriers that restrict farmers’ access to advisory and credit services need to be eliminated through implementing effective policies and monitoring provided services.
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ispartof Land use policy, 2018-02, Vol.71, p.249-260
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source PAIS Index; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Advisory services
Agricultural advisory services
Agricultural credit
Agricultural financial services
Agricultural production
Consolidation of land holdings
Constraints
Crop production
Crop productivity
Crops
Developing countries
Farmers
Farms
Finance
Financial services
Impact analysis
Interest rates
Land use
LDCs
Mixed cropping
Pakistan
Productivity
Studies
Training
Villages
Wheat
title Agricultural advisory and financial services; farm level access, outreach and impact in a mixed cropping district of Punjab, Pakistan
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