Smallholder farmers and contract farming in developing countries



View results in:
https://tapipedia.org/sites/default/files/259.full_.pdf
ISSN: 
0027-8424, 1091-6490
Licensing of resource: 
Rights subject to owner's permission
Type: 
journal article
Journal: 
Australian Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics
Number: 
1
Pages: 
259-264
Volume: 
117
Year: 
2020
Author(s): 
Meemken E.-M.
Bellemare M. F.
Description: 

Poverty is prevalent in the small-farm sector of many developing countries. A large literature suggests that contract farming —a preharvest agreement between farmers and buyers— can facilitate smallholder market participation, improve household welfare, and promote rural development. These findings have influenced the development policy debate, but the external validity of the extant evidence is limited. Available studies typically focus on a single contract scheme or on a small geographical area in one country. We generate evidence that is generalizable beyond a particular contract scheme, crop, or country, using nationally representative survey data from 6 countries. We focus on the implications of contract farming for household income and labor demand, finding that contract farmers obtain higher incomes than their counterparts without contracts only in some countries. Contract farmers in most countries exhibit increased demand for hired labor, which suggests that contract farming stimulates employment, yet we do not find evidence of spillover effects at the community level. Our results challenge the notion that contract farming unambiguously improves welfare. We discuss why our results may diverge from previous findings and propose research designs that yield greater internal and external validity. Implications for policy and research are relevant beyond contract farming.

Publication year: 
2020
Keywords: 
contract farming
outgrower schemes
small-holder farmer
external validity