Influence of Youth Access to Farm Products Markets on Their Participation in Agriculture in Kajiado North Sub-County
Abstract
Agriculture in Kenya has great untapped potential for providing employment
opportunities for youth that would enable them exploit their creativity, economic innovation
and access to agricultural product markets in order to spur faster national economic growth.
Reducing cereal importation in Kenya through local investment and expanding of markets for
agricultural products can effectively create youth employment. A number of youth took part in
agriculture in Kajiado North Sub- County with maize being the most preferred crop while
poultry keeping the most preferred livestock activity by youth The influence of youth access to
markets for agricultural products on their participation in agriculture in Kajiado North SubCounty was poorly understood and hence the need for this study, which used a cross-sectional
design to collect data from 397 randomly, selected youth and 22 youth and agricultural
officers. Content validity of the youth and agricultural officers’ questionnaires was ascertained
by extension experts while reliability was determined through a pilot test involving 30
respondents. The reliability coefficient were 0.86α and 0.80α respectively, which were above
the 0.70 threshold for acceptable reliability. The results showed a statistically significant
positive relationship (r=.330, p=.01) between youth access to markets and their participation
in agriculture. It also showed that youth access to markets influenced their participation in
agriculture with 57.4% of the respondents indicating that poor infrastructures and limited
knowledge on market prices reduced their access to markets for agricultural commodities.
Youth with easy access to markets for their products had higher participation rates in
agricultural activities than those with minimal access to markets. The government and other
actors should support formation of organizations that can give youth the necessary bargaining
power to interact on equal terms with other market actors in order to reduce transaction costs
through economies of scale when buying inputs and selling produce.