Determinants of smallholders farmers' participation in collective marketing of maize in the central highlands of Kenya
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Date
2019-06-30Author
Mogaka, Hezron
Mugwe, Jayne
Ayieko, David, M
Bett, Eric, k
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Show full item recordAbstract
Collective marketing has been proposed as a solution to the problem of poor access to
markets in developing nations. However, smallholders’ market participation is still limited.
This study assessed farmers’ perception of the benefits and challenges in collective
marketing, and identified the determinants of smallholder farmers’ participation in
collective marketing of maize from 126 households in the central highlands of Kenya.
Logistic regression model was used to analyze factors explaining farmers’ participation in
collective marketing. The key benefits of collective marketing were better prices and low
cost of inputs, while the main challenges were poor infrastructure, disagreement among
members and lack of credit. Gender of household head, years of farming experience, training
on market information search, keeping records, ability to search market information,
marketing group size, extension contact frequency and group meeting frequency were
significantly associated with farmers participation in collective marketing. Participation in
collective marketing could be improved by targeting women already organized in groups,
offering training to households on record keeping, enhanced extension contacts, improving
marketing group operations and searching for markets.