The African Indigenous Vegetables Value Chain Governance in Kenya

Pub Date : 2019-03-18 DOI:10.22004/AG.ECON.287549
O. B. Abel, Cristopher Obel Gor, S. Okuro, P. Omanga, W. Bokelmann
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引用次数: 9

Abstract

Increasingly, food security interventions in developing economies are adapting value chain approaches to facilitate the integration of smallholders into high margin value chains. In Kenya, the resurgence of African Indigenous Vegetables due to their medicinal value and rich micronutrients is a case in point. The vegetables are cultivated by smallholders, and the supply has not matched the demand in the high margin markets among urban consumers. Access to such high margin markets necessitates that smallholders gain entry or upgrade into the networks of those buyers who possess considerable control of these value chains. There is limited value chain scholarship on chain governance and its implication for smallholder participation in Kenya. This study investigated how value chain governance influences farmer participation in vegetable markets and food security in Kenya. This study employed exploratory case study design to provide chain architecture, isolate primary actors, their roles, relations, constraints and opportunities for upgrading by smallholders. A mixed method approach involving a multistage sampling technique of 339 respondents was employed to bring to the surface insights on chain architecture, market margins and governance structures and their implications as regards upgrading trajectories for small-scale farmers in Kenya. Thematic analysis was used for data analysis. Spot market relations were found to dominate traditional value chains in rural areas while peri-urban areas exhibited both traditional and coordinated value chains. The value chains are characterised by very weak linkages between upstream actors and downstream partners, where wholesalers and supermarkets play the role of leading firms in traditional and coordinated value chains, respectively. The study recommends the inclusion of famers in market management committees and the establishment of binding contractual arrangements with supermarkets.
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肯尼亚的非洲本土蔬菜价值链治理
发展中经济体的粮食安全干预措施正在越来越多地调整价值链方法,以促进小农户融入高利润价值链。在肯尼亚,非洲土著蔬菜因其药用价值和丰富的微量营养素而复兴就是一个很好的例子。蔬菜由小农户种植,供应量与城市消费者高利润市场的需求量不匹配。进入这样的高利润市场需要小农户进入或升级到对这些价值链拥有相当大控制权的买家的网络中。肯尼亚关于链治理及其对小农户参与的影响的价值链学术研究有限。本研究调查了价值链治理如何影响肯尼亚农民参与蔬菜市场和粮食安全。本研究采用了探索性案例研究设计,以提供链结构,隔离主要参与者、他们的角色、关系、约束和小农户升级的机会。采用了一种混合方法,包括339名受访者的多阶段抽样技术,以深入了解肯尼亚小规模农民的链结构、市场利润率和治理结构及其对升级轨迹的影响。数据分析采用专题分析法。现货市场关系在农村地区的传统价值链中占主导地位,而城市周边地区则表现出传统和协调的价值链。价值链的特点是上游参与者和下游合作伙伴之间的联系非常薄弱,批发商和超市分别在传统价值链和协调价值链中扮演主导企业的角色。该研究建议将农民纳入市场管理委员会,并与超市建立具有约束力的合同安排。
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