为什么在加纳,种植粮食作物的农民有潜力,但豆类产量仍然不足?

Daniel Adu Ankrah , Nana Afranaa Kwapong , Fred Fosu Agyarko , Enoch Kwame Tham-Agyekum , Seth Awuku Manteaw
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摘要

豆类通常是“孤种作物”,在撒哈拉以南的大多数国家,特别是加纳,产量仍然不足,目标较少,尽管它们对蛋白质需求做出了巨大贡献,并很好地融入了气候智慧型农业(CSA)。本研究中的豆类指的是未充分利用的非洲豆类作物,如花生/花生和豆类(小豆、班巴拉豆、蚕豆/豌豆(豇豆))。豆类是一种重要的粮食安全作物,最令人放心的是,农民有可能获得最佳产量。然而,几十年来,实现潜在产量一直是海市蜃楼。小农生产豆类的趋势以及阻碍生产潜力的驱动因素需要引起重视并采取政策行动。这种忽视阻碍了实现零饥饿的可持续发展目标(SDG) 2。特别是考虑到投资孤儿豆类作物的潜在利益日益显现的重要性,特别是在CSA、粮食主权和农村发展方面。根据加纳生活水平调查第七轮(GLSS 7),本文回答了两个研究问题:小农生产未充分利用的非洲脉冲作物的可能性有多大?什么因素阻碍了生产?使用经典计数回归和零膨胀回归估计,结果表明社会经济、地理和人口因素阻碍了生产。具体而言,与南部地区(大阿克拉、Volta、Oti、东部、中部、西部和北部西部地区)的家庭相比,中部地区(Ashanti、Bono East、Bono、Ahafo地区)的家庭更不可能每年生产一吨脉冲。北部地带(上西部、萨凡纳、北部、东北部、上东部地区)的农户更倾向于豆类生产。与农村家庭相比,城市家庭产生脉冲的可能性较小。没有受过正规教育和英语水平较低的户主产生脉冲的可能性更高。贫困家庭更有可能生产豆类。中年和老年农户生产豆类的可能性高于青年农户。鼓励农业推广和咨询服务努力解决沿社会经济、空间和人口因素共同构成轴影响豆类生产的障碍,以促进未充分利用的非洲豆类作物生产。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Why do food crop farmers have potential, but still under-produce pulses in Ghana?
Pulses are generally "orphan crops” that remain under-produced and less targeted in most countries south of the Saharan specifically, Ghana, even though they contribute immensely to protein needs and integrates well into climate smart agriculture (CSA). Pulses in this study refers to underutilized African pulse crops such as groundnuts/peanut, and beans (small beans, bambara beans, broad beans/peas (cowpeas). Pulses constitute an important food security crop, and most re-assuring, farmers have the potential to produce optimum yields. However, achieving potential production has remained a mirage for several decades. The tendency of smallholder farmers producing pulses as well as the drivers that hinder production potentials demand attention and policy action. The neglect thwarts the attainment of the Sustainable Development Goal (SDG)– 2 of zero hunger. Especially given the emerging importance of the potential benefits in investing in orphan pulse crops, especially in relation to CSA, food sovereignty, and rural development. Relying on the Ghana Living Standards Survey Seventh round (GLSS 7), this article answers dual research questions of: What is the probability of a smallholder producing underutilized African pulse crops? What factors hinder production? Using classical count regression and zero inflated regression estimations, the findings show that socioeconomic, geography, and demographic factors hinder production. Specifically, households in the middle belt (Ashanti, Bono East, Bono, Ahafo regions) are more unlikely to produce a tonne of pulse annually relative to households in the southern sector (Greater Accra, Volta, Oti, Eastern, Central, Western and Western North regions). Farming households in the northern belt (Upper West, Savannah, Northern, North-East, Upper East regions) have a greater affinity toward pulses production. Urban households are less likely to produce pulses in comparison to rural households. Household heads with no formal education and low English literacy show a higher probability of producing pulses. Poor households are more likely to produce pulses. The middle age and aged farm households show a higher probability to produce pulses compared to the youth. Efforts by agricultural extension and advisory services are encouraged to address hindrances that affect pulses production along co-constituted axes of socioeconomic, spatial, and demographic factors to boost underutilized African pulse crops production.
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