埃塞俄比亚农民的粮食储存和损失

Q3 Business, Management and Accounting
F. Bachewe, B. Minten, Alemayehu Seyoum Taffesse, K. Pauw, Alethia Cameron, Tirsit Genye Endaylalu
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引用次数: 14

摘要

在发展中国家,农场的储存损失通常被认为是造成巨大采后损失的一个重要因素,但关于这些损失的可靠和有代表性的数据往往缺乏。我们根据在埃塞俄比亚主要农业区进行的两次大规模家庭调查,研究了农民的粮食储存决策和自我报告的粮食储存损失。我们的研究表明,相对较大的粮食产量是由农户储存供自己消费的,而且储存技术还很落后。农民自我报告的储存损失平均占所有储存谷物的4%,占总收成的2%。这些储存损失因社会经济变量和财富,以及作物和湿度而有很大差异。我们进一步看到,埃塞俄比亚西南部储存损失的空间异质性明显更高。在农场一级扩大采用改良储存技术以减少储存损失的努力应考虑到这些特点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Farmers’ Grain Storage and Losses in Ethiopia
Abstract While storage losses at the farm are often assumed to be an important contributor to presumed large postharvest losses in developing countries, reliable and representative data on these losses are often lacking. We study farmers’ storage decisions and self-reported storage losses for grains based on two large-scale household surveys conducted in major agricultural areas in Ethiopia. We show that a relatively large share of grain production is stored by farm households for own consumption and that storage technologies are rudimentary. Farmers’ self-reported storage losses amount to an average of 4 % of all grains stored and 2 % of total harvest. These storage losses differ significantly by socioeconomic variables and wealth, as well as by crop and humidity. We further see strong spatial heterogeneity in storage losses being significantly higher in southwest Ethiopia. Efforts to scale up the adoption of improved storage technologies to reduce storage losses at the farm level should consider these characteristics.
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来源期刊
Journal of Agricultural and Food Industrial Organization
Journal of Agricultural and Food Industrial Organization Business, Management and Accounting-Business, Management and Accounting (all)
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
9
期刊介绍: The Journal of Agricultural & Food Industrial Organization (JAFIO) is a unique forum for empirical and theoretical research in industrial organization with a special focus on agricultural and food industries worldwide. As concentration, industrialization, and globalization continue to reshape horizontal and vertical relationships within the food supply chain, agricultural economists are revising both their views of traditional markets as well as their tools of analysis. At the core of this revision are strategic interactions between principals and agents, strategic interdependence between rival firms, and strategic trade policy between competing nations, all in a setting plagued by incomplete and/or imperfect information structures. Add to that biotechnology, electronic commerce, as well as the shift in focus from raw agricultural commodities to branded products, and the conclusion is that a "new" agricultural economics is needed for an increasingly complex "new" agriculture.
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