G. Akolgo, Duke Nii Darko Quaye, Abdul-Rauf Malimanga Alhassan, K. A. Asosega, Ebenezer Nunoo, Osman A. Akimsah Jedaiah, Michael Elorm Deho, T. Atta-Darkwa
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This formed the primary basis for this study and furthered on to establish the current level of agricultural mechanization within the country through measuring effect of available farm energy sources on farm sizes under cultivation. The methods employed included a structured questionnaire administered to farmers and other agricultural stakeholders to determine the level of mechanization, readiness to adopt/accept mechanization technology, level of usage of mechanization technologies, and ownership of machinery. The Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS version 20) software was used to model and analyze data obtained including a multiple regression method for the relationship between parameters. The overall level of agricultural mechanization in Ghana was found to be very low with 77.6% of the farm operations being performed manually. The level of the tractor power availability in Ghana was found to have increased from 0.0207 kW/ha in the year 2004 to 0.0588 kW/ha in the year 2020 and is expected to increase to 0.0752 kW/ha in the year 2025. The power availability valued in this study was also found to be low compared with that in other developing countries. Statistically, both employment in the service sector and population growth were significant determinants (\n \n Adjusted\n −\n \n \n R\n \n \n 2\n \n \n =\n 0.9172\n \n ) in the variations in the level of mechanization of agriculture in Ghana and policymakers will have to make adjustments in policies to take note of these indicators most often underplayed. Advocacy for higher levels of mechanization of agricultural operations must increase as it is critical to the overall cost of production in agriculture as this study also found out that mechanized operations were between 21.3% and 53.8% cheaper than manual operations.","PeriodicalId":30608,"journal":{"name":"Advances in Agriculture","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":1.8000,"publicationDate":"2022-09-26","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Status of Agricultural Mechanization in Ghana: Insight from Farmers’ Perception, Population, and Nonagricultural Sector Growth\",\"authors\":\"G. Akolgo, Duke Nii Darko Quaye, Abdul-Rauf Malimanga Alhassan, K. A. Asosega, Ebenezer Nunoo, Osman A. Akimsah Jedaiah, Michael Elorm Deho, T. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
不断增长的人口推动了更高的粮食需求,需要扩大农业生产并维持粮食供应链的安全。因此,有必要增加农业机械化系统的采用和改进,特别是在所需劳动力也流入非农业生产部门的地方。根据这一观点,对加纳(西非)非农业部门的人口和就业与农业机械化之间的关系或联系进行了检验,以确定是否存在这种有效性。这构成了本研究的主要基础,并进一步通过测量可用农场能源对耕种农场规模的影响来确定该国目前的农业机械化水平。采用的方法包括对农民和其他农业利益相关者进行结构化问卷调查,以确定机械化水平、采用/接受机械化技术的准备程度、机械化技术的使用水平和机械所有权。使用SPSS version 20软件对所得数据进行建模和分析,并采用多元回归方法对参数之间的关系进行分析。加纳农业机械化的总体水平非常低,77.6%的农场作业是手工完成的。加纳的拖拉机可用功率水平已从2004年的0.0207千瓦/公顷增加到2020年的0.0588千瓦/公顷,预计到2025年将增加到0.0752千瓦/公顷。与其他发展中国家相比,本研究中所重视的电力供应也很低。统计上,服务业就业和人口增长都是加纳农业机械化水平变化的重要决定因素(调整后- r2 = 0.9172),政策制定者将不得不调整政策,以注意这些最常被低估的指标。提高农业机械化水平的倡导必须加强,因为这对农业生产的总体成本至关重要,因为这项研究还发现,机械化操作比人工操作便宜21.3%至53.8%。
Status of Agricultural Mechanization in Ghana: Insight from Farmers’ Perception, Population, and Nonagricultural Sector Growth
The growing human population is a driver for higher food demands with a need to scale agricultural production and maintain security of the food supply chain. Thus, there is a need to increase the adoption and improvement of mechanized systems in agriculture, especially where needed labor is also drifting into nonagricultural production sectors. With this view, the relationship or link between population and employment in nonagricultural sector in Ghana (West Africa) to agricultural mechanization was tested to ascertain any such validity. This formed the primary basis for this study and furthered on to establish the current level of agricultural mechanization within the country through measuring effect of available farm energy sources on farm sizes under cultivation. The methods employed included a structured questionnaire administered to farmers and other agricultural stakeholders to determine the level of mechanization, readiness to adopt/accept mechanization technology, level of usage of mechanization technologies, and ownership of machinery. The Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS version 20) software was used to model and analyze data obtained including a multiple regression method for the relationship between parameters. The overall level of agricultural mechanization in Ghana was found to be very low with 77.6% of the farm operations being performed manually. The level of the tractor power availability in Ghana was found to have increased from 0.0207 kW/ha in the year 2004 to 0.0588 kW/ha in the year 2020 and is expected to increase to 0.0752 kW/ha in the year 2025. The power availability valued in this study was also found to be low compared with that in other developing countries. Statistically, both employment in the service sector and population growth were significant determinants (
Adjusted
−
R
2
=
0.9172
) in the variations in the level of mechanization of agriculture in Ghana and policymakers will have to make adjustments in policies to take note of these indicators most often underplayed. Advocacy for higher levels of mechanization of agricultural operations must increase as it is critical to the overall cost of production in agriculture as this study also found out that mechanized operations were between 21.3% and 53.8% cheaper than manual operations.