Research Article

An Analysis of Factors Influencing African Indigenous Vegetable Farmers’ Bargaining Power: A Case Study from Zambia

Volume: 30 Number: 1 January 9, 2024
EN

An Analysis of Factors Influencing African Indigenous Vegetable Farmers’ Bargaining Power: A Case Study from Zambia

Abstract

Growing African Indigenous Vegetables (AIVs) is an innovative way to address poverty and malnutrition problems in Zambia. Farmers’ bargaining power plays an important role in increasing AIV production and farmers’ income. Based on 300 responses from Zambian AIV farmers, we defined AIV farmers’ bargaining power and analyzed its benefits to farmers and the AIV industry. We used the ordered logistic regression model (OLRM) to analyze the influence of several factors that contribute to farmers’ bargaining power, and then used the interpretative structural modeling (ISM) to analyze the relationship and hierarchical structure between the effects. Four key results and innovations arose from the analysis of the data. First, we defined farmers’ bargaining power through their self-reported bargaining power. Second, we found that the respondents’ bargaining power was significantly influenced by seven variables: age, gender, education, main trading partners, awareness of AIV prices, and distance to the market from the farm. Third, the main trading partners and awareness of AIV prices are surface direct factors, gender, education and distance to the market from the farm are middle indirect relationships, and age, belong to any community are deep root factors. Last, farmers’ bargaining power can be improved through education, especially women’s education level, strengthening farmers’ organization construction, altering some of the farmers’ trading methods, and developing infrastructure. Overall, we found that bargaining power has played an important role in obtaining higher prices, getting faster payment, getting more income from AIV sales, and expanding AIV planting areas for farmers.

Keywords

Thanks

This research was supported by the Horticulture Innovation Lab with funding from the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID EPA-A-00-09-00004), as part of the U.S. Government’s global hunger and food security initiative, Feed the Future, for a project titled ‘‘Improving nutrition with African indigenous vegetables’’ in eastern Africa. We also thank the New Jersey Agriculture Experiment Station (HATCH project 12131); Himoonga Moonga, Mebelo Mataa, and John Shindano, University of Zambia; and Kenneth Chali and Lupiya Sakala, AgriSmart, Zambia; John Bowman, USAID- Washington and Beth Mitcham, UC-Davis. This work was also supported by the National Social Science Fund of China(21BJY249), and the MOE Project of Humanities and Social Sciences of China (Project No. 18YJA790100).

References

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Details

Primary Language

English

Subjects

Agricultural Engineering (Other)

Journal Section

Research Article

Publication Date

January 9, 2024

Submission Date

January 19, 2023

Acceptance Date

October 22, 2023

Published in Issue

Year 2024 Volume: 30 Number: 1

APA
Yu, Z., Xu, H., Govindasamy, R., Van Wyk, E., Özkan, B., & Simon, J. (2024). An Analysis of Factors Influencing African Indigenous Vegetable Farmers’ Bargaining Power: A Case Study from Zambia. Journal of Agricultural Sciences, 30(1), 193-204. https://doi.org/10.15832/ankutbd.1239590
AMA
1.Yu Z, Xu H, Govindasamy R, Van Wyk E, Özkan B, Simon J. An Analysis of Factors Influencing African Indigenous Vegetable Farmers’ Bargaining Power: A Case Study from Zambia. J Agr Sci-Tarim Bili. 2024;30(1):193-204. doi:10.15832/ankutbd.1239590
Chicago
Yu, Zhigang, Huiping Xu, Ramu Govindasamy, Emmanuel Van Wyk, Burhan Özkan, and James Simon. 2024. “An Analysis of Factors Influencing African Indigenous Vegetable Farmers’ Bargaining Power: A Case Study from Zambia”. Journal of Agricultural Sciences 30 (1): 193-204. https://doi.org/10.15832/ankutbd.1239590.
EndNote
Yu Z, Xu H, Govindasamy R, Van Wyk E, Özkan B, Simon J (January 1, 2024) An Analysis of Factors Influencing African Indigenous Vegetable Farmers’ Bargaining Power: A Case Study from Zambia. Journal of Agricultural Sciences 30 1 193–204.
IEEE
[1]Z. Yu, H. Xu, R. Govindasamy, E. Van Wyk, B. Özkan, and J. Simon, “An Analysis of Factors Influencing African Indigenous Vegetable Farmers’ Bargaining Power: A Case Study from Zambia”, J Agr Sci-Tarim Bili, vol. 30, no. 1, pp. 193–204, Jan. 2024, doi: 10.15832/ankutbd.1239590.
ISNAD
Yu, Zhigang - Xu, Huiping - Govindasamy, Ramu - Van Wyk, Emmanuel - Özkan, Burhan - Simon, James. “An Analysis of Factors Influencing African Indigenous Vegetable Farmers’ Bargaining Power: A Case Study from Zambia”. Journal of Agricultural Sciences 30/1 (January 1, 2024): 193-204. https://doi.org/10.15832/ankutbd.1239590.
JAMA
1.Yu Z, Xu H, Govindasamy R, Van Wyk E, Özkan B, Simon J. An Analysis of Factors Influencing African Indigenous Vegetable Farmers’ Bargaining Power: A Case Study from Zambia. J Agr Sci-Tarim Bili. 2024;30:193–204.
MLA
Yu, Zhigang, et al. “An Analysis of Factors Influencing African Indigenous Vegetable Farmers’ Bargaining Power: A Case Study from Zambia”. Journal of Agricultural Sciences, vol. 30, no. 1, Jan. 2024, pp. 193-04, doi:10.15832/ankutbd.1239590.
Vancouver
1.Zhigang Yu, Huiping Xu, Ramu Govindasamy, Emmanuel Van Wyk, Burhan Özkan, James Simon. An Analysis of Factors Influencing African Indigenous Vegetable Farmers’ Bargaining Power: A Case Study from Zambia. J Agr Sci-Tarim Bili. 2024 Jan. 1;30(1):193-204. doi:10.15832/ankutbd.1239590

Cited By

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