Comparison of decent work status among smallholder pig farmers in Kenya: An empirical approach using Principal Components

Agricultural production in Kenya is dominated by smallholder enterprises which provide up to 60% of the country’s workforce. The agrarian transition to enhance smallholder participation in neoliberal capitalistic markets demands compliance to sanitary and phytosanitary standards and with codes for w...

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Main Authors: Jonah N. Muthui, Joseph W. Matofari, Anthony Kingori, Christian Hülsebusch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Kassel University Press 2019-11-01
Series:Journal of Agriculture and Rural Development in the Tropics and Subtropics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jarts.info/index.php/jarts/article/view/20190613559
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spelling doaj-2988da9809ff4ebaa629c2f516885a212021-01-07T21:00:57ZengKassel University PressJournal of Agriculture and Rural Development in the Tropics and Subtropics1612-98302363-60332019-11-011201799010.17170/kobra-20190613559Comparison of decent work status among smallholder pig farmers in Kenya: An empirical approach using Principal ComponentsJonah N. Muthui0Joseph W. Matofari1Anthony Kingori2Christian Hülsebusch3Egerton University, Department of Animal Science, KenyaEgerton University, Department of Food Science and Technology, KenyaEgerton University, Department of Animal Science, KenyaGerman Institute of Tropical and Subtropical Agriculture (DITSL), GermanyAgricultural production in Kenya is dominated by smallholder enterprises which provide up to 60% of the country’s workforce. The agrarian transition to enhance smallholder participation in neoliberal capitalistic markets demands compliance to sanitary and phytosanitary standards and with codes for worker’s welfare and thus the concept of decent work. Evaluation of decent work deficits in the informal economy however remains a challenge associated with sector uniqueness and differences in socio-cultural attributes of labour. Nevertheless, there is need to build on analytical methods prescribed by the International Labour Organisation of the United Nations that make use of sector specific data and indicators. This study used 27 variables from a survey of 144 pig enterprises in three geographically and demographically distinct Counties in Kenya to develop five indices using Porter’s diamond methodology. The five indices were subjected to Principal Component Analysis using SPSS statistical software to extract two components which were latent variables for decent work. The two components were then subjected to Analysis of variance with Tukey’s test to separate the means. Results showed that decent work deficits were more pronounced (p <= 0.05) in pig enterprises in Busia County as compared to enterprises in Nakuru or Kiambu Counties. Decent work deficits became more pronounced (p <= 0.05) as the education level of household head reduced. Decent work deficits were also more pronounced (p <= 0.05) in enterprises where the age of the household head was 35 years and below. The study identified enterprises in Busia County as deficient in their decent work status with low technology adoption and production efficiency, weak market access and quality control as the most important determinants of decent work status. This study recommends that approaches to address decent work deficits should focus on training farmers to improve technology use and improve production efficiency as well as enhancing surveillance for quality. For further research, the study recommends that evaluation of decent work in smallholder systems could be done through aggregation of the many indicators around the concept of competitiveness where PCA can be used for data convergence.https://jarts.info/index.php/jarts/article/view/20190613559decent worksmallholderspig productionprincipal component analysissustainable production
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jonah N. Muthui
Joseph W. Matofari
Anthony Kingori
Christian Hülsebusch
spellingShingle Jonah N. Muthui
Joseph W. Matofari
Anthony Kingori
Christian Hülsebusch
Comparison of decent work status among smallholder pig farmers in Kenya: An empirical approach using Principal Components
Journal of Agriculture and Rural Development in the Tropics and Subtropics
decent work
smallholders
pig production
principal component analysis
sustainable production
author_facet Jonah N. Muthui
Joseph W. Matofari
Anthony Kingori
Christian Hülsebusch
author_sort Jonah N. Muthui
title Comparison of decent work status among smallholder pig farmers in Kenya: An empirical approach using Principal Components
title_short Comparison of decent work status among smallholder pig farmers in Kenya: An empirical approach using Principal Components
title_full Comparison of decent work status among smallholder pig farmers in Kenya: An empirical approach using Principal Components
title_fullStr Comparison of decent work status among smallholder pig farmers in Kenya: An empirical approach using Principal Components
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of decent work status among smallholder pig farmers in Kenya: An empirical approach using Principal Components
title_sort comparison of decent work status among smallholder pig farmers in kenya: an empirical approach using principal components
publisher Kassel University Press
series Journal of Agriculture and Rural Development in the Tropics and Subtropics
issn 1612-9830
2363-6033
publishDate 2019-11-01
description Agricultural production in Kenya is dominated by smallholder enterprises which provide up to 60% of the country’s workforce. The agrarian transition to enhance smallholder participation in neoliberal capitalistic markets demands compliance to sanitary and phytosanitary standards and with codes for worker’s welfare and thus the concept of decent work. Evaluation of decent work deficits in the informal economy however remains a challenge associated with sector uniqueness and differences in socio-cultural attributes of labour. Nevertheless, there is need to build on analytical methods prescribed by the International Labour Organisation of the United Nations that make use of sector specific data and indicators. This study used 27 variables from a survey of 144 pig enterprises in three geographically and demographically distinct Counties in Kenya to develop five indices using Porter’s diamond methodology. The five indices were subjected to Principal Component Analysis using SPSS statistical software to extract two components which were latent variables for decent work. The two components were then subjected to Analysis of variance with Tukey’s test to separate the means. Results showed that decent work deficits were more pronounced (p <= 0.05) in pig enterprises in Busia County as compared to enterprises in Nakuru or Kiambu Counties. Decent work deficits became more pronounced (p <= 0.05) as the education level of household head reduced. Decent work deficits were also more pronounced (p <= 0.05) in enterprises where the age of the household head was 35 years and below. The study identified enterprises in Busia County as deficient in their decent work status with low technology adoption and production efficiency, weak market access and quality control as the most important determinants of decent work status. This study recommends that approaches to address decent work deficits should focus on training farmers to improve technology use and improve production efficiency as well as enhancing surveillance for quality. For further research, the study recommends that evaluation of decent work in smallholder systems could be done through aggregation of the many indicators around the concept of competitiveness where PCA can be used for data convergence.
topic decent work
smallholders
pig production
principal component analysis
sustainable production
url https://jarts.info/index.php/jarts/article/view/20190613559
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