Smallholder Food Marketing Behaviour

Many farmers in Africa sell their produce at low prices immediately after harvest because they need cash. They could solve temporary liquidity constraints by use of credit and store their produce to sell when prices are high. However, due to various reasons such many poor farmers have been excluded...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Proscovia Renzaho Ntakyo, Marrit van den Berg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Debrecen 2018-05-01
Series:Apstract: Applied Studies in Agribusiness and Commerce
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.lib.unideb.hu/apstract/article/view/5166
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spelling doaj-7b741d14b5984d6cb8b623f6eeb972132020-11-25T03:32:05ZengUniversity of DebrecenApstract: Applied Studies in Agribusiness and Commerce1789-221X1789-78742018-05-01121-210.19041/APSTRACT/2018/1-2/10Smallholder Food Marketing BehaviourProscovia Renzaho Ntakyo0Marrit van den Berg1National Agricultural Research Organization, Mbarara; Wageningen UniversityWageningen University Many farmers in Africa sell their produce at low prices immediately after harvest because they need cash. They could solve temporary liquidity constraints by use of credit and store their produce to sell when prices are high. However, due to various reasons such many poor farmers have been excluded from formal financial services. In response, the informal financial market has expanded, but the question why informal credit has not facilitated storage to enable farmers benefit from intertemporal arbitrage opportunities remains largely unanswered. To answer this question, we investigate the role of informal credit markets and traders in stabilizing seasonal food crop prices. Our analysis is based on a household survey data, and in-depth interviews with key players in the informal credit market and grain traders in rural southwestern Uganda. We find that community-based self-help savings and credit associations provide credit for the majority (62%) of farmers. Informal credit still excludes the very poor and is not sufficient to enable farmers benefit from intertemporal arbitrage opportunities. Thus, poor farmers continue to ‘sell low and buy high’. The study also addresses a related fundamental aspect of food marketing: why is there no competition between traders bidding up prices after harvest and eliminating seasonal price fluctuations? We analyse traders’ costs and profit structure in the study area, and shed some light on imperfections in the grain market and the barriers that limit competition between traders. We find that grain trade is not highly competitive. High transaction costs and limited access to credit are the main barriers limiting competition. Supporting community-based self-help savings and credit associations to raise their portfolio can enable more farmers to borrow at the same time. Investing in infrastructure, organising and supporting small scale farmers to bulk their produce might lower transaction costs, promote competition and dampen price fluctuations. JEL Classification: D53, O13, O16, Q12, Q13 https://ojs.lib.unideb.hu/apstract/article/view/5166NarbitrageCredit MarketSeasonal Price VariationTrade Barriers
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Proscovia Renzaho Ntakyo
Marrit van den Berg
spellingShingle Proscovia Renzaho Ntakyo
Marrit van den Berg
Smallholder Food Marketing Behaviour
Apstract: Applied Studies in Agribusiness and Commerce
Narbitrage
Credit Market
Seasonal Price Variation
Trade Barriers
author_facet Proscovia Renzaho Ntakyo
Marrit van den Berg
author_sort Proscovia Renzaho Ntakyo
title Smallholder Food Marketing Behaviour
title_short Smallholder Food Marketing Behaviour
title_full Smallholder Food Marketing Behaviour
title_fullStr Smallholder Food Marketing Behaviour
title_full_unstemmed Smallholder Food Marketing Behaviour
title_sort smallholder food marketing behaviour
publisher University of Debrecen
series Apstract: Applied Studies in Agribusiness and Commerce
issn 1789-221X
1789-7874
publishDate 2018-05-01
description Many farmers in Africa sell their produce at low prices immediately after harvest because they need cash. They could solve temporary liquidity constraints by use of credit and store their produce to sell when prices are high. However, due to various reasons such many poor farmers have been excluded from formal financial services. In response, the informal financial market has expanded, but the question why informal credit has not facilitated storage to enable farmers benefit from intertemporal arbitrage opportunities remains largely unanswered. To answer this question, we investigate the role of informal credit markets and traders in stabilizing seasonal food crop prices. Our analysis is based on a household survey data, and in-depth interviews with key players in the informal credit market and grain traders in rural southwestern Uganda. We find that community-based self-help savings and credit associations provide credit for the majority (62%) of farmers. Informal credit still excludes the very poor and is not sufficient to enable farmers benefit from intertemporal arbitrage opportunities. Thus, poor farmers continue to ‘sell low and buy high’. The study also addresses a related fundamental aspect of food marketing: why is there no competition between traders bidding up prices after harvest and eliminating seasonal price fluctuations? We analyse traders’ costs and profit structure in the study area, and shed some light on imperfections in the grain market and the barriers that limit competition between traders. We find that grain trade is not highly competitive. High transaction costs and limited access to credit are the main barriers limiting competition. Supporting community-based self-help savings and credit associations to raise their portfolio can enable more farmers to borrow at the same time. Investing in infrastructure, organising and supporting small scale farmers to bulk their produce might lower transaction costs, promote competition and dampen price fluctuations. JEL Classification: D53, O13, O16, Q12, Q13
topic Narbitrage
Credit Market
Seasonal Price Variation
Trade Barriers
url https://ojs.lib.unideb.hu/apstract/article/view/5166
work_keys_str_mv AT proscoviarenzahontakyo smallholderfoodmarketingbehaviour
AT marritvandenberg smallholderfoodmarketingbehaviour
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