Gender and impact of climate change adaptation on soybean farmers’ revenue in rural Togo, West Africa

This study assesses the impact of climate change (CC) adaptation on farm-level revenue among 500 soybean farmers randomly selected in three districts in Togo using endogenous switching regression method. The survey results indicate that only 40.37% of the women have adapted to CC against 59.62% of t...

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Main Authors: Essossinam Ali, Nadège Essossolim Awade, Tahirou Abdoulaye
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2020-01-01
Series:Cogent Food & Agriculture
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311932.2020.1743625
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spelling doaj-7b812fe59ba548aab4396f5440e693742021-06-02T09:20:58ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Food & Agriculture2331-19322020-01-016110.1080/23311932.2020.17436251743625Gender and impact of climate change adaptation on soybean farmers’ revenue in rural Togo, West AfricaEssossinam Ali0Nadège Essossolim Awade1Tahirou Abdoulaye2University of KaraUniversity of KaraInternational Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA)This study assesses the impact of climate change (CC) adaptation on farm-level revenue among 500 soybean farmers randomly selected in three districts in Togo using endogenous switching regression method. The survey results indicate that only 40.37% of the women have adapted to CC against 59.62% of the men. Moreover, being member of farmer-based organization (FBO), access to credit and extension services, agricultural training of women are the main factors that increase the likelihood of adaptation. The gender-differentiated impact shows that women would earn more than men from adaptation, while losing compared to men if they do not take any adaptation actions. The loss from non-adapting to CC will increase by 0.268% of the soybean revenue. However, the heterogeneity effects suggest further assessment on the adopted technology in soybean farming in the study areas. Adaptation policy that seeks to ensure food security and enhance farmers’ welfare in subsistence agriculture should consider the gender dimension, while reviewing the financial policy in terms of affordability, access of extension services and supporting FBO will increase technologies adoption and farming revenue.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311932.2020.1743625adaptationclimate changegendersoybeanendogenous switching regression
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Essossinam Ali
Nadège Essossolim Awade
Tahirou Abdoulaye
spellingShingle Essossinam Ali
Nadège Essossolim Awade
Tahirou Abdoulaye
Gender and impact of climate change adaptation on soybean farmers’ revenue in rural Togo, West Africa
Cogent Food & Agriculture
adaptation
climate change
gender
soybean
endogenous switching regression
author_facet Essossinam Ali
Nadège Essossolim Awade
Tahirou Abdoulaye
author_sort Essossinam Ali
title Gender and impact of climate change adaptation on soybean farmers’ revenue in rural Togo, West Africa
title_short Gender and impact of climate change adaptation on soybean farmers’ revenue in rural Togo, West Africa
title_full Gender and impact of climate change adaptation on soybean farmers’ revenue in rural Togo, West Africa
title_fullStr Gender and impact of climate change adaptation on soybean farmers’ revenue in rural Togo, West Africa
title_full_unstemmed Gender and impact of climate change adaptation on soybean farmers’ revenue in rural Togo, West Africa
title_sort gender and impact of climate change adaptation on soybean farmers’ revenue in rural togo, west africa
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Food & Agriculture
issn 2331-1932
publishDate 2020-01-01
description This study assesses the impact of climate change (CC) adaptation on farm-level revenue among 500 soybean farmers randomly selected in three districts in Togo using endogenous switching regression method. The survey results indicate that only 40.37% of the women have adapted to CC against 59.62% of the men. Moreover, being member of farmer-based organization (FBO), access to credit and extension services, agricultural training of women are the main factors that increase the likelihood of adaptation. The gender-differentiated impact shows that women would earn more than men from adaptation, while losing compared to men if they do not take any adaptation actions. The loss from non-adapting to CC will increase by 0.268% of the soybean revenue. However, the heterogeneity effects suggest further assessment on the adopted technology in soybean farming in the study areas. Adaptation policy that seeks to ensure food security and enhance farmers’ welfare in subsistence agriculture should consider the gender dimension, while reviewing the financial policy in terms of affordability, access of extension services and supporting FBO will increase technologies adoption and farming revenue.
topic adaptation
climate change
gender
soybean
endogenous switching regression
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311932.2020.1743625
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