Heterogeneity of Agricultural Land Use Systems and Poverty in Sub-Saharan Africa: Relationship and Evidence from Rural Nigeria

Several factors influencing rural-poverty in sub-Saharan-Africa, for all the factors, agricultural-land access/ management and “culture of poverty” are quite dominant in literature. This study examines socio-cultural/ economic factors influencing poverty and establishes linkages of heterogeneity of...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Agboola, O. (Author), Apata, T. (Author), Ogunleye, K. (Author), Ojo, T. (Author)
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Economics and Management 2021
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Online Access:View Fulltext in Publisher
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Summary:Several factors influencing rural-poverty in sub-Saharan-Africa, for all the factors, agricultural-land access/ management and “culture of poverty” are quite dominant in literature. This study examines socio-cultural/ economic factors influencing poverty and establishes linkages of heterogeneity of land-use systems. Farm-level cost–route surveys of cross-sectional national-data of 800 respondents were used for analysis. Data were analyzed by descriptive-statistics, trans-logarithmic model, and poverty-measures. Descriptive statistics depict land-ownership structure, farmer’s socio-cultural practices, and exploits of government intervention programs influenced agricultural-poverty. Trans-logarithmic coefficients results of short-run sustainability-index (SRSI), land-policy intervention variables and household-sizes are dominance factors. Also, SRSI indicated 0.69, suggesting that 69% of the farmers made unsustainable use of agricultural-land. Moreover, 92% of extremely poor respondents with large household-sizes (61.2%) seek their agriculturalland ownership by rentage, while those with land-titled documents constitute 78.6% of the non-poor. Publicpolicy interventions must take into account formalization of land-property rights in order to facilitate its transferability and boosting investment. © 2021, Agris On-line Papers in Economics and Informatics. All Rights Reserved.
ISBN:18041930 (ISSN)
DOI:10.7160/aol.2021.130201