Status of appropriate-scale mechanization in Zambia and Zimbabwe

Unlocking the potential of smallholder agricultural productivity hinges on the pivotal role of mechanization, serving as the cornerstone to raise crop yield and improve livelihoods. However, evidence is thin on fit-for-purpose appropriate mechanization in the south of the Sahel. This study used a quantitative survey to understand the status of appropriate-scale mechanization in Zambia and Zimbabwe. In both countries, 50 service providers participated in the survey together with 210 farmers who used mechanization services and 219 farmers who did not. We find that farmers who used mechanization services had higher maize yield and higher household incomes. But there are nuances. First, mechanization service providers are older, predominantly male, and more educated. Second, the distributional effects show that hiring mechanization is associated with statistically significant higher outcomes in the 75th and 95th percentiles of income and yield. These results point to a need for structured promotion approaches tha allow all farmer types to equally benefit from mechanization services. There is a need for more work on the economics of appropriate scale agricultural mechanization to further understand profitability and returns to investments.

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Main Authors: Simutowe, E., Eric Muhulu Chikwalila, Chipindu, L., Tufa, A.H., Alene, A.D., Md Abdul Matin, Chikoye, D., Thierfelder, C., Marenya, P.P., Ngoma, H.
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English
Published: CGIAR 2023
Subjects:AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY, Service Provider, Two-Wheel Tractor, Smallholder Farmers, WHEELED TRACTORS, SHELLERS, TRANSPORT, IMPACT, SMALLHOLDERS, Sustainable Agrifood Systems,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10883/22933
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spelling dig-cimmyt-10883-229332024-01-24T17:36:17Z Status of appropriate-scale mechanization in Zambia and Zimbabwe Simutowe, E. Eric Muhulu Chikwalila Chipindu, L. Tufa, A.H. Alene, A.D. Md Abdul Matin Chikoye, D. Thierfelder, C. Marenya, P.P. Ngoma, H. AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY Service Provider Two-Wheel Tractor Smallholder Farmers WHEELED TRACTORS SHELLERS TRANSPORT IMPACT SMALLHOLDERS Sustainable Agrifood Systems Unlocking the potential of smallholder agricultural productivity hinges on the pivotal role of mechanization, serving as the cornerstone to raise crop yield and improve livelihoods. However, evidence is thin on fit-for-purpose appropriate mechanization in the south of the Sahel. This study used a quantitative survey to understand the status of appropriate-scale mechanization in Zambia and Zimbabwe. In both countries, 50 service providers participated in the survey together with 210 farmers who used mechanization services and 219 farmers who did not. We find that farmers who used mechanization services had higher maize yield and higher household incomes. But there are nuances. First, mechanization service providers are older, predominantly male, and more educated. Second, the distributional effects show that hiring mechanization is associated with statistically significant higher outcomes in the 75th and 95th percentiles of income and yield. These results point to a need for structured promotion approaches tha allow all farmer types to equally benefit from mechanization services. There is a need for more work on the economics of appropriate scale agricultural mechanization to further understand profitability and returns to investments. 23 pages 2024-01-16T21:30:13Z 2024-01-16T21:30:13Z 2023 Report Published Version https://hdl.handle.net/10883/22933 English Poverty reduction, livelihoods & jobs Diversification in East and Southern Africa Resilient Agrifood Systems CGIAR Trust Fund https://hdl.handle.net/10568/138130 CIMMYT manages Intellectual Assets as International Public Goods. The user is free to download, print, store and share this work. In case you want to translate or create any other derivative work and share or distribute such translation/derivative work, please contact CIMMYT-Knowledge-Center@cgiar.org indicating the work you want to use and the kind of use you intend; CIMMYT will contact you with the suitable license for that purpose Open Access Zambia Zimbabwe Africa CGIAR
institution CIMMYT
collection DSpace
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cimmyt
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region America del Norte
libraryname CIMMYT Library
language English
topic AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Service Provider
Two-Wheel Tractor
Smallholder Farmers
WHEELED TRACTORS
SHELLERS
TRANSPORT
IMPACT
SMALLHOLDERS
Sustainable Agrifood Systems
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Service Provider
Two-Wheel Tractor
Smallholder Farmers
WHEELED TRACTORS
SHELLERS
TRANSPORT
IMPACT
SMALLHOLDERS
Sustainable Agrifood Systems
spellingShingle AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Service Provider
Two-Wheel Tractor
Smallholder Farmers
WHEELED TRACTORS
SHELLERS
TRANSPORT
IMPACT
SMALLHOLDERS
Sustainable Agrifood Systems
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Service Provider
Two-Wheel Tractor
Smallholder Farmers
WHEELED TRACTORS
SHELLERS
TRANSPORT
IMPACT
SMALLHOLDERS
Sustainable Agrifood Systems
Simutowe, E.
Eric Muhulu Chikwalila
Chipindu, L.
Tufa, A.H.
Alene, A.D.
Md Abdul Matin
Chikoye, D.
Thierfelder, C.
Marenya, P.P.
Ngoma, H.
Status of appropriate-scale mechanization in Zambia and Zimbabwe
description Unlocking the potential of smallholder agricultural productivity hinges on the pivotal role of mechanization, serving as the cornerstone to raise crop yield and improve livelihoods. However, evidence is thin on fit-for-purpose appropriate mechanization in the south of the Sahel. This study used a quantitative survey to understand the status of appropriate-scale mechanization in Zambia and Zimbabwe. In both countries, 50 service providers participated in the survey together with 210 farmers who used mechanization services and 219 farmers who did not. We find that farmers who used mechanization services had higher maize yield and higher household incomes. But there are nuances. First, mechanization service providers are older, predominantly male, and more educated. Second, the distributional effects show that hiring mechanization is associated with statistically significant higher outcomes in the 75th and 95th percentiles of income and yield. These results point to a need for structured promotion approaches tha allow all farmer types to equally benefit from mechanization services. There is a need for more work on the economics of appropriate scale agricultural mechanization to further understand profitability and returns to investments.
format Report
topic_facet AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Service Provider
Two-Wheel Tractor
Smallholder Farmers
WHEELED TRACTORS
SHELLERS
TRANSPORT
IMPACT
SMALLHOLDERS
Sustainable Agrifood Systems
author Simutowe, E.
Eric Muhulu Chikwalila
Chipindu, L.
Tufa, A.H.
Alene, A.D.
Md Abdul Matin
Chikoye, D.
Thierfelder, C.
Marenya, P.P.
Ngoma, H.
author_facet Simutowe, E.
Eric Muhulu Chikwalila
Chipindu, L.
Tufa, A.H.
Alene, A.D.
Md Abdul Matin
Chikoye, D.
Thierfelder, C.
Marenya, P.P.
Ngoma, H.
author_sort Simutowe, E.
title Status of appropriate-scale mechanization in Zambia and Zimbabwe
title_short Status of appropriate-scale mechanization in Zambia and Zimbabwe
title_full Status of appropriate-scale mechanization in Zambia and Zimbabwe
title_fullStr Status of appropriate-scale mechanization in Zambia and Zimbabwe
title_full_unstemmed Status of appropriate-scale mechanization in Zambia and Zimbabwe
title_sort status of appropriate-scale mechanization in zambia and zimbabwe
publisher CGIAR
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10883/22933
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