Economic perspectives of the diversity of risks among crop farmers in the Northern Guninea Savanna of Nigeria

In this paper, we examine the diversity of risks that affect farming in the Northern Guinea Savanna of Nigeria. We also investigate the perspectives of these risks in relation to their economic implications on the farming enterprises. We also show that through reorganization of these risks, some derived factors have the ability to present themselves whether as corresponding to existing categorization of the variables or not and also to enable us know which of the factors is more important than the other. Gross margin and factor analytical methods were used in computing the estimated results on a cross sectional sample of 348 farming households. Results show that farmers who were grouped under natural risk incurred the least mean production cost of N11, 115.61, while the highest mean production cost of N15,998.18 was incurred by farmers grouped under production risks. The highest mean revenue of N18,998.16 was recorded by farmers under production risk which translated into a mean gross margin of N65, 999.85. Verifying whether some derived factors would correspond to the existing categorization of 14 risk types (from 5 sources) which the farmers faced, results from the factor analysis and the consequent F-tests from ANOVA show no marked or significant differences among the identified factors and the existing risk sources. Consequently, the individual effect or importance of the original 14 risk types that the sampled farmers considered important can be dully represented and effectively regrouped into five sources (factors) as natural, technical, social, ecosocial and biochemical.

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Main Authors: Olarinde, L.O., Manyong, Victor M., Akintola, J.O.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Science Alert 2011-04-01
Subjects:farmers, smallholders, agricultural products, agricultural economics,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/88175
https://doi.org/10.3923/sscience.2011.262.268
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-881752023-09-30T10:58:34Z Economic perspectives of the diversity of risks among crop farmers in the Northern Guninea Savanna of Nigeria Olarinde, L.O. Manyong, Victor M. Akintola, J.O. farmers smallholders agricultural products agricultural economics In this paper, we examine the diversity of risks that affect farming in the Northern Guinea Savanna of Nigeria. We also investigate the perspectives of these risks in relation to their economic implications on the farming enterprises. We also show that through reorganization of these risks, some derived factors have the ability to present themselves whether as corresponding to existing categorization of the variables or not and also to enable us know which of the factors is more important than the other. Gross margin and factor analytical methods were used in computing the estimated results on a cross sectional sample of 348 farming households. Results show that farmers who were grouped under natural risk incurred the least mean production cost of N11, 115.61, while the highest mean production cost of N15,998.18 was incurred by farmers grouped under production risks. The highest mean revenue of N18,998.16 was recorded by farmers under production risk which translated into a mean gross margin of N65, 999.85. Verifying whether some derived factors would correspond to the existing categorization of 14 risk types (from 5 sources) which the farmers faced, results from the factor analysis and the consequent F-tests from ANOVA show no marked or significant differences among the identified factors and the existing risk sources. Consequently, the individual effect or importance of the original 14 risk types that the sampled farmers considered important can be dully represented and effectively regrouped into five sources (factors) as natural, technical, social, ecosocial and biochemical. 2011-04-01 2017-10-05T07:42:46Z 2017-10-05T07:42:46Z Journal Article Olarinde, L.O., Manyong, V.M. & Akintola, J.O. (2010). Economic perspectives of the diversity of risks among crop farmers in the Northern Guinea Savanna of Nigeria. Social Science, 6(4), 262-268. 1818-5800 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/88175 https://doi.org/10.3923/sscience.2011.262.268 en Open Access p. 262-268 Science Alert Social Sciences
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic farmers
smallholders
agricultural products
agricultural economics
farmers
smallholders
agricultural products
agricultural economics
spellingShingle farmers
smallholders
agricultural products
agricultural economics
farmers
smallholders
agricultural products
agricultural economics
Olarinde, L.O.
Manyong, Victor M.
Akintola, J.O.
Economic perspectives of the diversity of risks among crop farmers in the Northern Guninea Savanna of Nigeria
description In this paper, we examine the diversity of risks that affect farming in the Northern Guinea Savanna of Nigeria. We also investigate the perspectives of these risks in relation to their economic implications on the farming enterprises. We also show that through reorganization of these risks, some derived factors have the ability to present themselves whether as corresponding to existing categorization of the variables or not and also to enable us know which of the factors is more important than the other. Gross margin and factor analytical methods were used in computing the estimated results on a cross sectional sample of 348 farming households. Results show that farmers who were grouped under natural risk incurred the least mean production cost of N11, 115.61, while the highest mean production cost of N15,998.18 was incurred by farmers grouped under production risks. The highest mean revenue of N18,998.16 was recorded by farmers under production risk which translated into a mean gross margin of N65, 999.85. Verifying whether some derived factors would correspond to the existing categorization of 14 risk types (from 5 sources) which the farmers faced, results from the factor analysis and the consequent F-tests from ANOVA show no marked or significant differences among the identified factors and the existing risk sources. Consequently, the individual effect or importance of the original 14 risk types that the sampled farmers considered important can be dully represented and effectively regrouped into five sources (factors) as natural, technical, social, ecosocial and biochemical.
format Journal Article
topic_facet farmers
smallholders
agricultural products
agricultural economics
author Olarinde, L.O.
Manyong, Victor M.
Akintola, J.O.
author_facet Olarinde, L.O.
Manyong, Victor M.
Akintola, J.O.
author_sort Olarinde, L.O.
title Economic perspectives of the diversity of risks among crop farmers in the Northern Guninea Savanna of Nigeria
title_short Economic perspectives of the diversity of risks among crop farmers in the Northern Guninea Savanna of Nigeria
title_full Economic perspectives of the diversity of risks among crop farmers in the Northern Guninea Savanna of Nigeria
title_fullStr Economic perspectives of the diversity of risks among crop farmers in the Northern Guninea Savanna of Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Economic perspectives of the diversity of risks among crop farmers in the Northern Guninea Savanna of Nigeria
title_sort economic perspectives of the diversity of risks among crop farmers in the northern guninea savanna of nigeria
publisher Science Alert
publishDate 2011-04-01
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/88175
https://doi.org/10.3923/sscience.2011.262.268
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