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An Economic Analysis of the Impact of Contract Farming of Broccoli Production on Youth Development: A Case of Musanze District

Published in Innovation (Volume 2, Issue 4)
Received: 21 June 2021    Accepted: 30 June 2021    Published: 10 November 2021
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Abstract

Majority of population engaged in agricultural activities are more aged and still predominantly practise traditional and subsistence farming systems. The decreasing number of young people involved in farming as a business is a national signal of distress in the agricultural sector. This is already negatively influencing the economy. The global objective of this paper was to analyse the impact of contract farming of broccoli production on youth development. The study was conducted in Musanze district, Muko, Remera, Kinigi, and Nyange sectors. A multi-stage sampling technique, purposive sampling, and stratification random sampling were employed due to the location and distribution of both individuals and cooperatives farmers growing this crop. Hundred and twenty 120-broccoli farmers were interviewed. The results indicated that age, education level, extensions services, amount of fertilisers used, contracted price, improved seeds used, irrigation system employed by respondents growing broccoli showed a positive influence on quantity of production of broccoli as expected and were statistically significant at (P<0.01). Experience of grower, pests and diseases control had positive influence to the quantity of broccoli produced at (P<0.05). The land reserved to broccoli farming had not significantly influenced broccoli production in the study area while labourers had a negative influence on broccoli production in study area. The results of the study indicated that contract farming system in agriculture sector contributed much more on the development of youth in Rwanda particularly in study area. It has contributed on youth income increase, jobs creation, inputs provision, access to the extension services, access to information, reduced the youth migration. However, the results also indicated the major constraints faced by youth to be involved in contract farming such as lack of support, Lack of access to credits, Lack of access to land, Lack of farming experience, Lack of information, Lack of youth policies, Transaction costs, Shortage of production, Limited technical knowledge, Lack of decision-making, and Lack of market accessibility.

Published in Innovation (Volume 2, Issue 4)
DOI 10.11648/j.innov.20210204.12
Page(s) 56-66
Creative Commons

This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited.

Copyright

Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Science Publishing Group

Keywords

Economic Analysis, Impact, Contract Farming, Broccoli Production, Youth

References
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    Gaspard Ntabakirabose, Ritha Tumukunde, Jean Claude Tuyisenge, Jean Claude Musabyimana, David Mwehia Mburu, et al. (2021). An Economic Analysis of the Impact of Contract Farming of Broccoli Production on Youth Development: A Case of Musanze District. Innovation, 2(4), 56-66. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.innov.20210204.12

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    Gaspard Ntabakirabose; Ritha Tumukunde; Jean Claude Tuyisenge; Jean Claude Musabyimana; David Mwehia Mburu, et al. An Economic Analysis of the Impact of Contract Farming of Broccoli Production on Youth Development: A Case of Musanze District. Innovation. 2021, 2(4), 56-66. doi: 10.11648/j.innov.20210204.12

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    AMA Style

    Gaspard Ntabakirabose, Ritha Tumukunde, Jean Claude Tuyisenge, Jean Claude Musabyimana, David Mwehia Mburu, et al. An Economic Analysis of the Impact of Contract Farming of Broccoli Production on Youth Development: A Case of Musanze District. Innovation. 2021;2(4):56-66. doi: 10.11648/j.innov.20210204.12

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  • @article{10.11648/j.innov.20210204.12,
      author = {Gaspard Ntabakirabose and Ritha Tumukunde and Jean Claude Tuyisenge and Jean Claude Musabyimana and David Mwehia Mburu and Yves Theoneste Murindangabo and Felicien Ndaruhutse and Jean Marie Vianney Senyanzobe},
      title = {An Economic Analysis of the Impact of Contract Farming of Broccoli Production on Youth Development: A Case of Musanze District},
      journal = {Innovation},
      volume = {2},
      number = {4},
      pages = {56-66},
      doi = {10.11648/j.innov.20210204.12},
      url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.innov.20210204.12},
      eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.innov.20210204.12},
      abstract = {Majority of population engaged in agricultural activities are more aged and still predominantly practise traditional and subsistence farming systems. The decreasing number of young people involved in farming as a business is a national signal of distress in the agricultural sector. This is already negatively influencing the economy. The global objective of this paper was to analyse the impact of contract farming of broccoli production on youth development. The study was conducted in Musanze district, Muko, Remera, Kinigi, and Nyange sectors. A multi-stage sampling technique, purposive sampling, and stratification random sampling were employed due to the location and distribution of both individuals and cooperatives farmers growing this crop. Hundred and twenty 120-broccoli farmers were interviewed. The results indicated that age, education level, extensions services, amount of fertilisers used, contracted price, improved seeds used, irrigation system employed by respondents growing broccoli showed a positive influence on quantity of production of broccoli as expected and were statistically significant at (P<0.01). Experience of grower, pests and diseases control had positive influence to the quantity of broccoli produced at (P<0.05). The land reserved to broccoli farming had not significantly influenced broccoli production in the study area while labourers had a negative influence on broccoli production in study area. The results of the study indicated that contract farming system in agriculture sector contributed much more on the development of youth in Rwanda particularly in study area. It has contributed on youth income increase, jobs creation, inputs provision, access to the extension services, access to information, reduced the youth migration. However, the results also indicated the major constraints faced by youth to be involved in contract farming such as lack of support, Lack of access to credits, Lack of access to land, Lack of farming experience, Lack of information, Lack of youth policies, Transaction costs, Shortage of production, Limited technical knowledge, Lack of decision-making, and Lack of market accessibility.},
     year = {2021}
    }
    

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  • TY  - JOUR
    T1  - An Economic Analysis of the Impact of Contract Farming of Broccoli Production on Youth Development: A Case of Musanze District
    AU  - Gaspard Ntabakirabose
    AU  - Ritha Tumukunde
    AU  - Jean Claude Tuyisenge
    AU  - Jean Claude Musabyimana
    AU  - David Mwehia Mburu
    AU  - Yves Theoneste Murindangabo
    AU  - Felicien Ndaruhutse
    AU  - Jean Marie Vianney Senyanzobe
    Y1  - 2021/11/10
    PY  - 2021
    N1  - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.innov.20210204.12
    DO  - 10.11648/j.innov.20210204.12
    T2  - Innovation
    JF  - Innovation
    JO  - Innovation
    SP  - 56
    EP  - 66
    PB  - Science Publishing Group
    SN  - 2994-7138
    UR  - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.innov.20210204.12
    AB  - Majority of population engaged in agricultural activities are more aged and still predominantly practise traditional and subsistence farming systems. The decreasing number of young people involved in farming as a business is a national signal of distress in the agricultural sector. This is already negatively influencing the economy. The global objective of this paper was to analyse the impact of contract farming of broccoli production on youth development. The study was conducted in Musanze district, Muko, Remera, Kinigi, and Nyange sectors. A multi-stage sampling technique, purposive sampling, and stratification random sampling were employed due to the location and distribution of both individuals and cooperatives farmers growing this crop. Hundred and twenty 120-broccoli farmers were interviewed. The results indicated that age, education level, extensions services, amount of fertilisers used, contracted price, improved seeds used, irrigation system employed by respondents growing broccoli showed a positive influence on quantity of production of broccoli as expected and were statistically significant at (P<0.01). Experience of grower, pests and diseases control had positive influence to the quantity of broccoli produced at (P<0.05). The land reserved to broccoli farming had not significantly influenced broccoli production in the study area while labourers had a negative influence on broccoli production in study area. The results of the study indicated that contract farming system in agriculture sector contributed much more on the development of youth in Rwanda particularly in study area. It has contributed on youth income increase, jobs creation, inputs provision, access to the extension services, access to information, reduced the youth migration. However, the results also indicated the major constraints faced by youth to be involved in contract farming such as lack of support, Lack of access to credits, Lack of access to land, Lack of farming experience, Lack of information, Lack of youth policies, Transaction costs, Shortage of production, Limited technical knowledge, Lack of decision-making, and Lack of market accessibility.
    VL  - 2
    IS  - 4
    ER  - 

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Author Information
  • Ministry of Agriculture and Animal Resources, Kigali, Rwanda

  • Ministry of Agriculture and Animal Resources, Kigali, Rwanda

  • Ministry of Agriculture and Animal Resources, Kigali, Rwanda

  • Ministry of Agriculture and Animal Resources, Kigali, Rwanda

  • Department of Land Resources Planning and Management, College of Agriculture & Natural Resources, Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology (JKUAT), Nairobi, Kenya

  • Department of Agroecosystems, University of South Bohemia, Bohemia, Czech Republic

  • Department of Agricultural Engineering, Integrated Polytechnic Regional College (IPRC) Huye, Kigali, Rwanda

  • College of Agriculture, Animal Sciences and Veterinary Medicine (UR-CAVM), University of Rwanda, Kigali, Rwanda

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