Food and Nutrition Security in Africa, Agricultural marketing and the use of mobile phones: Results...

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INTERNATIONAL FOOD POLICY RESEARCH INSTITUTE Agricultural marketing and the use of mobile phones: Results from Ghana and Uganda Nicholas Minot Senior Research Fellow, IFPRI Presented at the FoodAfrica Mid-term Conference University of Helsinki, Helsinki, 16 June 2014

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Food and Nutrition Security in Africa seminar in Helsinki 16 June 2014, Agricultural marketing and the use of mobile phones: Results from Ghana and Uganda, Nicholas Minot, IFPRI

Transcript of Food and Nutrition Security in Africa, Agricultural marketing and the use of mobile phones: Results...

Page 1: Food and Nutrition Security in Africa, Agricultural marketing and the use of mobile phones: Results from Ghana and Uganda, Nicholas Minot

INTERNATIONAL FOOD POLICY RESEARCH INSTITUTE

Agricultural marketing and the use of mobile phones: Results from Ghana and Uganda

Nicholas Minot Senior Research Fellow, IFPRI

Presented at the FoodAfrica Mid-term Conference University of Helsinki, Helsinki, 16 June 2014

Page 2: Food and Nutrition Security in Africa, Agricultural marketing and the use of mobile phones: Results from Ghana and Uganda, Nicholas Minot

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Overview of WP6 “ICT and market access”

Overall objective: Measure the impact of using SMS to improve access

to agricultural market information and other agricultural information

Methods Baseline surveys

• Ghana: 1290 households in northern Ghana

• Uganda: 1440 households in Western, Central, and Eastern regions

Interventions • Ghana: Esoko provides agricultural market information, weather info, and

extension info via SMS to random sub-sample of interviewed farmers

• Uganda: FIT-Uganda provides agricultural market info, weather, and extension info via SMS to random sub-sample of surveyed farmers

Endline surveys • Ghana: Scheduled for 2014

• Uganda: Scheduled for early 2015

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Methods: Collaborating institutions

MTT Economics branch • Participation in all phases, particularly in planning, analysis, and interpretation • Gender analysis of household survey data

ICRAF • Assistance in dissemination strategy • WP7 Innovative extension approaches

ISSER (Ghana) • Implementation of household surveys in Ghana

Esoko (Ghana) • Provision of agricultural price information via SMS to selected beneficiaries

FIT-Uganda • Provision of agricultural price information to selected beneficiaries

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Comparison

Ghana Uganda

Population 25 million 36 million

Share urban 48% 13%

GNI per capita US$ 1,410 US$ 510

Life expectancy 64 years 54 years

Agricultural exports Cocoa, cashew nut Coffee, tea

Staple foods Cassava, maize, yams Plantains, maize, cassava, sweet potatoes

Data collection Oct-Dec 2011 Dec 2012-Feb 2013

Regional coverage All districts in northern half

8 districts in west, central, and eastern

Nbr. of villages 130 144

Nbr. of households 1290 1440

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Agricultural marketing Who do farmers sell their crops to?

• In both countries, close

to 90% of crop sale

transactions are to

traders

• Most of remainder are

to other farmers and

consumers

• Negligible sales via

cooperatives or directly

to processors,

exporters, or

supermarkets

91 87

5 11 4 2

0 %

20 %

40 %

60 %

80 %

100 %

Ghana Uganda

Type of buyer

Other

Consumer

Trader

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Agricultural marketing Where do farmers sell their crops?

• In Uganda, 84% of sales

take place on farm and

at markets (usually in

same village)

• In Ghana, just 25% take

place on farm, 74%

take place in market

(usually outside village)

• May reflect lower

population density in

northern Ghana and/or

smaller mkt surplus

25

84 26

9

48

4

0 %

20 %

40 %

60 %

80 %

100 %

Ghana Uganda

Location of crop sale

Other

Market elsewhere

Market in village

Farm

Page 7: Food and Nutrition Security in Africa, Agricultural marketing and the use of mobile phones: Results from Ghana and Uganda, Nicholas Minot

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Agricultural marketing What is the role of farmer organizations?

• In both countries,

about 20% are

members of some type

of farmer organization

and about 10% are ag

coop members

• In both countries, less

than 8% of farms have

ever sold through a

cooperative or farmer

organization 2

4

4

7

10

8

19

22

0 10 20 30

Uganda

Ghana

Role of agricultural cooperatives

Member of coop or farm organization Member of ag coop

Ever sold through a coop/FO

Sold through a coop/FO in past year

Page 8: Food and Nutrition Security in Africa, Agricultural marketing and the use of mobile phones: Results from Ghana and Uganda, Nicholas Minot

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Agricultural marketing Most important crops in sales

• In northern Ghana,

yams, groundnuts,

and maize are most

important in terms of

crop revenue

• In Uganda, maize,

coffee, and beans are

most important

• Most “cash crops” are

food crops

• Large share of

“other”

17

39

10

14

19

19

45 37

0 %

10 %

20 %

30 %

40 %

50 %

60 %

70 %

80 %

90 %

100 %

Ghana Uganda

Percent of households by most important crop in sales

Other

Groundnut

Yams

Coffee

Beans

Maize

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Agricultural marketing How much competition?

• In Uganda, 83% of

respondents said they

had a choice of 2 or

more buyers for their

main commercial

crop

• In Ghana, 72% had 2

or more buyers

20

34

16

10

47

29

17

28

0 % 50 % 100 %

Uganda

Ghana

Percentage of households by number of buyers of main commercialized crop

More than 10

6-10 buyers

2-5 buyers

Just one buyer

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0

Agricultural marketing Reason for selecting buyer

• In both countries,

+85% of respondent

choose buyer by best

price or quick payment

• Debt obligation or

only-one-buyer is the

reason for <8%

• Competition among

traders for main crop

• There may be less

competition for other

crops

68

55

19

30

7

3

3

5

0 % 50 % 100 %

Uganda

Ghana

Percent of household by reason for selecting buyer

Best price

Immediate payment Location

Obligation

Only one buyer Other

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Agricultural marketing What percentage of crops do farmers sell?

• Fewer farmers with no

sales in Uganda (14%)

than northern Ghana

(28%)

• Median is 38% in

Uganda and 34% in

Ghana

• No clear distinction

between “subsistence”

and “commercial”

farmers; full range

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90

100

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100

Cro

ps

sale

s as

a p

erce

nta

ge o

f

valu

e o

f cr

op

pro

du

ctio

n

Percentage of households

Distribution of farms by share of production that is sold

Uganda

Ghana

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Use of mobile phones Share of farm households owning mobile phones

• Mobile phones are

more widely owned

in Uganda (72%) than

northern Ghana

(62%)

• Although Ghana is a

higher-income

country, northern

Ghana is the poorest

region of the country

72

62

0 20 40 60 80 100

Uganda

Ghana

Percentage of households owning a mobile phone

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Use of mobile phones Share of farm households owning mobile phones

• Female-headed

farmers are less likely

to own a mobile

phone in both

countries

• Also, medium- and

large-scale farmers

are more likely to

own a mobile phone

than small farmers

0 20 40 60 80

Uganda

Ghana

Percentage of households owning a mobile phone

Female

Male

Page 14: Food and Nutrition Security in Africa, Agricultural marketing and the use of mobile phones: Results from Ghana and Uganda, Nicholas Minot

Use of mobile phones Correlates of mobile phone ownership

• Households owning

mobile phones tend

to have more

members, higher

income, and more

education

• Sex of head of

household is not

significant after

controlling for other

factors

Probit model Dependent variable = mobile ownership (1=yes, 0=no)

Ghana Uganda

Household size +++ +++

Farm size

Log of per capita income ++ +++

Female headed household

Age of head of household - - -

Education of head + +++

Head can read

Head can write

Page 15: Food and Nutrition Security in Africa, Agricultural marketing and the use of mobile phones: Results from Ghana and Uganda, Nicholas Minot

Use of mobile phones How are mobile phones used?

• In both countries, no

more than half of

phone owners have

ever sent an SMS text

message

• Roughly one quarter

of owners use their

phone to get ag

market information 28

23

50

42

51

42

0 20 40 60

Uganda

Ghana

Use of mobile phones (% of households that own a phone)

Know how to use SMS

Have sent an SMS

Use phone for ag market info

Page 16: Food and Nutrition Security in Africa, Agricultural marketing and the use of mobile phones: Results from Ghana and Uganda, Nicholas Minot

Use of mobile phones Do farmers feel well-informed about prices?

• In both countries,

less than half of

farmers fell well

informed about

prices & markets

• Small farmers feel

less informed than

medium or larger

farmers 36

54

27

39

26

34

34

47

0 50 100

Uganda

Ghana

Perception of being well-informed about prices by farm-size category

(% of households)

Overall

Very small farms

Small farms

Medium farms

Large farms

Page 17: Food and Nutrition Security in Africa, Agricultural marketing and the use of mobile phones: Results from Ghana and Uganda, Nicholas Minot

Summary Almost all crop sales are to traders and consumers

• Few farmers sell directly to processors, exporters, or supermarkets

Location of sale varies by country and/or region • Ugandan farmers sell on farm, while those in northern Ghana sell at markets

Coops & farmer organizations play very minor roles in marketing • Less than 8% of farmers have ever sold crops through a coop/farmer organization

Markets are more competitive than sometimes portrayed • More than two-thirds know of at least two buyers willing to buy main crop • Farmers choose buyer based on best price & terms, not obligation or monopsony

No easy distinction between “subsistence” and “commercial” farmers • Whole spectrum of farmers with intermediate sales • Sale of food crops more important than sale of “cash” crops

Most farm households own mobile phones • More in Uganda than northern Ghana; more among larger, higher-income, and

better educated households

.. but less than one-third of owners get market info by phone • Provision of agricultural price information to selected beneficiaries

… and most farmers do not feel well-informed about crop prices • particularly small-scale farmers

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Conclusions

Ghana and Uganda offer apparently favorable conditions for mobile phones to improve market information:

• Large majority of farmers have crop sales • Most farmers sell to traders and have some choice of buyer • Competition means that negotiation with new information is possible • Most farmers already have mobile phones • But few farmers use their phones to get prices and market info • And less than half of farmers feel well-informed about prices and markets

But only empirical analysis can confirm that market information delivered via SMS to mobile phones will be useful to farmers

Page 19: Food and Nutrition Security in Africa, Agricultural marketing and the use of mobile phones: Results from Ghana and Uganda, Nicholas Minot

Thank you! Comments and suggestions welcome [email protected]

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