Skip to main content

Home/ Food Safety in Tanzania/ Group items tagged developing

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Amyaz Moledina

Emerging Trends In Mobile Agriculture - Highlights from mAgri's event at M4D Summit | M... - 0 views

  • Content remains one of the main bottlenecks for the success of mobile agriculture solutions. There is a lack of affordable content that doesn’t require significant effort to customise for selected markets and channels. This challenge is intensified by the diversity of content needs depending on the type of farming, value chain and stage of the crop cycle.
  • CABI, ILRI
  • information is needed, but farmers might not be willing or ready to pay for it. At the same time the perceived value of mobile services that facilitate or support transactions is much higher, as farmers need access to inputs, equipment and infrastructure, capital and markets – information by itself is simply not enough to make a difference on small-holders productivity and income. It’s apparent that the next generation of mobile agriculture services is likely to be represented by a spectrum of bundled services,
    • Amyaz Moledina
       
      The solution should be bundled. But if the information needs are heterogeneous how can you bundle? Standardize or make different bundles? Can we use customer information to customize bundles?
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • For the mobile operators leading a roll-out of Agri VAS solutions like Tigo Tanzania with their new service Tigo Kilimo, C-level support is absolutely critical.
  • it’s more feasible to design the service around existing cash-transactions that involve small-holder farmers, those are most likely to be either G2P payments and subsidies for seeds and fertilisers, or payments from organised buyers and processors to their network of smallholder suppliers. In both cases, there is a powerful stakeholder that benefits from the reduction of transactional costs and associated risks. Zoona shared their example of digitising payments within cotton value chain in Zambia, h
  •  
    The first Mobile for Development Summit provided a unique opportunity to gather first-hand insights from the emerging field of mobile agriculture, and GSMA mAgri team hosted a round-table discussion at the event
Amyaz Moledina

AgEcon Search: Strategies to Promote Market-Oriented Smallholder Agriculture in Develop... - 0 views

  • Smallholder Agriculture is key to livelihoods of many rural households in developing and transition economies. In Kenya, small farms account for over 75% of total agricultural production and nearly 50% of the marketed output. Despite favourable trends in global development drivers such as rising population, per capita incomes and emerging urban dietary preferences, most smallholder farmers remain poor. This study sought to characterize agricultural commercialization trends, identify and prioritize constraints to participation in markets, analyse determinants of percentage of output sold, and explore strategies to promote market-oriented production. A participatory Rapid Rural Appraisal approach, household survey and a Truncated Regression model were used. A sample of 224 farmers: 76 of them growing maize, 77 involved in horticulture (kales and tomatoes) and 71 practising dairy, were interviewed in one peri-urban and one rural district (Kiambu and Kisii, respectively). Results show that in rural areas, lower levels of output are sold and fewer farmers participate in markets compared to the peri-urban areas. Opportunities for profitable commercial agriculture are observed in growing demand, emerging food preferences and intensive farming. At village-level, market participation is hampered by poor quality and high cost of inputs, high transportation costs, high market charges and unreliable market information. At the household-level, the determinants of percentage of output sold are producer prices, market information arrangement, output, distance to the market, share of non-farm income and gender. Strategies are suggested to improve rural input supply, institutional and regulatory framework, enhance value addition and strengthen market information provision.
Amyaz Moledina

allAfrica.com: Tanzania: Horticulture Association Trains 40 Farmers - 0 views

  •  
    Enhancing Market Access for East Africa's Smallscale Fresh Produce" funded by the Trade Mark East Africa (TMEA), TAHA undertakes capacity building for the vegetable and fruits small grower groups to produce as per global private sector body for the certification of agricultural products (Global G.A.P). "The 42 farmers who have just graduated will be local Global GAP inspectors within their groups in order to enable their colleagues to produce as per global body's standards," Ms Mkindi explained. She said TAHA has already translated the Global GAP protocol on horticultural standards into Kiswahili, simplified illustrated its manual and developed its curriculum to support farmers to grasp easily.
Amyaz Moledina

AgEcon Search: Comparing Accuracy and Costs of Revealed and Stated Preferences: The Cas... - 0 views

  •  
     Experimental auctions produced the most realistic results for mean willingness to pay. They are also the most accurate at all budget levels, but also the most expensive. Considering their accuracy and realistic results, we conclude that they should be the recommended method in measuring consumer preference in developing countries, since the extra cost is more than recovered by the gain in accuracy.
Amyaz Moledina

Africa RISING | Africa Research in Sustainable Intensification for the Next Generation - 0 views

  •  
    Sustainable intensification of mixed crop livestock systems is a key pathway towards better food security, improved livelihoods and a healthy environment. As part of the US government's Feed the Future initiative to address hunger and food security issues in sub-Saharan Africa, the US Agency for International Development (USAID) is supporting three multi-stakeholder agricultural research projects to sustainably intensify key African farming systems. These are intended to catalyze concerted research and action by governments and donor agencies around pressing issues.This website reports on the activities of these projects which form a Program: 'Africa Research in Sustainable Intensification for the Next Generation - Africa RISING.'
Amyaz Moledina

Urban Consumers' Willingness to Pay for Quality of Leafy Vegetables along the Value Cha... - 0 views

  •  
    Improvement in income in developing countries has led to emergence of middle and high income consumers. In major urban centers there has been rapid expansion of the grocery sections selling variety of leafy vegetables in leading retail stores. This study examines the willing of the urban consumers to pay for quality of leafy vegetables and the drivers of willingness to pay for the quality. It considered a broad range of quality attributes including safety, nutrition, price, sensory, convenience, environmental friendliness, hygiene and ethics. The study found that mean willingness to pay for quality was highest among high income consumers. It also found that confidence and consistency, subjective knowledge, reference point, income and age of children the consumer has were the main explanatory variable for WTP. The study concludes that there is demand for quality of leafy vegetables and discusses policy implications.
Amyaz Moledina

Creating jobs in Africa's fragile states : are value chains an answer? - 0 views

  • The report argues that in Sub-Saharan Africa, where almost three-quarters of the labor force still works in agriculture, agricultural value chains may have the greatest potential to diversify rural economies, raise household incomes, and thereby contribute to stability. The core of value chain development involves strengthening relationships a critical task in fragile and post- conflict environments, where trust and social cohesion have been shattered.
  •  
    Value Chains help in post conflict settings
Amyaz Moledina

Carolyn Nombo - 0 views

  • Jeckoniah, J., Nombo, C., Mdoe, N. (2012). Women Empowerment in Agricultural Value Chains: Voices from Onion Growers in Northern Tanzania. Research on Humanities and Social Sciences Vol 2, No.8, Pp 54-60 Jeckoniah, J., Nombo, C., Mdoe, N. (2012). Determinants of Women Empowerment in Onion Value Chains: A Case of Simanjiro District in Tanzania. Journal of Economics and Sustainable Development Vol 2, No.8, Pp 54-60
1 - 9 of 9
Showing 20 items per page