To diversify or not to diversify, that is the question. Pursuing agricultural development for smallholder farmers in marginal areas of Ghana



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https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0305750X19303304
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DOI: 
10.1016/j.worlddev.2019.104682
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Licensing of resource: 
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs (CC BY-NC-ND)
Type: 
journal article
Journal: 
World Development
Number: 
125
Pages: 
1-10
Volume: 
January 2020
Author(s): 
Bellon M.R.
Kotu M.H.
Azzarri C.
Caracciolo F.
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Description: 

Many smallholder farmers in developing countries grow multiple crop species on their farms, maintaining de facto crop diversity. Rarely do agricultural development strategies consider this crop diversity as an entry point for fostering agricultural innovation. This paper presents a case study, from an agricultural research-for-development project in northern Ghana, which examines the relationship between crop diversity and self-consumption of food crops, and cash income from crops sold by smallholder farmers in the target areas. By testing the presence and direction of these relationships, it is possible to assess whether smallholder farmers may benefit more from a diversification or a specialization agricultural development strategy for improving their livelihoods. Based on a household survey of 637 randomly selected households, we calculated crop diversity as well as its contribution to self-consumption (measured as imputed monetary value) and to cash income for each household. With these data we estimated a system of three simultaneous equations

Publication year: 
2020
Keywords: 
Crop diversity
Production diversification
agricultural development
Ghana