Market Access and Extent of Commercialisation Among the Smallholder Dairy Farmers in Zimbabwe

Tawedzegwa Musitini, Abyssinia Mushunje, Joseph Muroiwa

Abstract


This study assesses the extent to which market access determine commercialisation among the smallholder dairy farmers in Zimbabwe. A total of 225 smallholder dairy farming households, randomly selected from 11 milk-producing cooperatives in Zimbabwe were analysed using descriptive statistics and the Tobit, regression model. The empirical results indicated that the proportion of farmers’ milk delivered to the market was significantly affected by the mode of transport used to carry the milk from the farmer’s homes to the market. The results show that farmers using more efficient though costly transport mechanisms such as a car, tractor, or motorcycle were more likely to get their milk to the market not only on time but also in good condition. Farmers using primitive methods of carrying the milk to the market such as walking on foot, wheelbarrow or bicycle were often only able to deliver once per day though commercial dairy cows are regularly milked more than once per day. The study stresses the need to find locally relevant milk transport mechanisms such as the corporate hiring of vehicles motorcycles or tractors by farmers residing close to each other to promote efficiency and profitability among the smallholder dairy farmers.

Keywords: market access, commercialisation, Tobit regression model, smallholder dairy farming, Zimbabwe, market information

DOI: 10.7176/JESD/10-8-14

Publication date: April 30th 2019


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ISSN (Paper)2222-1700 ISSN (Online)2222-2855

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