This paper explores how farm productivity affects poverty, and how various factor market constraints affect farm productivity. The empirical analysis draws on representative surveys of farm households in Kilimanjaro and Ruvuma, two cash crop growing regions in Tanzania. We find that poorer households do not only possess fewer assets, but are also much less productive. We find that agricultural productivity directly affects household consumption and hence overall poverty and welfare. Stochastic production frontier analysis indicates that many farmers are farming well below best practice in the region. Analysis of allocative efficiency suggests that family labour is substantially over utilized, a sign of considerable excess labour supply. Use...
University College Dublin (Ireland)About three out of every four income-earners in Tanzania are smal...
In an effort to inform strategic options to improve agricultural productivity, we examine the impact...
Tanzania J.Agric.Sc. (2007) Vol. 8 No.2, 103 -114 Accepted May, 2008Poverty can be categorized into...
This paper explores how farm productivity affects poverty, and how various factor market constraints...
This report explores how farm productivity affects poverty, and how various factor market constraint...
Agriculture’s importance to poverty reduction goes far beyond its direct impact on farmers’ incomes,...
Income poverty in Tanzania as elsewhere in developing countries is predominantly a rural phenomenon ...
Agriculture is a key element of the Tanzanian economy, it contributes about 46% of the GDP. It is no...
Poverty in Africa is primarily rural concentrated, about 75% of the poor population live in rural ar...
The main objective of this study is to develop a robust and comprehensive tool to evaluate the effec...
More than 70 percent of Tanzanians live in rural areas and close to 90 percent of thempractice agric...
Farmer groups (FGs) approach is seen as a fundamental solution to income poverty and food insecurit...
We study the interplay between market structure and domestic complementary factors in the production...
This article discusses poverty reducing effects of agricultural research, based on existing impact a...
This study uses detailed household-level data to investigate income and activity diversification amo...
University College Dublin (Ireland)About three out of every four income-earners in Tanzania are smal...
In an effort to inform strategic options to improve agricultural productivity, we examine the impact...
Tanzania J.Agric.Sc. (2007) Vol. 8 No.2, 103 -114 Accepted May, 2008Poverty can be categorized into...
This paper explores how farm productivity affects poverty, and how various factor market constraints...
This report explores how farm productivity affects poverty, and how various factor market constraint...
Agriculture’s importance to poverty reduction goes far beyond its direct impact on farmers’ incomes,...
Income poverty in Tanzania as elsewhere in developing countries is predominantly a rural phenomenon ...
Agriculture is a key element of the Tanzanian economy, it contributes about 46% of the GDP. It is no...
Poverty in Africa is primarily rural concentrated, about 75% of the poor population live in rural ar...
The main objective of this study is to develop a robust and comprehensive tool to evaluate the effec...
More than 70 percent of Tanzanians live in rural areas and close to 90 percent of thempractice agric...
Farmer groups (FGs) approach is seen as a fundamental solution to income poverty and food insecurit...
We study the interplay between market structure and domestic complementary factors in the production...
This article discusses poverty reducing effects of agricultural research, based on existing impact a...
This study uses detailed household-level data to investigate income and activity diversification amo...
University College Dublin (Ireland)About three out of every four income-earners in Tanzania are smal...
In an effort to inform strategic options to improve agricultural productivity, we examine the impact...
Tanzania J.Agric.Sc. (2007) Vol. 8 No.2, 103 -114 Accepted May, 2008Poverty can be categorized into...