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Bibliothèque Commercialisation of Agriculture in Kenya: Case Study of Urban Bias on Food Availability in Farm Households

Commercialisation of Agriculture in Kenya: Case Study of Urban Bias on Food Availability in Farm Households

Commercialisation of Agriculture in Kenya: Case Study of Urban Bias on Food Availability in Farm Households

Resource information

Date of publication
Juin 2002
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
AGRIS:US2016207593

This study investigates the effect of cash cropping on food availability and examines the determinants of the proportion of income allocated for food expenditures in the Nyeri district in Kenya. Using a Tobit model, the results suggest that in general food expenditure allocations suffer due to cash cropping in Kenya as the lump-sum income flows from this may be used for purchases other than food. Food expenditure also suffers when remittances are irregular. On the other hand, earnings from outside employment for married women living with husbands are positively associated with food expenditure allocations. Amounts of non-cash food output as well as ownership of livestock are negatively associated with food expenditure allocations. These findings indicate that lump sum income may not lead to improved welfare of women and children. Thus, there may be social reasons for increasing non-cash food production especially by women, instead of over emphasising cash cropping as now seems to be so in public policy.

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Kiriti, Tabitha
Tisdell, Clement A.

Data Provider
Geographical focus