Abstract:
Agricultural transformation is key to poverty reduction and food security in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). In Rwanda, transformation efforts have been focused on increasing smallholder farmers’ participation in agricultural markets, with a purpose to shift them from subsistence to market-oriented production. In spite of this, subsistence farming is still dominant, involving more women than men and little is known on the progress of these farmers towards market orientation. This study contributes to the existing knowledge by examining how smallholder households and women in particular, integrate in the current marketing system while determining the drivers of output market participation as well as
its effect on food access and on-farm employment. The study’s contributions is three-fold. First, it provides empirical evidence on the relationship between the output market participation and food access and on-farm employment. Second, the study highlights gender issues as well as women’s social and economic conditions that require attention to increase smallholder households’ participation to output market. Finally, the design of this study allowed to provide some knowledge on two underresearched topics; on-farm
employment and experience of women as individual farmers in the ongoing agricultural transformation. It used a mixed method approach with a quantitative survey on respectively 211 and 178 beans and potato producing households, 7 focus group discussions and 10 key informant interviews, under a sequential explanatory design. Double Hurdle model, Logit models and inverse probability weighting estimator with regression adjustment (IPWRA) as well as the qualitative thematic analysis were used. Results showed that 56% of the total sample has participated in output markets while 34.7% were market oriented. Based on the Household Commercialisation Index (HCI), the average participation was higher among potato producing households (80% versus
34% for beans). Landholding and income, proximity to all-weather roads, women’s education, group membership, possession of mobile phone and women participation in decisions on quantity sold determined the households’ market participation. Women’s low participation in the marketing system, limited control over agricultural income and increased workload were the primal hindrances to households’ market participation. Households with high degree of market participation had higher likelihood to be in better category of food access and food secure. Women’s participation in decisions on quantity to sell, education and saving have positively influenced food access. Households that
participated to output market, generated 19% more on-farm employment than they would have generated without market participation in output market. The study recommends women’s participation in groups, training and use mobile phones to access information and improve their bargaining ability in households’ decisions. Campaigns on gender equality target smallholder households. Improvement of rural all-weather roads, households’ income, and linkages in the marketing system was also recommended.