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Smallholder attrition in contract farming schemes in India: extent, causes, and concerns

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TLDR
In this article, the extent and causes of farmer exit from contract farming arrangements in southern India using survey data for five schemes: cotton, gherkins, papaya, marigold, and broiler chickens.
Abstract
This paper maps the extent and causes of farmer exit from contract farming arrangements in southern India using survey data for five schemes: cotton, gherkins, papaya, marigold, and broiler chickens. The paper finds that farmer attrition is quite widespread and that poorer farmers from marginalized social groups are more likely to exit these arrangements. While this is an important policy concern, the study also distinguishes between voluntary exit, where the farmer opts out, versus involuntary exit, where the contracting firm drops the farmer as a supplier because of constraints in delivering quality produce, or the firm's interaction with the farmer forces the farmer out. The paper also highlights the episodic nature of farmer participation, wherein farmers leverage opportunities to contract occasionally as part of a dynamic portfolio of alternatives. The paper emphasizes that while involuntary exclusion is of serious concern, voluntary exit and episodic participation are perhaps less important issues f...

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Contract Farming in Developed and Developing Countries

TL;DR: In this article, the authors review the literature on contract farming and assess how it contributes to improving production efficiency and income of farmers in general and of small-scale farmers in particular, finding that although contract farming contributes to the improvement of farmers' income by introducing new crops and production methods, there is room for strengthening its effects on poverty reduction through policy.
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Contract farming for improving smallholder incomes: What can we learn from effectiveness studies?

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the results of a systematic review that analyzed the evidence in the literature on income effects for smallholders, and they show that the most effective contractual arrangements included a price premium, especially when there was no farmers' organization to broker the contract between the farmer and the firm.
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Profits from participation in high value agriculture: Evidence of heterogeneous benefits in contract farming schemes in Southern India

TL;DR: In this article, the variable impact of participation in high value agriculture through contract farming arrangements in southern India was assessed using survey data for 474 farmers in four commodity sectors, gherkins, papaya marigold and broiler, using an endogenous switching model to estimate net profits from participation.
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Smallholder farmers' dissatisfaction with contract schemes in spite of economic benefits: Issues of mistrust and lack of transparency

TL;DR: In this article, contract farming is typically seen as a useful mechanism to help smallholders in overcoming market access constraints, however, in spite of economic benefits, high smallholder dropout rates from co-...
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Governance and Trade in Fresh Vegetables: The Impact of UK Supermarkets on the African Horticulture Industry

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied the role of large retailers in structuring the production and processing of fresh vegetables exported from Africa, and the control over the fresh vegetables trade exercised by UK supermarkets has clear consequences for inclusion and exclusion of producers and exporters of differing types.
Journal ArticleDOI

Smallholder participation in contract farming: Comparative evidence from five countries

TL;DR: This article developed a conceptual framework with which to study contracting between small-holders and a commodity-processing firm and synthesize results from empirical studies of contract farming arrangements in five countries (Ghana, India, Madagascar, Mozambique, and Nicaragua).

Contract farming: partnerships for growth.

C. Eaton, +1 more
TL;DR: Contract farming :partnerships for growth, Contract Farming :partnerhips for growing, Contract farming :Partnerships in agriculture:partnership for growth as mentioned in this paper, Contract Farming:partnership for growth.
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The Emergence of Supermarkets with Chinese Characteristics: Challenges and Opportunities for China's Agricultural Development

TL;DR: The supermarket revolution is spreading faster in China than anywhere else in the world as mentioned in this paper, and supermarket managers face several unique challenges: average farm size is small and farmers are not well organized.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Emergence of Supermarkets with Chinese Characteristics: Challenges and Opportunities for China's Agricultural Development

TL;DR: The supermarket revolution is spreading faster in China than anywhere else in the world as discussed by the authors, and supermarket managers face several unique challenges: average farm size is small and farmers are not well organized.
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