Factors Influencing Awareness and Use of Electronic–Based Market Information Services for Farming Business in Malawi
View/ Open
Date
2011Author
Katengeza, Samson P
Okello, Julius J
Mensah, Edouard R
Type
ArticleLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The government of Malawi has over the years initiated a number of agricultural market interventions including the recent electronic-based market information services in order to expose smallholder farmers to the exigency of market forces. The performance of agricultural markets is of significant importance in Malawi where agriculture remains the engine of growth. The study uses biprobit regression to examine drivers of awareness and adoption of electronic-based market information service interventions for farming business in Malawi. Using capability approach, it poses the hypothesis that farmers’ awareness of ICT-based market information services determines use. Results indicate that household’s awareness is positively influenced by owning a mobile phone, leasing some land and being a member of farmer group while being males, distant to agricultural field office and distance to the nearest electricity center are associated with lower likelihood of being aware. The paper also confirms that awareness raises use of ICT-based market interventions. In fact, drivers of ICT usage include income, membership in farmer group and awareness which interacts with distance to the nearest electricity center, distance to agricultural field office and land size. The study concludes that policy-makers will be valuable to work on formation of farmer organizations, access to power grid and land policy to create an enabling environment for awareness of electronic-based market interventions and ICT usage by farmers in Malawi.
Citation
Samson P. Katengeza, Julius J. Okello and Edouard R. Mensah (2011). Factors Influencing Awareness and Use of Electronic–Based Market Information Services for Farming Business in Malawi. Int. J. Eco. Res., 2011 2(4), 43-58Publisher
University of Malawi, Bunda College, Faculty of Development Studies, Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics, University of Nairobi, College of Agriculture and Veterinary Sciences, Department of Agricultural Economics University of Abomey-Calavi, Faculty of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Socio-Economics, Communication and Anthropology, Faculty of Agricultural Sciences