Improving Smallholders’ Jobs Through Agribusiness Linkages : Findings of the Mozambique Agricultural Aggregator Pilot (MAAP)

Agricultural firms in developing countries may decide to implement aggregation schemes, typically through contract farming arrangements (CFAs). The firms’ rationale for engaging in aggregation is likely to be based on their own anticipated financial gains. But research shows that CFAs can also incre...

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Main Authors: Baxter, Michael, Delgado, Christopher, Romero, Jose Manuel, Walker, Ian
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099945006302213749/P1550430f4aaa80590b939048f6b090d48b
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37650
id okr-10986-37650
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-376502022-08-24T18:23:54Z Improving Smallholders’ Jobs Through Agribusiness Linkages : Findings of the Mozambique Agricultural Aggregator Pilot (MAAP) Baxter, Michael Delgado, Christopher Romero, Jose Manuel Walker, Ian CONTRACT FARMING ARRANGEMENTS (CFAs) IMPACT EVALUATION SMALLHOLDERS AGRICULTURE AGGREGATION Agricultural firms in developing countries may decide to implement aggregation schemes, typically through contract farming arrangements (CFAs). The firms’ rationale for engaging in aggregation is likely to be based on their own anticipated financial gains. But research shows that CFAs can also increase the welfare of their smallholder participants (independent growers). When growers benefit and the CFA terms are set by a firm’s profit-maximizing decisions, the benefits deriving to growers can be seen as “jobs externalities” (i.e. labor income gains to third parties that are triggered by the firms’ actions in expanding the CFAs). The existence of such gains also implies that the aggregation scheme is helping to address market coordination failures by facilitating increased agricultural commercialization. A full appraisal of the impact of CFAs should therefore integrate the analysis of the firms’ and growers’ costs and returns. In this study, we assess the costs and returns to firms and growers from the expansion of seven existing aggregation schemes in Mozambique, using simultaneously gathered data from the firms operating the CFAs, the corresponding CFA participant farmers, and comparable nonparticipant farmers. As far as we know, this is the first attempt at integrated analysis of the impact on firms and independent growers of the expansion of CFAs. Our approach combines impact evaluation and cost-benefit analysis techniques, and yields estimates both of the financial returns to firms and of the CFAs’ full social returns (including the gains to the growers and to society at large). In most cases, we found that the growers gained more than the firms in the short term from the expansion of these schemes. In fact, growers’ incomes increased (relative to the comparators) in most of the schemes we analyzed. However, only half the schemes generated profits for the firms themselves in the three year time window of this study. This poor short-term financial return to the aggregator firms may explain why CFAs have expanded less than would seem to be justified when the gains to growers are factored in. These findings might justify a public subsidy to catalyze the expansion of CFA schemes that are expected to be financially viable in the medium term. We estimated the subsidy amount that would be needed to raise the firms’ private returns to the market cost of capital (a benchmark for financial viability from the firms’ perspective). We found that the required subsidy was normally modest: it averaged less than 25 per cent of the firms’ expenditures on supporting new growers. Overall, our results support the case for the selective use of public resources to catalyze an expansion of aggregator systems in Mozambique and similar economies, and thereby improve smallholder growers’ welfare. 2022-07-06T20:03:47Z 2022-07-06T20:03:47Z 2022-04-30 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099945006302213749/P1550430f4aaa80590b939048f6b090d48b http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37650 English Jobs Working Paper;No.67 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank Washington, DC: World Bank Working Paper (Numbered Series) Publications & Research Mozambique
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic CONTRACT FARMING ARRANGEMENTS (CFAs)
IMPACT EVALUATION
SMALLHOLDERS
AGRICULTURE
AGGREGATION
spellingShingle CONTRACT FARMING ARRANGEMENTS (CFAs)
IMPACT EVALUATION
SMALLHOLDERS
AGRICULTURE
AGGREGATION
Baxter, Michael
Delgado, Christopher
Romero, Jose Manuel
Walker, Ian
Improving Smallholders’ Jobs Through Agribusiness Linkages : Findings of the Mozambique Agricultural Aggregator Pilot (MAAP)
geographic_facet Mozambique
relation Jobs Working Paper;No.67
description Agricultural firms in developing countries may decide to implement aggregation schemes, typically through contract farming arrangements (CFAs). The firms’ rationale for engaging in aggregation is likely to be based on their own anticipated financial gains. But research shows that CFAs can also increase the welfare of their smallholder participants (independent growers). When growers benefit and the CFA terms are set by a firm’s profit-maximizing decisions, the benefits deriving to growers can be seen as “jobs externalities” (i.e. labor income gains to third parties that are triggered by the firms’ actions in expanding the CFAs). The existence of such gains also implies that the aggregation scheme is helping to address market coordination failures by facilitating increased agricultural commercialization. A full appraisal of the impact of CFAs should therefore integrate the analysis of the firms’ and growers’ costs and returns. In this study, we assess the costs and returns to firms and growers from the expansion of seven existing aggregation schemes in Mozambique, using simultaneously gathered data from the firms operating the CFAs, the corresponding CFA participant farmers, and comparable nonparticipant farmers. As far as we know, this is the first attempt at integrated analysis of the impact on firms and independent growers of the expansion of CFAs. Our approach combines impact evaluation and cost-benefit analysis techniques, and yields estimates both of the financial returns to firms and of the CFAs’ full social returns (including the gains to the growers and to society at large). In most cases, we found that the growers gained more than the firms in the short term from the expansion of these schemes. In fact, growers’ incomes increased (relative to the comparators) in most of the schemes we analyzed. However, only half the schemes generated profits for the firms themselves in the three year time window of this study. This poor short-term financial return to the aggregator firms may explain why CFAs have expanded less than would seem to be justified when the gains to growers are factored in. These findings might justify a public subsidy to catalyze the expansion of CFA schemes that are expected to be financially viable in the medium term. We estimated the subsidy amount that would be needed to raise the firms’ private returns to the market cost of capital (a benchmark for financial viability from the firms’ perspective). We found that the required subsidy was normally modest: it averaged less than 25 per cent of the firms’ expenditures on supporting new growers. Overall, our results support the case for the selective use of public resources to catalyze an expansion of aggregator systems in Mozambique and similar economies, and thereby improve smallholder growers’ welfare.
format Report
author Baxter, Michael
Delgado, Christopher
Romero, Jose Manuel
Walker, Ian
author_facet Baxter, Michael
Delgado, Christopher
Romero, Jose Manuel
Walker, Ian
author_sort Baxter, Michael
title Improving Smallholders’ Jobs Through Agribusiness Linkages : Findings of the Mozambique Agricultural Aggregator Pilot (MAAP)
title_short Improving Smallholders’ Jobs Through Agribusiness Linkages : Findings of the Mozambique Agricultural Aggregator Pilot (MAAP)
title_full Improving Smallholders’ Jobs Through Agribusiness Linkages : Findings of the Mozambique Agricultural Aggregator Pilot (MAAP)
title_fullStr Improving Smallholders’ Jobs Through Agribusiness Linkages : Findings of the Mozambique Agricultural Aggregator Pilot (MAAP)
title_full_unstemmed Improving Smallholders’ Jobs Through Agribusiness Linkages : Findings of the Mozambique Agricultural Aggregator Pilot (MAAP)
title_sort improving smallholders’ jobs through agribusiness linkages : findings of the mozambique agricultural aggregator pilot (maap)
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2022
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099945006302213749/P1550430f4aaa80590b939048f6b090d48b
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37650
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