Agricultural mechanization in Ethiopia: hiring service transactions, mechanization clusters and land consolidation
Journal of Agribusiness in Developing and Emerging Economies
ISSN: 2044-0839
Article publication date: 31 May 2023
Issue publication date: 2 January 2025
Abstract
Purpose
Agriculture in Ethiopia relies heavily on traditional farm power sources and is designated by the lowest farm machinery access, in contrast to other Sub-Sahara African (SSA) countries. The purpose of this research is to analyze the heterogeneity of mechanization service transactions and factors determining farmers' cooperation in mechanization clusters and willingness to accept land consolidation.
Design/methodology/approach
The authors conducted a cross-sectional survey of producer households in major crop production areas in the Oromia, SNNPR, Amhara and Tigray regions. The sampling design involved three stages: districts were selected using a stratified sampling approach accompanied by simple random samples of kebele units and producer households in the second and final stages, respectively.
Findings
This study’s results show that mechanization service costs, service relationships, clustering and land consolidation exhibit significant heterogeneity across the study areas. Cluster farming was found to be advantageous against diseconomies, rationalized by upgrading the mechanization scale. The probit model parameterization of the probability distributions reveals that household, land, crop, mechanization service, remoteness and location-related factors determine participation in mechanization clusters and willingness to accept land consolidation.
Research limitations/implications
Fostering cooperation by focusing on constraints and demand of users is suggested to reduce transaction costs and expand hired mechanization services to unaddressed areas. The findings are relevant to most SSA countries where mechanization development is hampered by land fragmentation.
Originality/value
Limited information is available on agricultural mechanization development for smallholder farmers, particularly in Ethiopia, and this study adds empirical evidence about the synergy between cluster farming and mechanization, horizontal coordination and alternative supply models.
Keywords
Citation
Tefera, Y.D. and Awoke, B.G. (2025), "Agricultural mechanization in Ethiopia: hiring service transactions, mechanization clusters and land consolidation", Journal of Agribusiness in Developing and Emerging Economies, Vol. 15 No. 1, pp. 109-130. https://doi.org/10.1108/JADEE-06-2022-0127
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
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