3.8 Article

The challenges of aligning aggregation schemes with equitable fruit and vegetable delivery: lessons from Bihar, India

Journal

Publisher

EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1108/JADEE-11-2020-0275

Keywords

Horticulture; Value chain; Markets; Trade-offs; Mixed methods

Funding

  1. Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF)
  2. UK Government's Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) [OPP1182694]
  3. Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation [OPP1182694] Funding Source: Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

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This study examines the horticultural value chain in Bihar, India, and finds that while aggregation schemes benefit farmers, they tend to cluster around urban export-oriented hubs, facing barriers such as informal governance, cold storage gaps, and underdeveloped transport infrastructures. The findings highlight the need to overcome wider enabling environment barriers to unlock the potential for aggregation to increase local fruit and vegetable delivery.
Purpose Agricultural aggregation schemes provide numerous farmer-facing benefits, including reduced transportation costs and improved access to higher-demand urban markets. However, whether aggregation schemes also have positive food security dimensions for consumers dependent on peri-urban and local markets in developing country contexts is currently unknown. This paper aims to narrow this knowledge gap by exploring the actors, governance structures and physical infrastructures of the horticultural value chain of Bihar, India, to identify barriers to using aggregation to improve the distribution of fruits and vegetables to more local market environments. Design/methodology/approach This study uses mixed methods. Quantitative analysis of market transaction data explores the development of aggregation supply pathways over space and time. In turn, semi-structured interviews with value chain actors uncover the interactions and decision-making processes with implications for equitable fruit and vegetable delivery. Findings Whilst aggregation successfully generates multiple producer-facing benefits, the supply pathways tend to cluster around urban export-oriented hubs, owing to the presence of high-capacity traders, large consumer bases and traditional power dynamics. Various barriers across the wider enabling environment must be overcome to unlock the potential for aggregation to increase local fruit and vegetable delivery, including informal governance structures, cold storage gaps and underdeveloped transport infrastructures. Originality/value To the best of the authors' knowledge, this study is the first critical analysis of horticultural aggregation through a consumer-sensitive lens. The policy-relevant lessons are pertinent to the equitable and sustainable development of horticultural systems both in Bihar and in similar low- and middle-income settings.

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