4.4 Article

Determinants of small farmers' participation in contract farming in developing countries: A study in Vietnam

Journal

AGRIBUSINESS
Volume 39, Issue 3, Pages 836-853

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/agr.21795

Keywords

agribusiness; contract farming; probit; sustainable development; Vietnam

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This study aims to explore the determinants of farmers' participation in contract farming in Vietnam. The qualitative analysis identifies 10 original factors that affect farmers' participation, while the quantitative analysis provides empirical evidence on the impact of various factors such as female heads, firm consulting activities, firm scales, cooperative membership, and quality certifications. Cooperative membership and quality certifications are found to be the most important factors, while head education and good soil have a negative impact on farmers' participation. The study highlights the importance of understanding these factors in promoting contract farming.
This study aims to explore the determinants of farmers' participation in contract farming by using a qualitative approach and empirically assess the impact of the factors withdrawn from the qualitative analysis and previous studies by employing the probit model in Vietnam. The qualitative analysis illustrates 10 original factors that affect farmers' participation in contract farming, including cooperative membership, quality certifications, sale preferences, farming difficulties, technology, supporting policy and program, estimation of oversupply, market information flow, association membership, and experience of contract farming failure. The quantitative analysis provides empirical evidence that female heads, firm consulting activities, firm scales, cooperative membership, quality certifications, and good-road locations can significantly and positively influence farmers' participation in contract farming. Cooperative membership and quality certifications are the most important factors. Contrary to the expectation, head education and good soil negatively impact farmers' participation in contract farming. Besides, bad soil can hinder farmers from participating in contract farming. [EconLit Citations: C12, L24, O13, O14, Q12, Q18].

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