4.6 Article

Drivers and outcomes of smallholder market participation in Sub-Saharan Africa

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE ACADEMY OF MARKETING SCIENCE
Volume 51, Issue 5, Pages 1165-1183

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11747-022-00914-2

Keywords

Sub-Saharan Africa; Agricultural marketing; Smallholder market participation; Smallholder farmer-entrepreneurs; Market orientation; Market credibility

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Despite agriculture's significance in sub-Saharan Africa's economy, the region faces the highest global risk for food insecurity due to its rapidly growing population. This study introduces the concept of smallholder market participation as a way to understand how smallholder farmers in Zimbabwe engage with markets. Through a survey of 464 smallholder farmer-entrepreneurs, the study examines the factors that contribute to their success in the market, such as market orientation, access to ancillary services, functional literacy, entrepreneurial abilities, and marketplace metacognition. The findings provide valuable insights for agribusiness marketers and policymakers in understanding smallholder engagement with markets.
Despite agriculture being a significant contributor to sub-Saharan Africa's economy, its exploding population puts the region at the highest global risk for food insecurity. Agricultural productivity in the region must meet the growing domestic demand and the needs of global markets. However, the central actors, smallholder farmers, face chronic challenges marketing their produce in high-value markets. While local agricultural policies encourage smallholder farmers and give them education and access, subsistence mindsets are believed to hold them back. This study approaches this challenge from a different, farmer centric view and proposes a new construct reflecting sustained and meaningful marketing activity & mdash;smallholder market participation. With survey data from 464 smallholder farmer-entrepreneurs in Zimbabwe, we reveal how market orientation, access to ancillary services, functional literacy, entrepreneurial abilities, and marketplace metacognition allowed them to beat the odds and grow in the market. We document financial and non-financial outcomes, such as increasing credibility in the marketplace. Our findings offer agribusiness marketers and policymakers more precise indicators of smallholder engagement with markets. The study contributes to marketing theory by highlighting the marketing caliber of an understudied actor, the smallholder farmer.

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