3.8 Article

Agricultural value chain participation and farmers' access to credit in northern Ghana

Journal

AGRICULTURAL FINANCE REVIEW
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1108/AFR-01-2023-0007

Keywords

Agricultural value chain participation; Credit access; Multinomial endogenous switching regression model; Northern Ghana

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The participation of farmers in agricultural value chains can significantly increase their access to both formal and informal credit, reducing borrowing costs and risks. Factors such as irrigation farming, extension visits, knowledge of AVC in the community, access to storage facilities, and trust in contract farming have a significant impact on farmers' participation in AVC.
PurposePromoted for its inclusivity, agricultural value chain (AVC) financing leverages social capital and mechanisms such as off-take agreements and forward contracts to reduce borrowing and lending costs and risks for both farmers and lending institutions. AVC financing has been defined as the flow of financial products and services to and among the various actors within the AVC to address constraints of production and distribution and fulfill the needs of those involved in the chain by reducing risk and improving efficiency. This paper investigates how farmers' involvement in AVC affects their access to credit.Design/methodology/approachThe authors collected primary data from 400 crop farmers in northern Ghana through a semi-structured questionnaire and analyzed the data, using the multinomial endogenous switching regression model.FindingsJoint participation in AVC increased the amount of formal and informal credit received by 64 and 78%, respectively, compared to nonparticipation. Similarly, participation in AVC horizontal linkage and AVC vertical linkage increased the amount of formal and informal credit received by 40 and 47% and 46 and 74%, respectively, compared to nonparticipation. Irrigation farming, extension visits, knowledge of AVC in the community, access to a storage facility and trust in contract farming significantly influenced farmers' participation in AVC.Originality/valueThe authors' work offers valuable insights into how different dimensions of value chain participation can impact smallholder farmers' access to credit. This work also underscores the importance of considering both formal and informal credit sources when analyzing the outcomes of value chain participation. The findings could enable formal financial providers to identify, liaise and/or resource informal financial players such as value chain actors to supply both formal and informal credit to farmers in AVCs.

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