4.7 Article

Market participation and subjective well-being of maize farmers

Journal

ECONOMIC ANALYSIS AND POLICY
Volume 80, Issue -, Pages 941-960

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.eap.2023.09.037

Keywords

Market participation; Sales ratio; Subjective well-being; Conditional mixed process model

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This study explores how maize farmers' market participation influences their subjective well-being and highlights the importance of government efforts in inciting market transactions to increase farmers' incomes and well-being. The findings suggest that market participation significantly improves maize farmers' happiness, life satisfaction, and confidence about the future, with maize income mediating this association. The study also reveals that market participation intensity and experiences of natural disasters play a role in shaping farmers' well-being.
This study explores how maize farmers' market participation influences their subjective well-being, utilizing the 2020 China Rural Revitalization Survey data collected by the Chinese Academy of Social Science. Three variables, including market participation (a binary variable), sales ratio (a continuous variable), and sales frequency (a categorical variable), are utilized to measure maize farmers' market participation patterns com-prehensively By estimating a conditional mixed process model, this study finds that maize farmers' market participation significantly improves their subjective well-being captured by happiness, life satisfaction, and confidence about the future by 0.672, 0.925, and 1.125 points, respectively. Maize income mediates the positive association between farmers' market participation and their subjective well-being. The disaggregated analyses reveal that farmers at the household income tertiles 2 and 3 obtain a higher level of happiness, life satisfaction, and confidence about the future. Meanwhile, market participation significantly improves life satisfaction and confidence about the future of farmers experiencing natural disasters, while it increases the happiness of farmers who do not have such experiences. Farmers' market participation significantly improves their objective well-being regarding pork consumption and milk consumption by 68 g/capita/day and 56 g/capita/day, respectively. Further analysis confirms that market participation intensity, reflected by sales ratio and frequency, significantly increases farmers' subjective well-being. These findings highlight that the government should devote more efforts to inciting maize farmers to participate in market transactions to increase farmers' incomes and subjective well-being.(c) 2023 Economic Society of Australia, Queensland. Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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