Farmers Willingness to Participate In Voluntary Land Consolidation in Gozamin District, Ethiopia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Institutional issues: what tasks should be done at what level by which institution, and how participatory “bottom-up” involvement should be implemented;
- Financial issues: how money to support land consolidation will be sourced, and how the process can be made cost-effective;
- Legal issues: what the legal basis for implementing land consolidation will be, and how to ensure that the results are not jeopardized (e.g., by heritage);
- Capacity building: how participants can, at all levels and in all sectors, acquire knowledge and skills they need to carry out their responsibilities;
- International cooperation: how countries can gain access to the technical and the financial resources of donors.
2. Study Area and Methods
2.1. Description of Study Area
- The variety of agro-climatic zones leading to diverse types of crop farming practices;
- The considerable degree of land fragmentation;
- The existence of sustainable natural resource management plans;
- The existence of second level land certification documents for landholders (in Gozamin district, all landholder farmers received the documents of completion of second level land certification);
- The authors’ local knowledge.
2.2. Methodology
2.2.1. Sampling Design and Data Collection
- n0 = the desired sample size Cochran’s (1977) when population is greater than 10,000;
- n = number of sample size when population is less than 10,000;
- Z = 95% confidence limit (1.96);
- p = estimated proportion of samples with specific attribute (0.5 as cases cannot be estimated a priori);
- q = 1 − p (0.5);
- N = total number of population (3277);
- d = precision or degree of accuracy desired (0.05).
2.2.2. Variables Specification and Working Hypothesis
2.2.3. Method of Data Analysis
- The value 1 if the event occurs;
- The value 0 if it does not.
3. Results
3.1. General Descriptive Analysis
3.2. Results of the Logistic Regression Model
4. Discussion
Sensitivity Analysis
- Has participated in an extension program (73.2%);
- Needs to exchange parcels with neighbors (65.9%);
- Has one of the parcels nearest to home (60.6%);
- Perceives that land fragmentation reduces productivity (60.1%);
- Has a positive attitude to land consolidation (57.7%);
- Perceives land consolidation as a way to secure land use rights (55.7%);
- Has awareness that land consolidation reduces boundary conflicts (53.6%);
- Trusts neighbors to exchange land (53.4%).
5. Conclusions
- Land exchange is a key element of land consolidation. The willingness of farmers in regard to voluntary land consolidation became evident by the quantitative and the qualitative surveys outlined in this study. It is the task of the government to facilitate legal land exchange;
- Landholder farmers are interested in aggregated and clustered parcels. Governmental authorities should provide the legal framework to enable consolidated agricultural land fragmentation while preserving environmentally important landscape structures;
- Findings of the study give evidence that landholder farmers prefer to have their parcels situated near the homestead and to have good access to their parcels. The government should enhance accessibility to farms by facilitating road networks;
- Voluntary land consolidation reduces parcel boundary disputes or conflicts. This was proven by the farmers in the survey and in the focus group discussions. Therefore, land administration offices should promote and support voluntary land consolidation to decrease conflicts arising from boundaries;
- Voluntary land consolidation improves the security of land use rights. Access to land and security of land tenure are effective ways to reduce a farmer’s vulnerability, to guarantee long-term investments on land, and to conserve natural resources. The government should facilitate components of land registry and surveying of land parcels (cadaster) within land consolidation procedures.
- Land fragmentation reduces yield. Only land consolidation processes can solve land fragmentation and, as a consequence, enable improved yields. The government has to encourage landholder farmers to participate in voluntary land consolidation. This creates a favorable environment for commercializing mechanized farming and supports agriculture towards higher proficiency and more stable yields;
- In addition, the government should provide loans to landholder farmers to purchase modern technologies to improve the agricultural productivity and to make the work easier for farmers. Loans can be secured by index insurance mechanisms;
- Farmers are not always aware of the benefits of land consolidation. Therefore, land administration offices should continuously inform the rural population about the aims, the benefits, the legal framework, and the implementation of land consolidation procedures.
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Variable Description | Variable | Hypothesis |
---|---|---|
Willingness to accept voluntary land consolidation | WTAVLC | A dichotomous dependent variable to specify, whether a landholder farmer is willing to accept voluntary land consolidation (WTAVLC = 1) or not (WTAVLC = 0). |
Landholder farmers exchange of parcels | PARCELEXCH | These explanatory variable measures landholder farmers need to exchange parcels with other farmers involved in a land consolidation procedure. It is the hypothesis, that landholder farmers, who are interested to exchange parcels, are more likely to be willing to accept voluntary land consolidation. PARCELEXCH is expected to be strongly and positively associated with landholder farmers willingness to accept voluntary land consolidation. Therefore, the value is 1, if landholder farmer is willing to exchange parcels, otherwise the value is 0. |
Parcel preference of landholder farmers | PARCELPREF | The hypothesis is that landholder farmers with needs to aggregate parcels are more likely to be willing to accept voluntary land consolidation. Therefore, this variable is 1, if the landholder farmer prefers to cluster parcels. If the landholder farmer prefers to have parcels scattered over the area, the value is 0. |
Landholder farmers’ knowledge about land consolidation | KNOWLEG | As it is hypothesized that landholder farmers being informed about land consolidation processes have a higher willingness to accept voluntary land consolidation, the variable is 1 in case the landholder farmer has some knowledge about land consolidation. Otherwise, the value is 0. |
Attitude of landholder farmers | ATTITUDE | It can be assumed that landholder farmers with a generally positive attitude toward land consolidation have a higher degree of willingness to accept voluntary land consolidation. Therefore, this variable is 1 in case of a positive attitude to land consolidation processes. |
Landholder farmers’ perceptions of land fragmentation reducing productivity | PERCEPTI | This variable describes landholder farmers’ perceptions about land fragmentation. It takes a value of 1 if a landholder farmer perceives that land fragmentation reduces agricultural productivity and 0 otherwise. It is expected that the perception variable is strongly and positively associated with landholder farmers’ willingness to accept voluntary land consolidation. |
Landholder farmers’ nearness of farm to home | FARMHOMENEAR | This variable specifies home nearness to the parcels. It takes a value of 1 if landholder farmers prefer parcels near to home and 0 otherwise. It is hypothesized that landholder farmers who want to have their parcels near to home are more likely to be willing to accept voluntary land consolidation. |
Education level of landholder farmers | EDULEVE | This variable takes the value of 1 if the landholder farmer is literate and 0 otherwise. Education increases land holder farmers’ abilities to get information. Thus, it is hypothesized that education has a positive effect for willingness to accept voluntary land consolidation. |
Age of the household head | AGE | This variable specifies the age of the landholder farmer in years. The age of landholder farmer is also a measure of farming experience. Age and farming experience are expected to be correlated with tradition. It is hypothesized that higher age has a more negative influence toward accepting voluntary land consolidation. Young landholder farmers are normally less affected by traditions and accept changes more easily. |
Farm area in hectares | FARMARE | This variable is the total area of farmland in hectares owned by the landholder farmers at the time of the survey. In the study area, large farms are owned by older landholder farmers, which are more conservative and are not so open for changes. Thus, it is hypothesized that farm size has a negative effect to accept voluntary land consolidation. Also, this variable is a continuous variable. |
Landholder farmers’ participation in extension program | EXTPROGPART | Ethiopian government carries out an agricultural program where farmers get specific training in how to manage the cultivation of land. It is the hypothesis of this study that landholder farmers who have participated in an extension program will also favor voluntary land consolidation. The variable is 1 if the landholder farmer has participated in an extension program and 0 otherwise. |
Conflict reduction | CONFLICTRED | This variable is 1, if the landholder farmer assumes land consolidation as a tool to reduce boundary disputes and 0, if not. The conflict reduction variable is expected to be strongly and positively correlated with landholder farmers willingness to accept voluntary land consolidation. |
Security of tenure | TENURESECUR | The variable describes that either the landholder farmer considers that he/she has security for using the parcel during his/her lifetime (TENURESECURE = 1) or not (TENURSECURE = 0). The hypothesis is that the existing perception of tenure security has a positive effect on the willingness to accept voluntary land consolidation. |
Landholder farmers’ trust in neighbor | TRUST | Trust increases landholder farmers’ willingness to exchange parcels. Thus, trust is important for willingness to accept voluntary land consolidation. Therefore, the trust variable is expected to be positively associated with landholder farmer willingness to accept voluntary land consolidation. It is 1 if landholder farmer trusts his/her neighbors to exchange plots, otherwise 0. |
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Reason Type | Reason |
---|---|
Social | to decrease disputes amongst neighbors to develop team work |
Economic | to increase production to enable self-sufficiency in food production |
Environmental | to enhance soil quality to protect water availability to balance climatic condition |
Name of Kebele | Total Landholder Farmers | Sampled Landholder Farmers |
---|---|---|
Chimit | 1100 | 115 |
Yebona Erjena | 1250 | 131 |
Adisna Guilit | 927 | 97 |
Total | 3277 | 343 |
Variable Name | Variable Type | Farmers Willing (%) |
---|---|---|
Educational Level | Dummy | 45.2 |
Farm to Home Nearness | Dummy | 60.6 |
Extension Program Participation | Dummy | 73.2 |
Parcel Exchange | Dummy | 65.9 |
Parcel Preference | Dummy | 47.8 |
Knowledge | Dummy | 53.6 |
Attitude | Dummy | 57.7 |
Perception | Dummy | 60.1 |
Conflict Reduction | Dummy | 53.6 |
Tenure Security | Dummy | 55.7 |
Trust | Dummy | 53.4 |
Variable Name | Age | Farm Area |
---|---|---|
Measurement Unit | Years | Hectares |
Mean Value | ||
All | 48.7 | 1.29 |
Willing | 48.9 | 1.32 |
Non-willing | 48.4 | 1.23 |
Median Value | ||
All | 48.0 | 1.00 |
Willing | 48.0 | 1.25 |
Non-willing | 46.5 | 1.00 |
Std. Deviation | ||
All | 10.8 | 0.70 |
Willing | 11.3 | 0.70 |
Non-willing | 9.8 | 0.80 |
Explanatory Variables Name | Estimated Coefficients | Odds Ratio | Wald Statistics | Significance Level |
---|---|---|---|---|
Age | −0.009 | 0.991 | 0.069 | 0.793 |
Educational Level | 0.827 | 2.286 | 1.813 | 0.178 |
Farm Area | −0.334 | 0.716 | 0.445 | 0.505 |
Farm to Home Nearness | 1.890 | 6.621 | 8.319 | 0.004 ** |
Extension Program Participation | 0.404 | 1.498 | 0.312 | 0.576 |
Parcel Exchange | 3.656 | 38.716 | 28.450 | 0.000 *** |
Parcel Preference | 3.233 | 25.361 | 18.999 | 0.000 *** |
Knowledge | 1.869 | 6.484 | 4.379 | 0.036 * |
Attitude | 0.455 | 1.577 | 0.533 | 0.466 |
Perception | 2.203 | 9.054 | 11.786 | 0.001 ** |
Conflict Reduction | 1.785 | 5.962 | 7.456 | 0.006 ** |
Tenure Security | 1.333 | 3.794 | 3.042 | 0.081 |
Trust | 1.238 | 3.448 | 4.043 | 0.044 * |
Constant | −7.200 | 0.001 | 15.175 | 0.000 |
Percent correctly predicted | 95.6 a | |||
Sensitivity | 96.54 b | |||
Specificity | 93.80 c | |||
Chi-square value | 351.505 *** | |||
Number of cases | 343 |
Description | Probability | Change in Probability | Percentage Change in Probability |
---|---|---|---|
A distinctive landholder farmer | 0.59 | ||
A distinctive landholder farmer but does not have parcel near home | 0.57 | −0.02 | −4.1 |
A distinctive landholder farmer but does not have need to exchange parcels | 0.56 | −0.04 | −5.9 |
A distinctive landholder farmer but does not perceive land fragmentation reduces productivity | 0.57 | −0.02 | −3.8 |
A distinctive landholder farmer but does not have land consolidation reduce boundary conflicts | 0.59 | −0.01 | −1.4 |
A distinctive landholder farmer but does not know land consolidation definition and its regulations | 0.59 | −0.01 | −1.4 |
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Gedefaw, A.A.; Atzberger, C.; Seher, W.; Mansberger, R. Farmers Willingness to Participate In Voluntary Land Consolidation in Gozamin District, Ethiopia. Land 2019, 8, 148. https://doi.org/10.3390/land8100148
Gedefaw AA, Atzberger C, Seher W, Mansberger R. Farmers Willingness to Participate In Voluntary Land Consolidation in Gozamin District, Ethiopia. Land. 2019; 8(10):148. https://doi.org/10.3390/land8100148
Chicago/Turabian StyleGedefaw, Abebaw Andarge, Clement Atzberger, Walter Seher, and Reinfried Mansberger. 2019. "Farmers Willingness to Participate In Voluntary Land Consolidation in Gozamin District, Ethiopia" Land 8, no. 10: 148. https://doi.org/10.3390/land8100148
APA StyleGedefaw, A. A., Atzberger, C., Seher, W., & Mansberger, R. (2019). Farmers Willingness to Participate In Voluntary Land Consolidation in Gozamin District, Ethiopia. Land, 8(10), 148. https://doi.org/10.3390/land8100148