Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-hc48f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T15:31:54.149Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Some Characteristics of Nigerian Smallholders: A Case Study from Western Region

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 May 2014

Extract

A series of some two hundred questions on farmers' opinions, behavior, and attitudes were asked during the course of a traditional cost route farm management survey of one hundred Nigerian smallholders. The answers illuminated the following:

1. farmers' tendency to make significant changes in their allocation of resources from one season to the next, reflecting the inherent flexibility of the farming system practiced;

2. farmers' ability to distinguish clearly between the characteristics of different crops, including variability of physical yield levels;

3. the distinct uses to which different crops were put;

4. satisfaction with the nutritional value of their diet;

5. reasons for practicing intercropping;

6. farmers' planning capability;

7. assessment of some types of risk;

8. imperfect knowledge of factor prices; and

9. the extensive intra- and inter-family monetary relationships.

The sample of one hundred smallholders were located at three different villages in the former Western Region of Nigeria. All farmers were Yoruba and therefore had similar ethnic characteristics. Cropping patterns in each village were markedly different as each village was in a different ecological zone. Cocoa dominated the cropping patterns of Akinlalu village in the low rainfall forest region, yam and cocoa dominated at Idi-Emi in the derived savannah region; and maize and yam dominated at Hero village in the southern Guinea savannah region. The survey was carried out during the 1970-71 crop season. The sample size was 33 at both Akinlalu and Idi-Emi, and 34 at Ilero (see Zuckerman, 1979, for details).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1979

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Allen, William. (1965) The African Husbandman. London: Oliver and Boyd.Google Scholar
Bateman, Merrill J. (1965) “Measuring Supply and Demand in Underdeveloped Agriculture.” Journal of Farm Economics. 47, 2.Google Scholar
Bohannan, Paul. (1954) Tiv Farm and Settlement. London: H.M.S.O. Google Scholar
Dalrymple, Dana G. (1976) Development and Spread of Higher Yielding Varieties of Wheat and Rice in the Less Developed Nations. U.S.AD., F.A.E.R. Report no. 95.Google Scholar
Day, Richard H. (1965) “Probability Distribution of Field Crop Yields.” Journal of Farm Economics. 47, 3.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dean, Edwin. (1966) The Supply Response of African Farmers. Theory and Measurement in Malawi Amsterdam: North Holland Publishing Company.Google Scholar
de Garine, Igore. (1971) “Food is not Just Something to Eat.” Ceres. 4, 1.Google Scholar
Echebarretta, Maria Aranzara. (1970) “Diagnosing Constraints on Agriculture Development: Linear Programming at the Farm Level to Appraise Agricultural Policy Alterations in the Leon Province of Spain.” Ph.D. thesis: University of London.Google Scholar
Haswell, M. R. (1963) The Changing Pattern of Economic Activity in a Gambia Village. London: H.M.S.O. Google Scholar
Hill, Polly. (1973) Rural Hausa. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Hsieh, S. C. (1963) “Management Decisions on Small Farms in Taiwan.” Journal of Farm Economics. 1.Google Scholar
King, K. F. S. (1968) Agri-Silviculture. Bulletin no. 1, Department of Forestry: University of Ibadan.Google Scholar
Leston, D. (1974) “The Diseconomy of Insecticides in Cocoa Production in Ghana.” In Kotey, R. A., Okali, C., and Rourke, B. E. (eds.) Economics of Cocoa Production and Marketing. Legon: I.S.S.E.R., University of Ghana.Google Scholar
Norman, D. (1973) “Crop Mixtures Under Indigenous Conditions in Northern Nigeria.” In Ofori, (ed.) Factors of Agricultural Growth in West Africa. Legon: University of Ghana.Google Scholar
Oliver, Douglas. (1949) Studies in the Anthropology of Bougainville, Solomon Islands. Papers of the Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology. 29: Harvard University.Google Scholar
Postan, M. M. (1975) The Medieval Economy and Society. New York: Penguin Books.Google Scholar
Wharton, Clifton R. Jr. (1968) Risk, Uncertainty and the Subsistence Farmer: Technological Innovation and Resistance to Change in the Context of Survival New York: A.D.C. Inc.Google Scholar
Zuckerman, Paul S. (1979) Experience with Questionnaires on Opinions, Behavior and Attitudes in a Traditional Farm Management Survey of African Smallholders. Ibadan: International Institute of Tropical Agriculture.Google Scholar