Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-s2hrs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-05T23:28:42.728Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Running out of credit: the limitations of mobile telephony in a Tanzanian agricultural marketing system*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 November 2008

Thomas Molony
Affiliation:
Centre of African Studies, University of Edinburgh, Chrystal Macmillan Building, 15A George Square, Edinburgh EH8 9LD, United Kingdom

Abstract

Poor farmers often lack credit to purchase agricultural inputs, and rely on their buyers to provide it. This paper considers the effects of mobile phones on traders of perishable foodstuffs operating between Tanzania's Southern Highlands and Dar es Salaam's wholesale market, with a particular focus on the importance of credit in the relationship between potato and tomato farmers and their wholesale buyers. It argues that the ability to communicate using these new information and communication technologies (ICTs) does not significantly alter the trust relationship between the two groups. It also suggests that farmers, in effect, often have to accept the price they are told their crops are sold for – irrespective of the method of communication used to convey this message – because their buyers are also their creditors. In this situation, many farmers are unable to exploit new mobile phone-based services to seek information on market prices, and potential buyers in other markets. Doing so runs the risk of breaking a long-term relationship with a buyer who is willing to supply credit because of their established business interaction. It is suggested that, under a more open system than currently exists in Tanzania, mobile-payment (‘m-payment’) applications should target these creditor-buyers as key agents in connecting farmers to the credit they so often require.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 2008 Cambridge University Press

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.)

Footnotes

*

The research was funded by a doctoral studentship (R42200134339) awarded by the United Kingdom's Economic and Social Research Council. The paper was written during a postdoctoral fellowship at the School of Geography, Archaeology and Environmental Studies, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa. Thanks for constructive comments are given to Caryn Abrahams, Jan Kees van Donge, and the other (anonymous) reviewer.

References

REFERENCES

Aker, J. 2008. ‘Does digital divide or provide? The impact of cell phones on grain markets in Niger’, BREAD working paper, Harvard University: Center for International Development.Google Scholar
Andersson, J. 1996. ‘Potato cultivation in the Uporoto mountains, Tanzania: an analysis of the social nature of agro-technological change’, African Affairs 95, 378: 85106.Google Scholar
Andrew, F. 2004. ‘CRDB Bank proves that farmers are bankable customers’. <http://www.ippmedia.com/ipp/financial/2005/02/15/32602.html>, accessed 17.2.2004.,+accessed+17.2.2004.>Google Scholar
Bryceson, D. F. 1993. Liberalizing Tanzania's Food Trade. Oxford: James Currey.Google Scholar
Bryceson, D. F. 2002a. ‘Multiplex livelihoods in rural Africa: recasting the terms and conditions of gainful employment’, Journal of Modern African Studies 40, 1: 128.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bryceson, D. F. 2002b. ‘The scramble in Africa: reorienting rural livelihoods’, World Development 30, 5: 725–39.Google Scholar
Castells, M., Fernandez-Ardevol, M., Linchuan Qiu, J. & Sey, A.. 2007. Mobile Communication and Society: a global perspective. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Chijoriga, E. S. M. 1992. ‘The role of middlemen in the marketing of staples: the case of Kariakoo wholesale market’, MA dissertation, University of Dar es Salaam.Google Scholar
Dasgupta, P. 1988. ‘Trust as a commodity’, in Gambetta, D. ed. Trust: making and breaking cooperative relations. Oxford: Blackwell, 4972.Google Scholar
Digital Opportunity Initiative (DOI). 2001. Creating a Development Dynamic: final report of the Digital Opportunity Initiative. New York: UNDP.Google Scholar
Donner, J. 2006a. ‘Internet use (and non-use) among urban microentrepreneurs in the developing world: an update from India’, paper to the conference of the Association of Internet Researchers, Brisbane, 28–30 September.Google Scholar
Donner, J. 2006b. ‘The use of mobile phones by microentrepreneurs in Kigali, Rwanda: changes to social and business networks’, Information Technologies and International Development 3, 2: 319.Google Scholar
Donner, J. 2007. ‘Customer acquisition among small and informal businesses in urban India: comparing face to face and mediated channels’, Electronic Journal of Information Systems in Developing Countries 32, 3: 116.Google Scholar
Egbert, H. 2004. ‘Networking and entrepreneurial success: a case study from Tanga, Tanzania’, in Wohlmuth, K., Meyn, M., Gutowski, A., Knedlik, T. & Pitamber, S. eds. African Entrepreneurship and Private Sector Development. Münster: Lit. Verlag, 291309.Google Scholar
Fafchamps, M. 2004. Market Institutions in sub-Saharan Africa: theory and evidence. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Fafchamps, M. & Gabre-Madhin, E.. 2001. ‘Agricultural markets in Benin and Malawi: the operation and performance of traders’, Policy Research Working Paper 2734. Washington, DC: World Bank.Google Scholar
Glaeser, E. L., Laibson, D. & Sacerdote, B.. 2002. ‘An economic approach to social capital’, The Economic Journal 112, 483: 437–58.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goodman, J. 2005. ‘Linking mobile phone ownership and use to social capital in rural South Africa and Tanzania’, in Coyle, D. ed. Africa: the impact of mobile phones. Newbury: Vodafone, 5365.Google Scholar
IICD. 2008. ‘IICD supported project: Agricultural Business Information Services (BIS) Cromabu’. <http://www.iicd.org/iicd/projects/articles/IICDprojects.import10>, accessed 7.2.2008.,+accessed+7.2.2008.>Google Scholar
ITU. 2007. ‘Definitions of World Telecommunications/ICT indicators’. <http://www.itu.int/ITU-D/ict/handbook.html>, accessed 26.5.2008.,+accessed+26.5.2008.>Google Scholar
Jagun, A., Heeks, R. & Whalley, J.. 2007. ‘Mobile telephony and developing country micro-enterprise: a Nigerian case study’, IDPM working paper 29, Manchester: IDPM.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
James, J. 2005. ‘Technological blending in the age of the internet: a developing country perspective’, Telecommunications Policy 29, 4: 285–96.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jensen, R. 2007. ‘The digital provide: information (technology), market performance, and welfare in the south Indian fisheries sector’, Quarterly Journal of Economics 122, 3: 879924.Google Scholar
Lyon, F. 2000. ‘Trust, networks and norms: the creation of social capital in agricultural economies in Ghana’, World Development 28, 4: 663–81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lyon, F. 2003. ‘Trader associations and urban food systems in Ghana: institutionalist approaches to understanding urban collective action’, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 27, 1: 1123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McCormick, D. 1999. ‘African enterprise clusters and industrialization: theory and reality’, World Development 27, 9: 1531–51.Google Scholar
Manobi.sn. 2008. ‘Manobi (Senegal): Innovative internet and wireless e-services for the strengthening of Senegalese fisherman artisans’. <http://www.manobi.sn/sites/za/index.php?M=9&SM=18&Cle=6>, accessed 7.2.2008.,+accessed+7.2.2008.>Google Scholar
Molony, T. S. J. 2007. ‘“I don't trust the phone, it always lies”: social capital and information and communication technologies in Tanzanian micro and small enterprises’, Information Technologies and International Development 3, 4: 6783.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Molony, T. S. J. 2008a. ‘Non-developmental uses of mobile communication in Tanzania’, in Katz, J. E. ed. The Handbook of Mobile Communication Studies. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 339–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Molony, T. S. J. 2008b. ‘The role of mobile phones in Tanzania's informal construction sector: the case of Dar es Salaam’, Urban Forum 19, 2: 175–86.Google Scholar
Molony, T. S. J. forthcoming. ‘Trading places in Tanzania: mobility and marginalisation in a time of travel-saving technologies’, to appear in de Bruijn, M., Nyamnjoh, F. & Brinkman, I. eds. New Social Spaces: mobility and technology in Africa. Leiden: Afrika Studiecentrum.Google Scholar
Mungunasi, E. 2000. Survey of Information and Communication Technologies within Small, Micro and Medium Enterprises in Tanzania. Washington, DC: World Bank.Google Scholar
Ponte, S. 2002. Farmers and Markets in Tanzania: how policy reforms affect rural livelihoods in Africa. Oxford: James Currey.Google Scholar
Poulton, C., Kydd, J. & Dorward, A.. 2006. ‘Overcoming market constraints on pro-poor agricultural growth in sub-Saharan Africa’, Development Policy Review 24, 3: 243–77.Google Scholar
Samuel, J., Shah, N. & Hadingham, W.. 2005. ‘Mobile communications in South Africa, Tanzania and Egypt: results from community and business surveys’, in Coyle, D. ed. Africa: the impact of mobile phones. Newbury: Vodafone, 4452.Google Scholar
Souter, D., Scott, N., Garforth, C., Jain, R., Mascarenhas, O. & McKemey., K. 2005. ‘The economic impact of telecommunications on rural livelihoods and poverty reduction: a study of rural communities in India (Gujarat), Mozambique and Tanzania’, Commonwealth Telecommunications Organisation report for UK Department for International Development.Google Scholar
Southwood, R. 2008. ‘M-Money: new competitor services throw their hats into the ring in Ghana and Tanzania’. <http://www.balancingact-africa.com/news/back/balancing-act_407.html>, accessed 31.3.2008.,+accessed+31.3.2008.>Google Scholar
Sutherland, E. 2008. ‘Counting mobile phones, SIM cards & customers’, working paper, LINK Centre, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tanzania Communications Regulatory Authority (TCRA). 2007a. Tanzania Telecommunications market average voice tariff trends (2000–2006). Dar es Salaam: TCRA.Google Scholar
TCRA. 2007b. Tanzania Telecommunications market voice tariff trends (2000–2006). Dar es Salaam: TCRA.Google Scholar
TCRA. 2008. ‘Trends of telephone subscription, December 2007’. <http://www.tcra.go.tz/publications/telecom.html>, accessed 26.5.2008.,+accessed+26.5.2008.>Google Scholar
Thomson, J. & Terpend, N.. 1993. ‘Promoting private sector involvement in agricultural marketing in Africa’, FAO Agricultural Services Bulletin. Rome: FAO.Google Scholar
Trulsson, P. 1997. Strategies of Entrepreneurship: understanding industrial entrepreneurship and structural change in northwest Tanzania. Linköping: Department of Technology and Social Change, University of Linköping.Google Scholar
UNDP. 2001. Human Development Report: making new technologies work for human development. New York: OUP.Google Scholar
URT. 1997. ‘Iringa region socio-economic profile’, Dar es Salaam: Planning Commission and Regional Commissioner's Office, Government of the United Republic of Tanzania.Google Scholar
van Donge, J. K. 1992a. ‘Agricultural decline in Tanzania: the case of the Uluguru mountains’, African Affairs 91, 362: 7394.Google Scholar
van Donge, J. K. 1992b. ‘Waluguru traders in Dar es Salaam: an analysis of the social construction of economic life’, African Affairs 91, 363: 181205.Google Scholar
World Bank. 1998. World Development Report: knowledge for development. Washington, DC: World Bank.Google Scholar
World Bank. 2007. ‘Development indicators: Tanzania’. <http://devdata.worldbank.org/external/CPProfile.asp?PTYPE=CP&CCODE=TZA>, accessed 10.12.2007.,+accessed+10.12.2007.>Google Scholar
World Bank. 2008. ‘Development indicators: Tanzania’. <http://devdata.worldbank.org/external/CPProfile.asp?PTYPE=CP&CCODE=TZA>, accessed 26.5.2008.,+accessed+26.5.2008.>Google Scholar

Interviews

Multiple interviews were conducted with some informants over the period indicated in the introduction. Those listed below refer only to the specific interviews that are mentioned in the text.

Angelo Manigula Kilave, tomato farmer, Mtitu, Iringa region, 18.3.2003, 7.5.2003 and 5.9.2003.

Bartholomeo Sanga & Festo Mkilama, madalali, Kariakoo market, Dar es Salaam, 17.9.2003.

Berod Mhanga, tomato farmer, Ilula Mazomba, Iringa region, 4.9.2003.

Edward Sanga, tomato farmer, Kidamali, Iringa region, 6.5.2003.

Exoni Manitu, tomato farmer, Mangalali, Iringa region, 19.3.2003, 15.5.2003 and 6.9.2003.

Festo Mkilama, tomato dalali, Kariakoo market, Dar es Salaam, 15.4.2003.

Geoffrey Sanga, potato kiunganishi, Ntokela, Mbeya region, 23.5.2003.

Kamwene Benedict Mlelwa Sanga, potato dalali, Kariakoo market, Dar es Salaam, 5.1.2003 and 17.4.2003.

Kuboja Ng'ungu, General Manager, Kariakoo Market Corporation, Kariakoo, 27.8.2003.

Maiko Bakari, African blackwood carvings (vinyago) trader, Masasi, Mtwara Region, 22.7.2003.

Nicanor Omolo, Senior statistician, Kariakoo Market Corporation, Kariakoo, Dar es Salaam, 27.8.2003.