2022
DOI: 10.9734/jalsi/2022/v25i230282
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Farmers’ Information-inputs and their Sway on Coffee Productivity in the West of Rift, Kenya

Abstract: Coffee (Coffea arabica) is an important cash crop for export earnings and livelihoods in Kenya. Coffee production has, however, declined from about 130,000 metric tons in the 1990s to about 43,000 in 2018, partly attributed to low farm-level productivity. Previous studies further attribute this to weak adherence to agronomic practices. The current study investigated the farmer’s information inputs, as a precursor of agronomic practices, for their potential sway on coffee productivity. The study assessed the le… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…Muriithi et al (2021) similarly pointed out that lack of information was a major constraint in the utilisation of greenhouse technology as a measure to mitigate climate variability. Elsewhere in other crops, crop productivity in coffee has been linked to technical information inputs (Cheruiyot, 2022); emphasising the significance of the information inputs on the overall farm productivity.…”
Section: Poor Access To Information and Extension Servicesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Muriithi et al (2021) similarly pointed out that lack of information was a major constraint in the utilisation of greenhouse technology as a measure to mitigate climate variability. Elsewhere in other crops, crop productivity in coffee has been linked to technical information inputs (Cheruiyot, 2022); emphasising the significance of the information inputs on the overall farm productivity.…”
Section: Poor Access To Information and Extension Servicesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lack of farmers' experience affects the producer's assessment of pests and mitigation of factors such as changes in climatic conditions, which determine the productivity of coffee. Coffee production in Kenya employs about 30 percent of the value chain and contributes to about 10% of the total exports from the agricultural sector (Cheruiyot, 2022). Maundu & Karugu (2018) postulated that Kenya has a high potential for producing quality coffee, despite the country being faced with low yields, which are associated with a lack of promotion for domestic consumption, overproduction in the world during the 1990s crisis, low prices, strict rules prohibiting trade, uprooting of the coffee crop and inaccessible credit facilities.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%