2022
DOI: 10.1111/agec.12754
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Impact of aquaculture training on farmers’ income: Cluster randomized controlled trial evidence in Ghana

Abstract: Aquaculture in Ghana is experiencing tremendous growth, led mainly by largescale commercial cage operators. A major objective of the government and its partners is to ensure that this rapid growth is sustainable and includes small-scale farmers and poor rural producers. This paper evaluates the aquaculture trainings implemented in six main tilapia-producing regions in Ghana as part of the Ghana Tilapia Seed Project. The impact evaluation is designed as a cluster randomized controlled trial, with half of the pr… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Owing to the relatively limited resources of arable land, it is difficult for farmers to rely solely on agricultural production to realize sustained growth in income, and non-farm employment, as an important way of expanding the sources of income of farmers, has an important impact on the increase of farmers' income [32]. Secondly, human capital factors, the level of farmers' human capital significantly affects the nature of their work and their ability to generate income [33][34][35]. Compared with less-educated farmers, farmers with higher education tend to have certain advantages in the efficiency of agricultural production and operation and the nature of non-farm employment [36,37], and the level of human capital significantly affects their agricultural production decision-making behavior and non-farm employment behavior, which in turn significantly affects their incomegenerating capacity [38][39][40].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Owing to the relatively limited resources of arable land, it is difficult for farmers to rely solely on agricultural production to realize sustained growth in income, and non-farm employment, as an important way of expanding the sources of income of farmers, has an important impact on the increase of farmers' income [32]. Secondly, human capital factors, the level of farmers' human capital significantly affects the nature of their work and their ability to generate income [33][34][35]. Compared with less-educated farmers, farmers with higher education tend to have certain advantages in the efficiency of agricultural production and operation and the nature of non-farm employment [36,37], and the level of human capital significantly affects their agricultural production decision-making behavior and non-farm employment behavior, which in turn significantly affects their incomegenerating capacity [38][39][40].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A necessary pre-condition for the subsequent realization of expected positive impacts is the successful and sustained uptake of BMPs (and their proper implementation) (Bone et al, 2018;Karim et al, 2020). However, this is often constrained by the unavailability of appropriate information and resources to small-scale producers (Bush et al, 2021;N'souvi et al, 2021;Ragasa et al, 2022a;World Bank, 2007).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%