Effect of Commercialization of Home-grown Agricultural Goods on Poverty: Evidence From North-East Nigeria

Abbas Shehu, Bulus Barnabas Toyyo, Abubakar Turaki Muhammad

Abstract


Agricultural Commercialization plays a central role in mitigating poverty especially for widow farmers, widowhood is a catastrophic event for women farmers at any stage of their lives, with serious implications for their well-being. We examines the effect of household commercialization on poverty of widowed cowpea farmers in North-east Nigeria. Multistaged sampling procedure was employed which arrived at 525 respondents. The Data were collected using structured questionnaire and analysed using both descriptive and inferential statistic (muliple regression). The result revealed that Household commercialization index (HCI) was moderate in both the IDPs and host communities. The average progress out of poverty index (PPI) score was lower for IDP farmers compared to host community farmers with homogeneity in both. Explanatory variables influencing PPI explained 35.30% of its variation, Legume farming experience and value harvest were found to be improving PPI, Household size and IDP status were reducing the PPI. The HCI was explaining 4.7% of Poverty of widowed cowpea farmers, and the HCI had inverse relationship with poverty. All in all, widowed cowpea farmers’ household commercialization increases poverty by 0.126, with heterogeneity among households with higher legume farming experience, lower household sizes, IDPs host communities and higher value of cowpea which experienced less poverty in the study area. Strengthening cooperative development, promoting value addition of cowpea products, expanding access to financial services and targeted support for widowed farmers is hence recommended.


Keywords


Boko Haram, Market participation, Female headed household, vulnerability, IDPs, Borno

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DOI: https://doi.org/10.14267/CJSSP.2025.2.6

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ISSN: 2062-087X

DOI: 10.14267/issn.2062-087X