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Smallholder agriculture and agrarian livelihoods

This chapter from The Handbook of African Economic Development discusses the role of smallholder farmers in development, examining policies that improve productivity and commercialization but increase inequality in land ownership.

Selorm Kugbega / Published on 23 August 2024

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Citation

Andersson, A., & Kugbega, S. K. (2024). Smallholder agriculture and agrarian livelihoods. In Handbook of African Economic Development, pp. 330-344. Edward Elgar Publishing. https://doi.org/10.4337/9781800885806.00033.

Studies suggest that the importance of agriculture to rural livelihoods remains relatively stable over time. Agrarian livelihoods meanwhile are unique and vulnerable in the sense that they rely on family labour and are dependent on natural resources and weather patterns that vary strongly geographically. The African smallholder sector consists of millions of smallholders. Politically, development of the smallholder sector is important as a way of dealing with rural poverty, urban food insecurity and promoting a broader transformation of the economy. In this chapter the authors discuss the perceived role of smallholder farmers in development processes and the unique nature of agrarian livelihoods. They also describe the agricultural policies that have been promoted to address key productivity constraints and encourage commercialization processes within smallholder agriculture. While these appear to have improved rural livelihoods, at least in some places, such improvements have come at the cost of growing differentiation with respect to key assets such as land.

The Handbook of African Economic Development explores the diverse nature of economic advancement in Africa, spanning from pre-colonial times to the present day. Expansive in scope, it offers both orthodox and heterodox perspectives on the subject, and what it means for the continent.

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SEI author

Selorm Kugbega
Selorm Kugbega

Research Fellow

SEI Headquarters