To read this content please select one of the options below:

Credit sources, access and factors influencing credit demand among rural livestock farmers in Nigeria

Asenath Kotugan Fada Silong (Alliance for Cohesion and Racial Equality, Reading, UK)
Yiorgos Gadanakis (School of Agriculture Policy and Development, University of Reading, Reading, UK)

Agricultural Finance Review

ISSN: 0002-1466

Article publication date: 4 October 2019

Issue publication date: 7 January 2020

675

Abstract

Purpose

Rural farmers’ access to farm credit in Nigeria has been very low, which affects farm performance, and credit providers have blamed for the problem in the sector. While this general perception persists the fact may be the case of credit demand, rather than just the risk-averse attitudes of credit providers. The purpose of this paper is to investigate significant factors influencing farmers’ credit demand to ensure efficient credit provision.

Design/methodology/approach

The research adopted mixed methods for an in-depth investigation into the problem. There were 216 research participants split into equal halves of men and women from six local government areas of Nasarawa State. Data collection methods employed structured interviews, focus group discussions, close/open-ended and key informant interviews. Analytical tools involved descriptive statistics, the logit and multinomial logit models to determine participants’ socio-economic characteristics, sources of credit, access, factors influencing credit demand generally and from the various sources of credit identified.

Findings

Findings reveal only 47.6 per cent of the participants accessed credit, with fewer women accessing than men. The most accessed forms of credit are from the semi-formal sources, with more men accessing from formal sources and more women from non-formal sources. Factors having significant influence on credit demand generally are education, group membership and household size. And from formal, semi-formal and non-formal credit sources are education, information on sources of credit, deposits, household size and marital status; education, deposits, group membership, household size, flock size; and education, group membership, and gender from the non-formal credit providers, respectively.

Research limitations/implications

Due to time constraint, this study data were collected concurrently with both quantitative and qualitative methods and did not allow for the interrogation of findings from one method with the other. In addition, the research categorised the agency of women based on marital status only as single or married and did not interrogate the agency of women further, this may be a limitation as some of the female participants are from polygamous homes.

Originality/value

Unlike the current concentration of Nigerian research of this kind with quantitative methods alone, this research contributes particularly to Nigerian research output and experience by triangulating both quantitative and qualitative methods to explore farmers sources of credit, access and factors determining access to credit in the study area.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This manuscript is extracted from my doctoral thesis which was mentored and supervised by Dr Yiorgos Gadanakis, and funded by the Commonwealth Scholarship.

Citation

Silong, A.K.F. and Gadanakis, Y. (2020), "Credit sources, access and factors influencing credit demand among rural livestock farmers in Nigeria", Agricultural Finance Review, Vol. 80 No. 1, pp. 68-90. https://doi.org/10.1108/AFR-10-2018-0090

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019, Emerald Publishing Limited

Related articles