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Typologies of South African small-scale farmers and their risk perceptions: an unsupervised machine learning approach

Sara Yazdan Bakhsh (Department of Agricultural Economics and Rural Development, University of Göttingen, Göttingen, Germany)
Kingsley Ayisi (Risk and Vulnerability Center, University of Limpopo, Polokwane, South Africa)
Reimund P. Rötter (Tropical Plant Production and Agricultural Systems Modelling (TROPAGS), University of Göttingen, Göttingen, Germany)
Wayne Twine (School of Animal, Plant and Environmental Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand Johannesburg, Johannesburg, South Africa)
Jan-Henning Feil (Department of Agriculture, University of Applied Sciences South Westphalia, Iserlohn, Germany)

China Agricultural Economic Review

ISSN: 1756-137X

Article publication date: 9 September 2024

Issue publication date: 30 September 2024

99

Abstract

Purpose

Small-scale farmers are highly heterogeneous with regard to their types of farming, levels of technology adoption, degree of commercialization and many other factors. Such heterogeneous types, respectively groups of small-scale farming systems require different forms of government interventions. This paper applies a machine learning approach to analyze the typologies of small-scale farmers in South Africa based on a wide range of objective variables regarding their personal, farm and context characteristics, which support an effective, target-group-specific design and communication of policies.

Design/methodology/approach

A cluster analysis is performed based on a comprehensive quantitative and qualitative survey among 212 small-scale farmers, which was conducted in 2019 in the Limpopo Province of South Africa. An unsupervised machine learning approach, namely Partitioning Around Medoids (PAM), is applied to the survey data. Subsequently, the farmers' risk perceptions between the different clusters are analyzed and compared.

Findings

According to the results of the cluster analysis, the small-scale farmers of the investigated sample can be grouped into four types: subsistence-oriented farmers, semi-subsistence livestock-oriented farmers, semi-subsistence crop-oriented farmers and market-oriented farmers. The subsequently analyzed risk perceptions and attitudes differ considerably between these types.

Originality/value

This is the first typologisation of small-scale farmers based on a comprehensive collection of quantitative and qualitative variables, which can all be considered in the analysis through the application of an unsupervised machine learning approach, namely PAM. Such typologisation is a pre-requisite for the design of more target-group-specific and suitable policy interventions.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

We gratefully acknowledge funding from the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) and its project carrier, DLR. This investigation was part of the German–South African collaborative research project SALLnet within the SPACES II program.

Funding: German Federal Ministry of Education and Research, Grant/Award Number: 01LL1802A.

Citation

Yazdan Bakhsh, S., Ayisi, K., Rötter, R.P., Twine, W. and Feil, J.-H. (2024), "Typologies of South African small-scale farmers and their risk perceptions: an unsupervised machine learning approach", China Agricultural Economic Review, Vol. 16 No. 4, pp. 804-827. https://doi.org/10.1108/CAER-09-2022-0201

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited

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