What determines small farms’ succession patterns in Eastern European emerging markets? Exploring the role of embeddedness in social networks
International Journal of Emerging Markets
ISSN: 1746-8809
Article publication date: 19 December 2024
Abstract
Purpose
The interactive relationships of farmers with institutions and other individuals create the context of succession intention – “farm embeddedness”. This context shapes in long-term self-efficacy of farmers. The main goal of this paper is to study the contextual drivers of the choice of succession paths in small-scale farms which dominate in Eastern European countries. The studied pathways, ordered by farmers’ self-efficacy are “no succession”, “conditional succession”, “unconditional internalised succession” and “unconditional externalised succession”.
Design/methodology/approach
We used a sample of 1,683 small farms from three Eastern European emerging markets: Romania, Moldova and Serbia. The likelihood of choosing a given succession path is analysed using a multinomial logit model; contextual drivers of succession are selected based on the theory of embeddedness.
Findings
We found that more-educated and more-efficient small-scale farmers are less likely to pass on their farms because of a kind of “glass ceiling”, so they do not want such a difficult future for their children. The most important determinant of unconditional/internalised succession is the successor formation through “training on the farm”. Some formal institutions operating in the agricultural sector hinder self-efficacy and thus unconditional succession.
Originality/value
Most of the papers lack a theoretical background while demonstrating that economic drivers are crucial to succession. The embeddedness theory argues that economic activities are always anchored in a social structure. We contribute to this theory by showing that the embeddedness in social networks is more important than economic factors when smallholders transfer their farms to successors in post-socialist countries. In addition, we attempt to identify which particular types of social networks are most relevant to the multi-stage process of farm transfer, and we outline several transfer scenarios using the concept of self-efficacy.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
Funding: This research was financed by National Science Center in Poland, Grant Number: 2021/41/B/HS4/02433 and International Academic Partnership Grant No: PPI/APM/2018/1/00011/U/001.
Citation
Czyżewski, B., Kryszak, Ł., Bajrami, E., Lucasenco, E., Muntean, A. and Tošović-Stevanović, A. (2024), "What determines small farms’ succession patterns in Eastern European emerging markets? Exploring the role of embeddedness in social networks", International Journal of Emerging Markets, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJOEM-03-2023-0445
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
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