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  • DETERMINANTS OF SMALL-SCALE MACADAMIA NUT PRODUCTIVITY IN ZIMBABWE: AN ORDINAL REGRESSION MODEL ANALYSIS
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    This study determines the factors influencing macadamia nut productivity among smallholder farmers in Zimbabwe's Chipinge District. Despite favourable agro-ecological conditions, smallholder productivity (1.89t/ha) significantly lags behind commercial farmers (3.9t/ha) and global benchmarks (7.17t/ha). Using cross-sectional data from 284 registered smallholder farmers collected in 2023-2024, ordinal regression analysis identified critical productivity determinants. Results revealed that farming experience significantly increases productivity, with each additional year of experience raising the log odds of achieving higher productivity by 18.4% (p<0.05). Labour availability positively influences productivity (p<0.05), particularly during labour-intensive operations like pruning and harvesting. Farm resilience score, capturing innovations that reduce field losses and improve market access, exhibited a strong positive effect (p<0.01). Unexpectedly, financial management skills (FMS) and risk management skills (RMS) demonstrated significant negative effects (p<0.05), suggesting a "formalization penalty" where sophisticated management systems incur overhead costs that fail to yield proportional returns in contexts of pervasive market failure, price volatility, and liquidity constraints. The study concludes that while farm experience, labour capacity, and resilience-building investments enhance productivity, the effectiveness of formal management skills is constrained by fundamental market structure failures. Policy recommendations emphasize capacity building in experiential learning, labour skill development, resilience-enhancing technologies, and most critically the market structure reforms to enable formal management systems to function effectively. Addressing transaction costs, information asymmetry, and capital access constraints must precede investments in sophisticated farm management training.

  • SOCIO‑ECONOMIC DRIVERS AND INSTITUTIONAL CHALLENGES OF TOBACCO CONTRACT FARMING PARTICIPATION IN SVOSVE COMMUNAL AREA, ZIMBABWE
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    Tobacco remains Zimbabwe's Leading agricultural export crop, increasingly produced under contract farming arrangements. While contract farming offers inputs, technical assistance and assured markets, concerns persist that benefits are skewed towards merchancts rather than smallholder farmers. This study investigates the determinants of smallholder participation in tobacco contract farming in ward 22, Svosve communal area, Marondera District, Mashonaland East Province. Guided by the New Institutional Economics(NIE) theory, which emphasises the role of institutions in reducing transaction cost under market imperfections, a mixed methods approach was employed. Quantitative data were from 246 communal tobacco farmers using qestionnaires, while qualitative insights were gathered from 10 key informant interviews with agricultural business advisory officers(ABAO), tobacco merchants and farmer leaders. Multistage sampling was used select 5 villages;Mere 1, Mere 2, Mere 3, Neshamba and Bonda. Data were analysed using descriptive statistics and multiple linear regression in SPSS version 25. The statistics revealed that contracted farmers had higher education levels(10 years), larger landholding(mean 2.1 hacters) and greater access to irrigation(65%) than their counterparts. The regression model was statistically significant (F = 24.73, p < 0.001) with a strong explanatory power (R² = 0.68; Adjusted R² = 0.65). Results showed that landholding size (β = 0.62) and years in contract farming (β = 0.45) were the strongest positive predictors of participation, followed by irrigation access (β = 0.38), household income (β = 0.31), and education level (β = 0.29). In contrast, multiple income sources (β = -0.27) and years in general agriculture (β = -0.27) negatively influenced participation, indicating that diversified and highly experienced farmers were less inclined to join contracts. The discussion highlighted that resource endowments and institutional support drive participation, while lack of collateral and financial literacy hinder broader inclusion. The study concludes that contract farming remains a viable pathway for smallholder integration into value chains but requires reforms to ensure equitable benefits. Policy implications emphasize collateral support, farmer training, and resource provision particularly land development and irrigation infrastructure to enhance participation and productivity among smallholder farmers.

  • THE INFLUENCE OF COVERAGE ATTRIBUTES ON COMMUNAL FARMERS' WILLINGNESS TO ADOPT CATTLE INSURANCE IN LUPANE DISTRICT, ZIMBABWE
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    This study examines the role of coverage attributes specifically, their scope, clarity, and relevance in influencing the willingness of communal farmers to adopt cattle insurance. The research was guided by the Stakeholder Networking Theory. Employing a mixed-methods approach in Lupane District, Zimbabwe, the research utilized a sample of 219 communal farmers, selected via multistage sampling for quantitative data, and 25 key informants, selected using purposive sampling for qualitative data. The Probit regression analysis revealed a statistically significant positive coefficient of 0.242 (p<0.001) for the relationship between Coverage Attributes and Willingness to Adopt. This indicates that farmers' decisions are significantly driven by the comprehensiveness of covered risks and the simplicity of the policy's terms. The findings highlight that existing products fail to meet farmer expectations regarding risk coverage and ease of understanding. This study concludes that insurance schemes must be designed to be both comprehensive and user-friendly, providing practical insights for creating policies that are genuinely attractive and relevant to the specific needs of this vulnerable demographic.

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