The social and economic diversity of the coffee-banana farming system and technology uptake in Central Uganda
Publication Date
2021Author
Samuel Mpiira, Phoebe Mose, Mary Kipsat, Christopher Sebatta, Francis Kalyango, Wilberforce Tushemereirwe, Charles Staver
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract/ Overview
Food systems of the future that will guarantee food and nutrition
security of millions of poor farming households will have to be
both economically and socially diverse. Diversity of farming systems acts as a catalyst for innovation, commercialisation as well
as technology adoption. This study sought to find farm typologies
and explore the social, enterprise and economic diversity of the
various farm types based on a promoted Growing Bananas with
Trees and Livestock (GBTL) technology system that was implemented by National Agricultural Research Organisation and Bioversity International in three districts of Central Uganda, Kiboga,
Nakaseke and Ssembabule. Using Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and Cluster Analysis (CA), typologies were created in
which two distinct clusters of farming households were revealed.
Further analysis of the clusters through Food Consumption
Scores, food classes, and other descriptive statistics indicated
that the two clusters were socially and economically diverse.
Findings indicated that Cluster 1 is made up of smaller farms
with high crop diversity. Families in Cluster 1 sell more of their
produce and subsequently have lower food security compared to
the land-abundant, off-farm earning and more food secure Cluster 2. We failed to reject the hypothesis that socially and economically diverse farmers adopt technologies more given that
the level of GBTL adoption was about 25% and about 70% for
Banana + Goats within both clusters.