BEHAVIOURAL MODEL ON THE ADOPTION OF ICT IN THE E-WALLET PROGRAMME FOR FARMERS BY THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT

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Product Code: 00008215

No of Pages: 69

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ABSTRACT

This study assesses the effectiveness of the usages of mobile phones-based innovation in the e-wallet programme-powered by the Growth Enhancement Support Scheme which was designed by the Nigeria Government to facilitate and improve farmers’ prompt access to agricultural information and input services using Abia state as a case study. One hundred and forty farmers were randomly selected in this study. Majority of the respondents were 55.3% male with farming experience of at least 15-20 years. Benefits of the program included quick accessibility of improved and subsidized inputs, increased production. The shortcomings of the program, however, include low level of awareness, telephony network failure, low density coverage of agro-dealers and supply of fertilizer and other agricultural inputs. To enhance farmers’ productive capacity, the study recommends a e-wallet awareness campaign, improvement of rural telephony networking for improved interconnectivity and the scaling up of the quantity of input supply by government to accelerate and increase the production capacity of the farmers.





TABLE OF CONTENT

Content                                                                                                               page

Title page                                                                                                            i                                                                                                     

Declaration                                                                                                         ii

Certification                                                                                                       iii

Dedication                                                                                                          iv

Acknowledgement                                                                                              v

Table of content                                                                                                 vi

List of Tables                                                                                                     vii

Abstract                                                                                                              viii

CHAPTER ONE

INTRODUCTION                                                                                           

1.1   background of the study                                                                       1

1.2   statement of problem                                                                            7

1.3   objectives of the study                                                                          8

1.4   Research questions                                                                               9

1.5   Research hypothesis                                                                             9

1.6   Significance of the study                                                                      10

1.7   Scope of the study                                                                                10

1.8   Limitations of the study                                                                        11

1.9   Definition of terms                                                                                11

CHAPETR TWO

LITERATURE NREVIEW

2.1 Concept of adoption                                                                                     13

2.2 Farmers behavior towards the agricultural technology adoption                 14

2.3 Technology in agriculture                                                                            16

2.4 Role of ICT in agricultural sector                                                                17-19

2.5 Barriers/limiting factors to the use of agricultural technology             20

2.6 E-wallet and its effectiveness                                                                       20-22

2.7 GESS                                                                                                            22

2.8 Challenges of e-wallet                                                                                  23-24

 

CHAPTER THREE

RESEARCH METHODOLOGY

3.1 Research design                                                                                            25

3.2 Area of study                                                                                                25-26

3.3 Sampling procedure                                                                                      26-27

3.4 Sources of data                                                                                             27

3.5 Method of Data Analysis                                                                             28 

CHAPTER FOUR

RESULT AND DISCUSSION                                                                        29

CHAPTER FIVE

CONCLUSION AND RECOOMENDATION

5.1 Conclusion                                                                                                   52

5.2 Recommendation                                                                                         53

      Reference                                                                                                      54

 

 

 

 

 

 

LIST OF TABLES

4.1 General description                                                       

4.2 voucher collection                         

4.3 Rate of information on e-wallet                                    

4.4 Extent of interest on adoption of ICT in e-wallet programme                              

4.5 Distribution of the respondents according to electricity barrier

in adopting ICT                                                                   

4.6 distance of place of purchase of farming/agricultural input                                        

4.7 Factors that affect the adoption of ICT in the e-wallet programme/critical success                                                          

4.8 Hypothesis                                                                     

4.9 Hypothesis two

4.10 Hypothesis three

4.11 Hypothesis four

4.12 Hypothesis five                                                                               

 


 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER ONE

1.0                                    INTRODUCTION


1.1 Background of the study

With the growing incidence of poverty from 54.4 percent to 69.0 percent in 2012, and dwindling agricultural productivity, the growth and survival of agriculture have become a topical issue and occupies the center stage of policy discourse. This is precipitated on the fact that agriculture is a veritable platform to ensure food production, food security and rural development because its objective is to guarantee food security, employment opportunities and provide income for many households.  For instance, agriculture contributes significantly to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of Nigeria (Patachu 2012) and provides employment for up to 70 percent (Njoku, 2012).

However, it is disheartening that agricultural sector which contributed as high as 65.7% of 1957 Gross Domestic Product (GDP) has dropped to 22% in 2014; representing 43.7% decrease. This may have contributed to the predicted drop in growth of real GDP from 7.8% in 2011 to 7.6% in 2012 (NBS 2011). With this development, it is debatable if the country will be able to ameliorate the challenges of food security faced by Nigerians considering the gap in food requirement growth rate of 3.5% and 3.18% population growth in Nigeria (FOS 1996; Ojo 2003 and Nto and Mbanasor, 2011), since this growth lies below the 10% necessary for attaining food security and poverty reduction (Nwajiuba, 2013).

Consequent upon that Nigeria food sub sector has growing at 2.0, while its population is growing at 3.3 per cent (NBS, 2012). This has implication on the country’s ability to feed its growing population, widening income inequality and economic development. As a measure to reverse this trend, government has through numerous policies and programme seek to address this challenge. Such programmes include but not limited to Rural integrated agricultural development programme (ADP), Green Revolution programme (GR),   Agro service Center Programme (ASC), National Seed Service (NSS), Operation Feed the Nation (OFN), Directorate of Food, Road and Rural Infrastructure (DFRRI) and 2011 presidential initiative on cassava, yam, rice vegetable oil etc. all these are production policy led strategy aimed at improving agricultural productivity. Unfortunately, these policies and programmes have not achieved their desired intent due in part to elite hijack, bad governance and corruption (Sule, 2012) among other challenges.

To check the growing concern over corruption and arbitrary control of marketing intermediaries in the management and distribution of farm inputs such as fertilizer to rural farmers and increase agricultural productivity, Growth Enhancement Scheme (GES) of Federal Ministry of Agriculture in response to global increasing importance of technology in business adopted and adapted Information and Communication Technology (ICT) in agriculture. The potentials of ICT/GSM in creating socio-economic opportunities and strengthened networks with potency to poverty alleviation have been variously studied (see CAT, 2004; Donner, 2006; Saunder et al., 1994). The adoption of information and communication technologies (ICTs) promise many benefits to the famers, which include among others increasing people’s knowledge of market information; improving the coordination of transportation, especially during emergencies; and enhancing the effectiveness of development activities (Saunder et al., 1994).

Electronic Agriculture (e-agriculture) is an emerging field focusing on the enhancement of agricultural and rural development through improved information and communication processes (Kemiyi and Moya 2011). The importance of ICT in agriculture cannot be over emphasis. ICTs offer to facilitate technological adoption, to transmit information about new seed varieties, inputs and information about new markets and market prices at a relatively low cost, hence having a significant contribution to agricultural growth (Ansoms 2008). E-agriculture is also a tool in e-wallet.

Nigeria is the first country in the world to develop the e-wallet system to reach farmers with subsidized inputs. The system unleashed a market revolution, as seeds and fertilizer companies, for the first time ever, rapidly developed their Electronic Wallet System (e-wallet) which allows farmers to get their seeds and fertilizer using electronic vouchers sent directly via their mobile phones. However, a large proportion of these inputs could not be reached to farmers, as a result of the high level of corruption, insincerity and political interruption in the channel of distribution. (Adesina 2013) pointed out that the old system used in supplying inputs to the farmers are weak, inefficient and fraudulent, hence a large proportion of the farmers could not benefit from it.

Behavioral model in agriculture seek to understand the behavior of individual decision-makers, usually the farmers or land managers directly responsible for the land, focus on psychological construct such as attitudes, values and goals but also gather additional relevant data on farm structure, economic situation, succession status which will contribute to decision making by the Federal Ministry of Agriculture (oluloye 2008).

Although agriculture and natural resources are deemed to continue being the key drivers of Africans economic growth. It is the application of modern technologies that is considered to have the most significant impact on the growth trajectories of most African economies. Kimeyi and Moyo (2011) stressed that technologies provide great opportunities for growth in service sectors such as agriculture, health, education, banking and insurance. This being the case, countries has identified ICT as an important component in moving the countries’ subsistence-based economy to service-sector driven, high value added information and knowledge based economy, that can compete effectively on the global market (Ansoms 2008).

Exchanging information is critical for stakeholders in agricultural value chains due to its nature, as it is the key for establishing, developing and managing efforts to improve their competitiveness in local and international markets. In this regard, information and communication technologies (ICTs) are effective tools and in several cases, also innovative to facilitate the exchange of information in the value chains. ICTs certainly play a key role to contribute to reduce asymmetries of information and communication between stakeholders of an agricultural value chain and to help reduce the vicious circle of rural poverty.

Various studies have shown that composed manure is made and used under the supervision of extension programmes of sustainable land management initiatives. And yet the rate of adoption by farmers in rural areas has remained low. This low adoption is mainly because farmers are not fully aware of the benefits of composed manure and yet, and often lack the resources to use it.

In Nigeria, empirical studies on agricultural technology adoption suggest that factors such as socio-economic characteristics of farmers, access to credit, or cash resources and information from extension and other media influence adoption rate of new agricultural technology among farmer (Ayinde et al 2010). He found that education level of farmers, farming experience, farm size, access to extension and access to credit have significant and positive influence on adoption of Ict.

In order to reverse the dwindling or declining agricultural productivity and improve efficiency, Otegbulu (2008) suggested two major approaches. First, the technological approach which implies the type of technology that will improve efficiency and access to resources utilization. This was seen as the thrust behind the introduction of e-wallet programme of Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (FMARD). The e-wallet was introduced by the growth enhancement scheme (GES) which is an efficient and transparent electronic device system that makes use of voucher is used to redeem fertilizers, seeds and other agricultural inputs from agro-dealers at half the cost (signal Alliance 2014). The second approach is the behavioral approach, which implies a change in the ways we do things.

Adesina (2012) the Minister of Agriculture based on survey carried out through Growth Enhancement Scheme (GES) on large samples from various government areas in 13 different states showed that 71% of sampled farmers in the rural areas did not have mobile phone, which in effect excludes them from the benefit of GES e-wallet platform. He argued that the e-wallet project will serve as an avenue to educate, inform and communicate with farmers I rural areas across the country on the latest and best agricultural practices, as well as the current prices of commodities in the market.


1.2 Statement of problem

Food production in Nigeria has not kept pace with its population growth, because the population is growing at about 3.3 per cent per annun, while food production is about 2.0 per cent (NBS 2011) which can result in cultural practices such as bush burning which reduces the plant nutrient, excessive use of fertilizers, planting of crops in a wrong soil, etc.

The cost of procurement, awareness, lack of involvement of farmers both in the planning and implementation of information and communication technology projects, physics, and network infrastructure among others are barriers to rural information and communication technology usage in places where such has taken off. Anti intellectual in culture i.e. they don’t believe in learning, farmers perceptions towards farming with mechanized equipment. Inadequacy of skill personnel should also be addressed which is as a result of high level of illiteracy because don’t know how to use the mechanized equipment. The rate of adoption is low because farmers are not fully aware of the benefits and often lack the resources to use it. Adoption rate is low among farmers due to they are not aware of the benefit they will derive from the use of ict and e-wallet and the cost of acquiring the farm inputs. Most farmers lack experience or does not have farming skills in using the ict and e-wallet programme and as a result are been exploited by channel of distribution. Most farmers in the rural areas are fragmented, have low input and output and most of their farming techniques and tools are low and old.

Before the adoption of e-wallet, farmers were been exploited as a result of corruption among the channel of distribution. (Adesina 2013) pointed that the system whereby input and fertilizer are distributed by the channel of distribution was insufficient, insincere and fraudulent.


1.3 Objectives of the study

The broad objective of this study is to examine the adoption and use of ICT in the e-wallet programme, while the specific objectives were to:

1.     Assess the level of awareness on the adoption of e-wallet programme.

2.     Determine the level of adoption of e-wallet programme by farmers in the study area

3.     Analyze the perception of farmers about e-wallet programme

4.     Analyze factors influencing adoption of ICT by farmers.

5.     Ascertain the impact of ewallet programme on production capacity of farmers in abia state.

 

1.4 Research questions

1. What influence does the ICT have on the farmers and its impact?

2. Will the farmers adopt the use of ICT and the e-wallet programme.

3. Will the programme benefit the farmers in the rural area?

4. What are farmer’s perceptions towards the e-wallet programme

5. Does the programme have any impact on production capacity of farmers


1.5 Research hypothesis

Given the nature of this research work, there is need to formulate a reasonable hypothesis:

Ho1: Farmers in the study are not aware of e-wallet progrmme

Ho2: The level of adoption of e-wallet programme is low in the area study area

Ho3: Farmers perception about e-wallet programme is low in the study area

Ho4: There is no significant factor that influence the adoption of ICT by farmers in the study area

Ho5: E-wallet does not have any significant impact on production capacity of farmers


1.6 Significance of the study

Some farmers in the rural area are becoming aware of the importance and impact of information communication technology and e-wallet system. Farmers in the rural area that operates with old farming equipment are larger than the farmer in the urban area, thus any information provided by this research will help the federal ministry of agriculture and farmers on this ICT and e-wallet system. It will also guide and direct the FMARD on how to grow and develop a good relationship with the farmers in rural areas. This will no doubt contribute economically and socially to the agriculture sector in Nigeria.

A comprehensive assessment of ICT and e-wallet influence on farmer’s behavior and perception will provide a guide to the FMRAD in implementing their farming strategies and programmes.


1.7 Scope of the study

This study focused on the use of ict in the e-wallet programme which is aimed at enhancing the farmers to be able to work effectively and efficiently. The aim of the FMARD was to remove constraints by educating, informing and communicating with the farmers on the use of mechanized farming equipment and how the ICT can help them in their farming business.

This study is carried out in the rural area where most farmers are unaware of the ICT and the e-wallet programme;


1.8 Limitation of the study

Research of this nature especially in a developing country like Nigeria always encounters some difficulties. The limitations to carry my research in this project were time limit I had to contend with the limited time combined with other school activities. Finance was also another problem because insufficient fund will not allow a research to be carried out effectively.


1.9 Definition of terms

Behavioral model: it refers to the action, reaction or functioning of a system, under normal or specified circumstances.

ICT: information and communication technology is an umbrella-term that includes any communication device or application encompassing radio, television, cellular and software, satellite systems and so on, as well as the various services and application associated with them.

E-WALLET: it is defined as an efficient and transparent electronic device system that makes use of vouchers for the purchase and distribution of agriculture inputs.

ADOPTION: it refers to the choosing and making that to be one’s own which originally was not so, acceptance as the adoption of opinions.

 


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