ABSTRACT
This study was designed to examine gender and resource use
efficiency in rice production systems in Abia State of Nigeria. Rice has grown
in importance as a major component of Nigerian diets with its consumption
increasing at an annual rate of 11 percent. The crop has been identified as a
very important primary food source, drawn from the conclusion that ricebased
systems are essential for food security, poverty alleviation and improved
livelihoods. Regional rice production has failed to meet the increased demand
for rice due to population growth and rapid urbanization. This has led to
reliance on rice imports to bridge the everwidening gap between demand and supply.
This is despite the fact that the country has the potential to greatly increase
its rice production as the country is blessed with rich and abundant rice
growing environments. Also, the contributions of women in farming are not duly
recognized as they are not critically involved in the process of farm problem
analysis, planning and decision making or provided with the training, credit
and support they needed. This study therefore specifically seeks to examine the
socio-economic characteristic and the constraints faced by the men and women
rice farmers, analyze the net profit associated with rice production by the
farmers based on gender and production system, compare the technical and
allocative efficiency and returns to scale of the farmers by gender and
production system and compare the mean output of the men and women rice farmers
and for the various production systems. Primary data collected from a random
sample of 142 rice farmers from 2 Local Government Areas, purposively selected
based on performance in rice production were used for the study. The 142 rice
farmers were disaggregated in two ways. On the basis of gender into 71 men and
71 women rice farmers and on the basis of production systems into 46 inland
valley, 41 upland and 55 swamp rice. The cost route technique was adopted in
data collection. Data analysis consisted of the use of such statistical and
econometric tools as frequencies, percentages, averages, and multiple
regression analysis by the ordinary least squares, the t-test of significance
between two means and analysis of variance (ANOVA). Results of the data
analysis show that the mean ages of the men and women rice farmers were 46
years and 43 years respectively. Also the bulk of the farmers are married and
the mean household size was 6 and 7 for the men and women farmers respectively.
90.14 percent and 78.87 percent of the men and women farmers had one form of
formal education or the other ranging from primary to tertiary education. The
mean hectarage cultivated by the men and women rice farmers were 2.27 hectares
and 1.27 hectares respectively. The result further revealed the men farmers to
be more experienced than their women counterpart as shown by the mean
experience of 19 years against 15 years of the women farmers. About 95.77 percent
of the men and 87.32 percent of the women farmers used at least one form of
improved rice variety for cultivation. The main source of land for the men and
women farmers was inheritance and lease/rent respectively. Some of the major
problems confronting the farmers were lack of fund, loans/cridtcarcity and high
cost of labour; high interest rate; pests, diseases and theft; high cost of
inputs, fertilizer and agro chemicals; limited access and high cost of land.
The result further revealed that rice farming is profitable. The net profits
respectively for the men and women farmers are N 77605.11 for the men and N
70126.14 for the women rice farmers. The net profit for the inland valley,
upland and swamp farms were N 98811.86, N 59016.32 and N 73020.72 respectively.
The women farmers were less technically efficient than the men farmers were.
All the defined farmer groups were' characterized by the same production VIII
function except the inland valley and swamp farmer group. None of the defined
farmer groups achieved absolute allocative efficiency in the use of farm
resources (achieved an efficiency index of unity by using the profit maximizing
input level). The women farmers, under-utilized land, other inputs and capital
inputs while their men counterparts in addition to these resources
under-utilized family labour. The upland farmers under-utilized all the farm
resources while the inland and upland farmers both under-utilized farmland,
other inputs and capital inputs and over-utilized family labour and hired
labour. All the defined farmer groups are characterized by increasing returns
to scale, which implies that they are operating in region one of the
production, function and hence need to employ more resources. The mean output
of the men farmers was significantly higher than th'at of the women rice
farmers, while there was no significant difference in the mean output of rice
from the production systems. It is recommended that policies that will enable
the farmers to remain in rice production, encourage reallocation and
redistribution of farm resources, grant farmers increased access to land and
enable them employ more use of farm resources so as to achieve increased
efficiency, productivity and constant returns to scale should be put in place.
IHEKE, R (2021). Gender And Resource Use Efficiency In Rice Production Systems In Abia State Of Nigeria. Repository.mouau.edu.ng: Retrieved Nov 22, 2024, from https://repository.mouau.edu.ng/work/view/gender-and-resource-use-efficiency-in-rice-production-systems-in-abia-state-of-nigeria-7-2
RAPHAEL, IHEKE. "Gender And Resource Use Efficiency In Rice Production Systems In Abia State Of Nigeria" Repository.mouau.edu.ng. Repository.mouau.edu.ng, 22 Oct. 2021, https://repository.mouau.edu.ng/work/view/gender-and-resource-use-efficiency-in-rice-production-systems-in-abia-state-of-nigeria-7-2. Accessed 22 Nov. 2024.
RAPHAEL, IHEKE. "Gender And Resource Use Efficiency In Rice Production Systems In Abia State Of Nigeria". Repository.mouau.edu.ng, Repository.mouau.edu.ng, 22 Oct. 2021. Web. 22 Nov. 2024. < https://repository.mouau.edu.ng/work/view/gender-and-resource-use-efficiency-in-rice-production-systems-in-abia-state-of-nigeria-7-2 >.
RAPHAEL, IHEKE. "Gender And Resource Use Efficiency In Rice Production Systems In Abia State Of Nigeria" Repository.mouau.edu.ng (2021). Accessed 22 Nov. 2024. https://repository.mouau.edu.ng/work/view/gender-and-resource-use-efficiency-in-rice-production-systems-in-abia-state-of-nigeria-7-2