ABSTRACT
Despite various efforts in Nigeria towards delivering
microcredit to farmers to achieve the twin objectives of poverty alleviation
and enhanced agricultural productivity over the years, the track record of
performance has been unencouraging. Agricultural productivity is still
reportedly low while incidence of poverty is on the increase. Assessment
studies on microcredit have focused mainly on the informal and public sector
initiatives with little attention on the private sector, institutional
microcredit providers. Therefore. this study analyzed institutional microcredit
supply and its effects on the productivity, technical efficiency and poverty
levels of arable crop farmers in Nigeria. Primary data used in the study were
obtained from the farmers directly, while the secondary data were obtained from
publications of the Central Bank of Nigeria, National Bureau of Statistics, the
World Bank and CIA World Fact Book. Tools used in analyzing the data were trend
equations, multiple regression analyses and the FGT poverty measurement
indices. The trend analysis covered a fifty-year period from 1961 to 2010 and
was broken into sub-periods (pie-deregulation. regulation and financial sector
reform) to capture some major policy milestones in Nigeria. The results of data
analyses showed that there was a positive trend relationship between time and
institutional microcredit supply to farmers all through the fifty-year period.
The compound growth rate of institutional microcredit to farmers was however
found to be higher in the pie-deregulation era than in the deregulation and
financial sector reform periods. This was corroborated by the result of the
quadratic time term (t2) which showed acceleration of credit supply in the pie-
deregulation period as compared to deceleration in the deregulation and
stagnation in the post financial sector reform periods. The major determinants
of credit supply to the agricultural sector were lending interest rate. deposit
base of the lending institutions and liquidity. While the deposit base of the institutional
microcredit providers (IMPs) stimulated lending, rising interest rate and
liquidity ratios were major constraints to agricultural sector credit supply.
There were also significant positive relationships between interest rate,
treasury bills rates, and minimum rediscount rate (MRR). Credit supply. gross
domestic product (GDP), government expenditure and financial investment were
also found to have significant positive relationship with the deposit base of
the IMPs while, MRR moved in the opposite direction contrary to a priori
expectation. The results of the productivity analyses showed that institutional
microcredit beneficiaries had higher productivity and technical efficiency
indices than the non beneficiaries. The study also showed that non beneficiaries
of institutional microcredit were poorer than their credit using counterparts
and that the level of poverty among the farmers generally was higher than the
national average. Finally, the results showed no significant differences in the
productivity and poverty indices across the geopolitical zones. Based on these
results. it was recommended that government should combine deregulation with a
more direct policy measure that stipulates minimum credit boundaries for the
IMPs to targeted priority sectors like agriculture. This would improve farmers'
productivity and technical efficiency levels and in turn, reduce poverty among
them.
AGBAEZE, C (2021). Institutional Microcredit Supply and Its Effects On Productivity, Technical Efficiency And Poverty Levels Of Arable Crop Farmers In Nigeria. Repository.mouau.edu.ng: Retrieved Nov 22, 2024, from https://repository.mouau.edu.ng/work/view/institutional-microcredit-supply-and-its-effects-on-productivity-technical-efficiency-and-poverty-levels-of-arable-crop-farmers-in-nigeria-7-2
CHILASA, AGBAEZE. "Institutional Microcredit Supply and Its Effects On Productivity, Technical Efficiency And Poverty Levels Of Arable Crop Farmers In Nigeria" Repository.mouau.edu.ng. Repository.mouau.edu.ng, 08 Nov. 2021, https://repository.mouau.edu.ng/work/view/institutional-microcredit-supply-and-its-effects-on-productivity-technical-efficiency-and-poverty-levels-of-arable-crop-farmers-in-nigeria-7-2. Accessed 22 Nov. 2024.
CHILASA, AGBAEZE. "Institutional Microcredit Supply and Its Effects On Productivity, Technical Efficiency And Poverty Levels Of Arable Crop Farmers In Nigeria". Repository.mouau.edu.ng, Repository.mouau.edu.ng, 08 Nov. 2021. Web. 22 Nov. 2024. < https://repository.mouau.edu.ng/work/view/institutional-microcredit-supply-and-its-effects-on-productivity-technical-efficiency-and-poverty-levels-of-arable-crop-farmers-in-nigeria-7-2 >.
CHILASA, AGBAEZE. "Institutional Microcredit Supply and Its Effects On Productivity, Technical Efficiency And Poverty Levels Of Arable Crop Farmers In Nigeria" Repository.mouau.edu.ng (2021). Accessed 22 Nov. 2024. https://repository.mouau.edu.ng/work/view/institutional-microcredit-supply-and-its-effects-on-productivity-technical-efficiency-and-poverty-levels-of-arable-crop-farmers-in-nigeria-7-2