Performance Of Sesame Marketing System In Nasarawa State, Nigeria

ABSTRACT

The study assessed the performance of sesame marketing system and the qualitative and

quantitative impact of social capital. For primary data, the sampling procedure involved a

systematic random selection of 120 sesame farmers, 40 wholesalers, and 60 retailers of the

produce after determining the sampling frame. The farmers were proportionately drawn from the

main and minor producing areas. Similarly, the wholesalers and retailers were proportionately

selected from 13 rural and urban sesame markets in the three agricultural zones of Nasarawa

State. Data was collected using structured questionnaire. Retail prices for 84 months from 13

rural and urban markets of sesame were used as secondary data. The analytical tools employed in

the analyses of data were descriptive and inferential statistics, regression and correlation

techniques, Gini coefficient, Herfindahl index, marketing margin and principal component

analysis. Steps to cointegration analysis involved augmented Dickey-Fuller (ADF) test, Granger

causality test and augmented Engle – Granger (AEG) test, while price dynamics and speed of

price adjustment were accomplished using error correction models (ECM). Results showed that

only 34 pairs of market prices (about 21.8%) were cointegrated and the rate of price adjustment

within one month was very high in nearly all the cointegrated pairs. Gini coefficient values

among farmers, wholesalers and retailers were 0.686, 0.331 and 0.589, respectively. The

Herfindahl index values estimated among farmers, wholesalers and retailers were 0.115, 0.442

and 0.188, respectively. The mean marketing margin value of the consumer price for wholesalers

was 15.2% while the mean value for retailers was 11.4% of the consumer price. Mean farmer’s

share for wholesalers was 84.8% and that of retailers was 88.6%. The key social capital factors

perceived to have impact on the performance of the middlemen were named as (1) social

relationships that make direct impact on market performance and (2) social relationships that

make indirect impact on market performance. Social capital contributed significantly to market

performance in the dissemination of information and accessibility of credit. Social capital

variables which contributed significantly to market performance included amount of credit from

friends, relatives, social contact and membership of organizations on one hand, and number of

market information on the other. Public policy intervention on infrastructural development, farm

input supply and accessibility to credit by market participants in the right amount and conditions

were recommended. Use of social capital variables relevant to market performance is an avenue

to improve the marketing system of sesame in Nasarawa State.

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APA

ALLANANA, A (2021). Performance Of Sesame Marketing System In Nasarawa State, Nigeria. Afribary. Retrieved from https://tracking.afribary.com/works/performance-of-sesame-marketing-system-in-nasarawa-state-nigeria

MLA 8th

ALLANANA, ANZAKU "Performance Of Sesame Marketing System In Nasarawa State, Nigeria" Afribary. Afribary, 14 May. 2021, https://tracking.afribary.com/works/performance-of-sesame-marketing-system-in-nasarawa-state-nigeria. Accessed 24 Nov. 2024.

MLA7

ALLANANA, ANZAKU . "Performance Of Sesame Marketing System In Nasarawa State, Nigeria". Afribary, Afribary, 14 May. 2021. Web. 24 Nov. 2024. < https://tracking.afribary.com/works/performance-of-sesame-marketing-system-in-nasarawa-state-nigeria >.

Chicago

ALLANANA, ANZAKU . "Performance Of Sesame Marketing System In Nasarawa State, Nigeria" Afribary (2021). Accessed November 24, 2024. https://tracking.afribary.com/works/performance-of-sesame-marketing-system-in-nasarawa-state-nigeria