Modeling fertilizer demand in cotton-producing villages of Benin: Does price matter in a centralized distribution system?
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Abstract
Abstract
Cotton is a strategic crop in Benin's economy and fertilizer is a crucial
necessity for its development. Fertilizer supply is awkwardly cotton-oriented
and depends totally on imports. Spurious liberalization, characterized by
partial state withdrawal combined with a rigid distribution agreement between
the state, fertilizer traders and farmers’ cooperatives, led to a drastic decli ne
in fertilizer use and cotton production. Although fertilizer consumption
resumed timidly with reforms, the supply system remained centralized
(importers’ licensing, distribution quotas, price administration). This study
inquired whether price is relevant in fertilizer demand in such a business
environment. Randomly-selected 577 cotton farmers from purposively-chosen
191 cotton-producing villages, were interviewed about fertilizer use and
distribution using structured questionnaires. Determinants of average villagelevel
fertilizer
demand,
elicited
using
a
multiple
regression
model
with
a
joint
agronomic
and marketing perspective, included at 5% or 1% significance
level: the region’s dummy, share of cotton in cultivated area, rural roads’
density, distance ‘village store - farmer’s fields, and off-farm income. Other
non-negligible factors included: estimated cost price, soil degradation rate,
diffusion rate of water and soil conservation techniques, proportion of leased
land area and distance ‘farmer’s house - local agricultural market’. Despite an
administered pan-territorial district-level price, fertilizer demand was still
sensitive to the actual farm-gate prices. However, the business environment
had a stronger influence. The policy levers to increase fertilizer use intensity
include the development of road and market infrastructures, promotion of
market orientation of farming and off-farm activities, wise liberalization of
fertilizer retail market, and reform of the licensing system.
