Explaining the Positioning of Agricultural Entrepreneurs on the Necessity-Opportunity Continuum in Sub-Saharan Africa: Insights from Benin.
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Abstract
Despite the potential of agriculture to reduce unemployment in
sub-Saharan Africa, research on agricultural entrepreneurship is
scarce, especially regarding the entrepreneurs’ motivations. The
aim of this research is to examine the intensity of necessity and
opportunity motivations among agricultural entrepreneurs and the
influence of socioeconomic characteristics, personality, and environmental
factors. Hence, the study reports a survey of 819 agricultural
entrepreneurs in Benin and uses multinomial logistic
regressions. Most agricultural entrepreneurs are moderately necessity-
driven (76%); the remainder includes highly necessity-driven
entrepreneurs (4%), moderately opportunity-driven entrepreneurs
(6%), and highly opportunity-driven entrepreneurs (14%). Those
displaying higher intensity of necessity motivations can be at any
education level, are former employees, are less proactive, less optimistic,
and operate in the services sector. In contrast, highly opportunity-
driven entrepreneurs are likely to have received a university
education and agricultural professional training, operate in the
services sector, and have better access to finance and technologies.
This study advances the push-pull theory by revealing a richer set of
entrepreneurial motivations beyond the simplistic dichotomic view.
Hence, policymakers could devise entrepreneurship strategies and
programs that consider the diverse motivations of entrepreneurs
and the influencing factors to move them toward increased opportunity
entrepreneurship.
