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Agricultural expenditure for economic growth and poverty reduction in ZimbabweMapfumo, Alexander January 2012 (has links)
A vibrant and an efficient agricultural sector would enable a country to feed its growing population, generate employment, earn foreign exchange and provide raw materials for industries. The agricultural sector has a multiplier effect on any nation's socio-economic and industrial fabric because of the multifunctional nature of agriculture. The main objective of this study was to investigate how government expenditure on agriculture has affected economic growth in Zimbabwe from 1980-2009. The Log linear growth regression model was employed where gross domestic gross was the dependant variable and the explanatory variables are the factors which affect it which include government agricultural expenditure. The expenditures of government on agriculture were divided into three functions namely extension, credit assistance and R & D. The regression analyses were performed using Econometric-views 7 (E-views 7) statistical package. Regression was carried out on time series data for the period 1980 to 2009. The data was tested for stationarity and for autocorrelation. Problems of non stationarity of data were corrected by integrating the trending series. Results from the empirical analysis provide strong evidence indicating that agriculture is an engine of economic growth. The results from this study suggest that spending more on agricultural research and development can improve economic growth and ultimately reduce poverty. However, it can also be concluded that insufficient government agricultural expenditure on extension and credit assistance adversely affected economic growth in Zimbabwe, based on the results of the study. Global experience with pro-poor growth and empirical work spanning India, Benin and Malawi demonstrates the importance of agricultural expenditure for poverty reduction in poor rural areas, while also pointing to the need for complementary non farm sector growth. This study also proposes a simple methodology to estimate the agricultural spending that will be required to achieve the Millennium Development Goal of halving poverty by 2015 (MDG1) in Zimbabwe. This method uses growth poverty and growth expenditure elasticities to estimate the financial resources required to meet the MDG1. The study attempts to address a key knowledge gap by improving estimation of first MDG agricultural expenditure at country level.
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Factores que condicionan las tierras agrícolas como prenda en el crédito financiero para la oferta exportable de mango y palta en los departamentoes de Ica y Cajamarca al año 2012Cruz-Bringas, Annie-Jetsely-de-la January 2016 (has links)
El objetivo de la presente investigación es estudiar los factores que condicionan a los agricultores a acceder a los créditos financieros, en donde tienen prenda sus tierras con título de propiedad en los departamentos de Cajamarca e Ica asimismo se identificara los problemas que tienen las tierras agrícolas en los departamentos mencionados como prenda de garantía de la oferta exportable y que factores le dan valor a estas tierras para ello se realizara un análisis de los microcréditos que otorgan las entidades como Agrobanco y los programas como COFIDE y SEPYMEX. / Trabajo de investigación
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Assessment of access and use of credit amongst smallholder farmers in the Capricorn District Municipality, of Limpopo Province in South AfricaMotlhatlhana, Moloko Lovedelia 10 December 2013 (has links)
MSAEC / Department of Agricultural Economics and Agribusiness
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Economic and institutional factors affecting the performance of the graduated mortgage loan repayment scheme used by medium-scale sugarcane farmers in KwaZulu-Natal.Mashatola, Mopai Clement. January 2003 (has links)
Private sector sugar millers and Ithala Development Finance Corporation (Ithala)
implemented a graduated mortgage loan repayment scheme in the 1995/96 sugarcane
production-season to try and improve access to farmland by aspirant commercial
farmers in KwaZulu-Natal. By March 2001, the scheme had financed 106 "medium
scale farmers" (MSFs), 99 of whom were still in the scheme (one loan had been
repaid from own funds, and another six from the proceeds of life insurance policies).
The first aim of this study was to analyse factors affecting whether or not the MSFs
were current or in arrears on loan repayments as at 31 March 2001. A logit model
based on full information for 83 MSFs shows that the estimated probability of a MSF
being current on loan repayments was higher for clients with higher levels of average
annual gross turnover relative to loan size, and for clients with access to substantive
off-farm income. This suggests that farm size (proxied by annual farm gross turnover)
does matter when policymakers in South Africa consider future similar schemes
designed to improve access to commercial farmland by people that previously could
not buy farmland. Smaller-sized, creditworthy farms with loan sizes that are relatively
low compared to the expected average annual gross income may also be viable.
Access to off-farm income could also be considered as a criterion in selecting
potential farmers for future similar schemes, as it helps to provide additional liquidity
to fund future operations and debt repayments, and can reduce leverage levels.
The second aim was to conduct personal interviews with the 99 MSFs between July
and September 2001 in order to identify what aspects of the scheme could be
improved for new members . Responses from 88 of these MSFs show that 68% of
them would opt to first rent land before purchasing, while 78% of them recognize, or
have experienced, the cash flow problem associated with land purchase. Most of the
MSFs felt that long-term sugarcane supply agreements constrain enterprise
diversification, and that the quality of mentorship that they currently received was not
satisfactory. Industry players could consider leveraging donor funding for
empowerment projects to improve the quality of future mentorship programmes.
There is also some scope for Ithala to improve the client-lender relationship by better
clarifying the structure of the graduated repayments, sending loan statements on time,
and helping clients to interpret loan statements. Growers perceive the need for a
coordinator to monitor, and advise on how to improve, their financial performance this
could be a new commercial service opportunity. Using an independent valuer to
conduct farm valuations may also be necessary to avoid perceptions of bias in the
value of farms offered for sale by the millers.
A logit model of the MSFs' preferences for first renting land before purchase shows
that new growers joining this scheme, or similar schemes for other farm products, with
relatively less liquidity and less farming experience should be given the choice to rent
land with an option to purchase. The preference for first renting by most of the
surveyed MSFs could indicate that many very highly leveraged MSFs still experience
cash flow stress despite the interest rate subsidy. A second policy implication,
therefore, is that the current subsidy level, which reduces the effective starting interest
rate level to about ten per cent relative to a typical five per cent current return on land,
could be increased to promote access to farmland markets. Alternatively, loan terms in
the next round of the scheme could be changed to require higher proportions of own
equity (lower leverage levels), or to permit the deferral of principal payments, or to
permit the purchase of smaller farms by creditworthy, part-time farmers. Another
strategy to improve liquidity is to advise growers to limit family drawings in the early
years after farmland purchase. / Thesis (M.Sc.Agric.)-University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2003.
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An empirical study of the impact of bank credit on agricultural output in South AfricaChisasa, Joseph 12 1900 (has links)
In the literature there are mixed results on the link between credit and agricultural output growth. Some authors argue that credit leads to growth in agricultural output. Others view growth as one of the factors that influence credit supply, thus growth leads and credit follows. By and large, studies have not endeavoured to establish the short-run impact of agricultural credit on output. They are generally limited in establishing the long-run relationship between credit and agricultural output and thus present a research gap in this respect.
This study contributes to the existing body of literature by focusing on the finance-growth nexus at sectoral level as a departure from extant literature that has focused on the macroeconomic level. Using South African data, the study investigated the causal relationship between the supply of credit and agricultural output as well as whether the two are cointegrated and have a short-run relationship.
The study found that bank credit and agricultural output are cointegrated. Using the error correction model (ECM), the results showed that, in the short-run, bank credit has a negative impact on agricultural output, reflecting the uncertainties of institutional credit in South Africa. However, the ECM coefficient shows that the supply of agricultural credit rapidly adjusts to short-term disturbances, indicating that there is no room for tardiness in the agricultural sector. The absence of institutional credit will immediately be replaced by availability of other credit facilities from non-institutional sources. Conventional Granger causality tests show unidirectional causality from (1) bank credit to agricultural output growth, (2) agricultural output to capital formation, (3) agricultural output to labour, (4) capital formation to credit, and (5) capital formation to labour, and a bi-directional causality between credit and labour. Noteworthy and significant for South Africa is that for the agricultural sector, the direction of causality is from finance to growth, in other words supply-leading, whereas at the macroeconomic level, the direction of causality is from economic growth to finance, in other words, demand-leading.
Applying a structural equation modelling approach to survey data of smallholder farmers, the positive relationship between bank credit and agricultural output observed from analysis of secondary data was confirmed. / Business Management / DCOM (Business Management)
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An empirical study of the impact of bank credit on agricultural output in South AfricaChisasa, Joseph 12 1900 (has links)
In the literature there are mixed results on the link between credit and agricultural output growth. Some authors argue that credit leads to growth in agricultural output. Others view growth as one of the factors that influence credit supply, thus growth leads and credit follows. By and large, studies have not endeavoured to establish the short-run impact of agricultural credit on output. They are generally limited in establishing the long-run relationship between credit and agricultural output and thus present a research gap in this respect.
This study contributes to the existing body of literature by focusing on the finance-growth nexus at sectoral level as a departure from extant literature that has focused on the macroeconomic level. Using South African data, the study investigated the causal relationship between the supply of credit and agricultural output as well as whether the two are cointegrated and have a short-run relationship.
The study found that bank credit and agricultural output are cointegrated. Using the error correction model (ECM), the results showed that, in the short-run, bank credit has a negative impact on agricultural output, reflecting the uncertainties of institutional credit in South Africa. However, the ECM coefficient shows that the supply of agricultural credit rapidly adjusts to short-term disturbances, indicating that there is no room for tardiness in the agricultural sector. The absence of institutional credit will immediately be replaced by availability of other credit facilities from non-institutional sources. Conventional Granger causality tests show unidirectional causality from (1) bank credit to agricultural output growth, (2) agricultural output to capital formation, (3) agricultural output to labour, (4) capital formation to credit, and (5) capital formation to labour, and a bi-directional causality between credit and labour. Noteworthy and significant for South Africa is that for the agricultural sector, the direction of causality is from finance to growth, in other words supply-leading, whereas at the macroeconomic level, the direction of causality is from economic growth to finance, in other words, demand-leading.
Applying a structural equation modelling approach to survey data of smallholder farmers, the positive relationship between bank credit and agricultural output observed from analysis of secondary data was confirmed. / Business Management / D. Com. (Business Management)
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Volatility, integration and grain banks : studies in harvests, rye prices and institutional development of the parish magasins in Sweden in the 18th and 19th centuriesBerg, Bengt Åke January 2007 (has links)
This study is the first to focus primarily on the Swedish parish magasins, the country’s most widespread credit institution in the last half of the 18th, and the first part of the 19th, century. During the Early Modern Period, grain price volatility was a matter of great concern. The parish magasins were conceived as a substitute for government action intended to stabilize grain prices and offer relief in case of crop failure. The thesis analyzes the problems of harvest variability and grain price fluctuations utilizing both theory and empirical evidence. It is concluded that market integration, especially by permitting imports, was more effective than inter-harvest storage in reducing the likelihood of high prices. Initially the peasants were sceptical of the new institution. Although the establishment of the magasins was strictly speaking voluntary, substantial hierarchical pressure was applied. Once they had come into existence, however, the magasins evolved into a type of grain bank. The parishioners found them useful as a source of communal revenue at a time of rising need for local public expenditure for education and poor relief. In addition, the failure of the grain market to meet the needs of the peasantry created a demand for loans in kind. Although by no means ideal, in the absence of any superior institutions, the magasins provided valuable services. When improvements in both municipal finance and the functioning of the grain markets occurred in the second half of the 19th century, the magasins became obsolete. Both history and geography impact the formation of institutions. This study describes one such case of institutional development and attempts to explain why the outcome deviated from the original intention. / <p>Diss. Stockholm : Handelshögskolan i Stockholm, 2007</p>
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Determinants of access to farm credit by emerging farmers of Thulamela Local Municipality, South AfricaChivenge, Wilson 02 February 2015 (has links)
Dpartment of Agricultural Economics and Agribusiness / MSc.AEC
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Loan products to manage liquidity stress when broad-based black economic empowerment (BEE) enterprises invest in productive assets.Finnemore, Gareth Robert Lionel. January 2005 (has links)
Investments in productive assets by broad-based black economic empowerment (BEE) enterprises in
South Africa (SA) during the 1990s have been constrained, in part, by a lack of access to capital. Even if
capital can be sourced, BEE businesses often face a liquidity problem, as conventional, equally
amortized loan repayment plans do not take into account the size and timing of investment returns, or
there are lags in the adjustment of management to such new investments. The aim of this dissertation,
therefore, is to compare five alternative loan products to the conventional fixed repayment (equally
amortized) loan (FRL) that lenders could offer to finance BEE investments in productive assets that are
faced with liquidity stress, namely: the single payment non-amortized loan (SPL); the decreasing
payment loan (DP); the partial payment loan (PPL); the graduated payment loan (GPL); and the deferred
payment loan (DEFPLO-2). This is done firstly by comparing loan repayment schedules for the six loans
using a loan principal of R200 000, repaid over 20 years at a nominal contractual annual interest rate of
10%. Secondly, data from five actual BEE loan applications to ABSA Bank and Ithala in KwaZulu-Natal
(KZN) during 2003 are used to compare how the FRL, SPL, DP, GPL, and DEFPLO-l, affect
investment profitability, and both the borrower's and the lender's cash-flows, assuming that the lender
sources funds from a development finance wholesaler.
Results for the first part of the study show that the SPL has smaller initial annual repayments than the
FRL (R20 000 versus R23 492) that ease liquidity stress in the early years after asset purchase, but
requires a nominal balloon repayment of both interest and principal in year 20 of R220 000. The SPL is
also the most costly loan, with total nominal and real repayments that are R130 162 and R43 821,
respectively, more than the FRL. The PPL has the lowest total nominal and real repayments assuming
that the borrower can make the nominal balloon repayment in year 5 of R202 173. If not, the ending
balance of the loan in year 4 would have to be refinanced at current market interest rates. In this
situation, the PPL uses very similar financing terms to that of the variable rate long-term loans already
used in SA, and thus may not be a useful option to consider for BEE investments facing a liquidity
problem. Interest rates may have risen over the last four years of the loan, encouraging lenders to add a
premium into the interest rate for the refinanced loan, which could worsen the liquidity position of the
BEE enterprise. The DP requires higher initial nominal annual loan repayments (R6 508 more than the
FRL) that do not ease the liquidity problem in the early years of operation. The DP loan, however, has total nominal and real repayments that are R59 838 and R23 118, respectively, less than the FRL. A
GPL with diminishing, finite interest-rate subsidy seems to have the most potential to ease the BEE
investment's liquidity stress. The 17YRGPL used to buy land had total nominal and real repayments that
were R84 634 and R67 726 (after subsidy), respectively, less than the FRL. If the GPL was used to
purchase machinery-type assets, then the 6YRGPL would have required total nominal and real
repayments of R13 957 and R12 596, respectively, less than the FRL. Finally, the DEFPLO-2 loan
required a total nominal repayment of R531 128 (R61 290 more than the FRL) and a total real
repayment of R345 358 (R26 095 more than the FRL). Clearly, the GPL and DEFPLO-2 loan repayment
schedules can partly resolve the liquidity problem in the early years (assuming no major income shocks),
although the DEFPLO-2 plan requires higher total repayments than the FRL. The question remains
whether lenders would be prepared to implement these two financing plans for BEE investments in
productive assets, where the funds to finance the diminishing, finite interest-rate subsidy or the
deferment would be sourced, and how the interest-rate subsidy would affect asset values.
In the second part of the study, the profitability of the five proposed BEE investments in KZN during
2003 was compared for the five loan products using the Net Present Value (NPV) and the Internal Rateof-
return (lRR) capital budgeting procedures. The loan terms, interest rates, principal and characteristics
of each BEE firm are different with current rates of return on equity varying by business type.
Companies A (five-year loan) and C (10-year loan) are agribusinesses with a higher expected current
rate of return of 8% on machinery investments, while companies B (eight-year loan), D (15-year loan),
and E (20-year loan) invest in farmland with a lower expected current annual rate of return of 5%. The
five business plans may not be representative in a statistical sense of all BEE firms in KZN, but were
used because they were readily available. Initially it was assumed that donor/grant funds from a
development finance wholesaler were lent to an intermediary (like a commercial bank), which in turn,
could finance the five investments using any of the five alternative loans, with the lender's repayment to
the wholesaler being via a FRL. It was then assumed that the lender could repay its borrowed funds
using the same loans, or combinations of them, that it had granted to these companies. Results show that
GPLs and DEFPLs can resolve the liquidity problem associated with investments like land in the early
years after purchase provided that projected business performance is adequate, while the SPL and GPL
are preferred for BEE projects with stronger initial cash-flows like machinery investments. The study
also shows that the loan product that best improves the borrower's liquidity is not always best suited to
the lender. In most cases, the GPL suited the borrower, but in four of the five cases, the lender would prefer the SPL and to repay the wholesaler using the SPL. The SPL, however, is unlikely to be used,
given the large negative real net cash-flows that it generates when the final payments are due.
Recent SA experience with the GPLs (interest rate subsidies funded by private sector sugar millers via
Ithala) and the DEFPLs (via the Land Reform Empowerment Facility (LREF) which is a wholesaler of
funds in SA) suggests that there is scope to alleviate the liquidity problem if a wholesaler of funds can
offer such terms to private banks and venture capital investors who then on-lend to finance BEE asset
investments that are otherwise considered relatively high credit risks. This would shift the liquidity
problem away from the client to the wholesaler of the funds, but requires access to capital at favourable
interest rates. Such capital could be sourced from dedicated empowerment funds earmarked by the
private sector, donors and the SA government.
The lesson for policymakers is that broad-based BEE could be promoted in other farm and non-farm
sectors in SA using similar innovative loan products to complement cash grant funds via financial
intermediaries, bearing in mind the limitations of the GPL and DEFPL - such as how to finance the
subsidy or deferment, and the impact of income shocks. Donor and National Empowerment Fund capital
could be used to allocate grants to provide previously disadvantaged individuals with own equity and
also to fund finite, diminishing interest-rate subsidies via GPLs, or to fund DEFPLs (many LREF loans
have been leveraged by a cash grant component). This could create an incentive for public/private
partnerships, as public/donor funds could be then used to attract private sector funds to finance broadbased
BEE investments in SA that satisfy empowerment criteria. The five case studies did not show how
the GPLs and DEFPLs could make all profitable (positive net present value) but financially infeasible
(returns do not match the size and timing of the lender's financing plan) BEE investments in productive
assets under the FRL feasible, except for Company E that showed a positive NPV and IRR when the
19YRGPL was used. They did, however, show how the alternative loans could improve liquidity for
investments with either strong or poor cash-flows. The financiers consulted to source case studies in
KZN in 2003 at the time of the study could not provide the researcher with any profitable, but
financially infeasible, BEE business plans. This raises some concern about how effective these
empowerment loan products could be in the future as there is uncertainty over how many potential BEE
investments in productive assets in SA are likely to be profitable but financially infeasible. Further
research is thus needed to assess the impact of these alternative loans on a wider range of broad-based
BEE investments, particularly non-farm projects, than considered in this dissertation. / Thesis (M.Agric.Mgt.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2005.
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An economic analysis of the factors that affect the success of new freehold growers in the South African sugar industry.Floyd, Warren N. January 2009 (has links)
The South African (SA) Sugar Industry is committed to transformation in land ownership and supports the SA government's target to transfer 30% of freehold sugarcane land to previously disadvantaged individuals (PDls) by 2014 via the land market under the willing buyer/willing seller principle. The medium-scale farmer scheme for emerging commercial sugarcane farmers, which was introduced in 1996 to help redistribute commercial sugarcane farmland to PDIs is an important component of the SA Sugar Industry's land reform strategy. The average financial performance of emerging commercial farmers (now called New Freehold Growers or NFGs) in the SA Sugar Industry was below that of large-scale commercial farmers during 1997-2007 (real average annual net return per hectare of R390 versus R3 075 in 2007 Rand). Given that this trend raises concerns about the long-term viability of NFGs, the first aim of this
study is to identify factors that distinguish between successful, less successful and unsuccessful NFGs using a stratified random sample of 96 NFGs in KwaZulu-Natal (KZN) surveyed during July-November 2008. These NFGs were classified according to whether their mortgage loans were current (successful), in arrears (less successful) or in the process of legal action (unsuccessful). Student t-tests indicate that successful NFGs, on average, had statistically significantly more experience in farming sugarcane, larger farm sizes (proxied by average annual gross farm income), greater solvency and liquidity, and larger areas annually replanted to sugarcane than the less successful and unsuccessful NFGs. The successful NFGs also placed relatively more emphasis on computerized record keeping systems that can save time in conducting production and financial analyses to improve farm profitability. They also on average tended to make more use of their own financial record keeping system in addition to the services of bookkeepers, and used more risk management strategies than unsuccessful NFGs, in particular having off-farm investments and keeping cash and credit reserves. A multinomial logit model of factors affecting the sample NFGs' mortgage loan
repayment status estimated that extension contact, production and financial risk management capacity, farm financial and production management ability, own record keeping and cash management, and having more sugarcane farm experience to operate larger farm sizes were key determinants of successful loan repayment. The results suggest that policy makers can promote the viability of NFGs by (1) encouraging them to manage solvency and liquidity levels and implement replanting schedules in line with industry norms (e.g. debt:asset ratio of 0.5 or lower, and the replanting of 10% of the area under cane (AUC) per annum); and (2) facilitate the transfer of adequate size farms
(expected annual gross farm income can meet annual loan repayments) in commercial transactions or transactions funded via government grants to farmers who have the relevant farming experience. New Freehold Growers are also encouraged to build business relationships with industry support staff, implement good record keeping practices, and develop strategies to manage risk (e.g. off-farm investment and holding cash and credit reserves). The second aim of this study was to document the NFGs' perceptions of the scheme and industry role players in order to identify what aspects could be improved for both current and future farmers. The results suggest that most sample respondents (84%) can identify with, or have experienced the relatively low current returns (cash flow problems) usually associated with the early years after land purchase, while about 60% of the sample NFGs would have preferred to first lease their land before buying. Future NFGs, or the
beneficiaries of other land reform initiatives, must be informed that an investment in land has low current returns relative to capital growth and that the annual profit from farming is low relative to the land value. The possibility of leasing could also be considered for future land transfers to NFGs or other land reform beneficiaries to help manage the liquidity constraints associated with land purchase. Ninety-nine percent of the sample NFGs felt that it was important for new farmers to have a mentor. Post-settlement support thus needs attention from industry role players, and a sustainable mentorship programme could, in part, meet this need. / Thesis (M.Sc.Agric.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2009.
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