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Wikipedia

Smallholding

A smallholding or smallholder is a small farm operating under a small-scale agriculture model.[2] Definitions vary widely for what constitutes a smallholder or small-scale farm, including factors such as size, food production technique or technology, involvement of family in labor and economic impact.[3] Smallholdings are usually farms supporting a single family with a mixture of cash crops and subsistence farming. As a country becomes more affluent, smallholdings may not be self-sufficient, but may be valued for the rural lifestyle. As the sustainable food and local food movements grow in affluent countries, some of these smallholdings are gaining increased economic viability. There are an estimated 500 million smallholder farms in developing countries of the world alone, supporting almost two billion people.[4][5]

Woman smallholder farmers in Kenya. In many parts of Africa and other parts of the world, women are the primary smallholders. In many contexts, women face unequal access to land, markets, knowledge, and other assets needed to maintain their farms.[1]
Small vegetable farm in Hainan, China

Small-scale agriculture is often in tension with industrial agriculture, which finds efficiencies by increasing outputs, monoculture, consolidating land under big agricultural operations, and economies of scale. Certain labor-intensive cash-crops, such as cocoa production in Ghana or Côte d'Ivoire, rely heavily on small holders; globally, as of 2008 90% of cocoa is grown by smallholders.[6] These farmers rely on cocoa for up to 60 to 90 per cent of their income.[7] Similar trends in supply chains exist in other crops like coffee, palm oil, and bananas.[8] In other markets, small scale agriculture can increase food system investment in small holders improving food security. Today some companies try to include smallholdings into their value chain, providing seed, feed or fertilizer to improve production.[9]

Because smallholding farms frequently require less industrial inputs and can be an important way to improve food security and sustainable food systems in less-developed contexts, addressing the productivity and financial sustainability of small holders is an international development priority and measured by indicator 2.3 of Sustainable Development Goal 2.[10][3] Additionally, since agriculture has such large impacts on climate change, Project Drawdown described "Sustainable Intensification for Smallholders" an important method for climate change mitigation.[11]

Issues edit

Productivity edit

According to conventional theory, economies of scale allow agricultural productivity, in terms of inputs versus outputs, to rise as the size of the farm rises. Specialization has also been a major factor in increasing agricultural productivity, for example as commodity processing began to move off the farm in the 19th century, farmers could spend more effort on primary food production.[12]

Although numerous studies show that larger farms are more productive than smaller ones,[13] some writers state that whilst conventional farming creates a high output per worker, some small-scale, sustainable, polyculture farmers can produce more food per acre of land.[14]

 
A smallholder coffee farmer in Colombia contributing her coffee to an agricultural cooperative. Cooperatives give small farmers an opportunity to be more competitive in markets, especially markets like coffee and cocoa where many of the purchasers are large businesses with high market power.

Small farms have some economic advantages. Farmers support the local economy of their communities. An American study showed that small farms with incomes of $100,000 or less spend almost 95 percent of their farm-related expenses within their local communities. The same study took into comparison the fact that farms with incomes greater than $900,000 spend less than 20 percent of their farm-related expenses in the local economy.[15]

Small-scale agriculture often sells products directly to consumers. Disintermediation gives the farmer the profit that would otherwise go to the wholesaler, the distributor, and the supermarket. About two-thirds of the revenue is expended on product marketing.[citation needed] If farmers sell their products directly to consumers, they receive a higher percentage of the retail price, although they will spend more time selling the same amounts of product, which is an opportunity cost.

Food security edit

Because smallholding farms frequently require less industrial inputs and can be an important way to improve food security in less-developed contexts, addressing the productivity and financial sustainability of small holders is an international development priority and measured by indicator 2.3 of Sustainable Development Goal 2.[10][3] The International Fund for Agricultural Development has an ongoing program for Adaptation for Smallholder Agriculture.[16]

During the global COVID-19 pandemic, and the attendant disruptions of food systems, their role has become more important.[17]

Environmental and climate adaptation edit

While the historical focus on smallholders has been increasing global food supply under climate change and the role played by smallholder communities, climate adaptation efforts are still hindered by lack of information on how smallholder farmers are experiencing and responding to climate change. There is lack of detailed, context-specific information on what climate change portends to smallholder farmers in different and widely varying agroecological environments and socio-economic realities, and what management strategies they are employing to deal with these impacts.[18][19]

Especially for smallholders working in commodity crops, climate change introduces an increasing amount of variability to farmer economic viability; for example, coffee production globally is under increased threat, and smallholders in East Africa, such as in the Ugandan, Tanzanian or Kenyan industries, are rapidly losing both viable coffee land and productivity of plants.[20]

In some cases, smallholders are an important source of deforestation. For example, smallholders are an important component of the oil palm industry of Southeast Asia, contributing 40% of the production. Because such farmers are less able to access financing than larger businesses, they are unable to fund methods to increase the productivity of their farms when yields decline, increasing their need to clear more land.[21] Increasing productivity, especially amongst smallholder farms, is an important way to decrease the amount of land needed for farming and slow environmental degradation through processes like deforestation.[11][21]

Formats edit

The definition of a small farm has varied over time and by country. Agricultural economists have analyzed the distinctions among farm sizes since the field's inception.[22] Traditional agricultural economic theory considered small farms inefficient, a stance that began to be challenged in the 1950s.[23] An overview of research published by the World Bank in 1998 indicated that the productivity of small farms often exceeded that of larger ones.[24]

Hobby farms edit

A hobby farm (also called a lifestyle block, acreage living, or rural residential) is a smallholding or small farm that is maintained without expectation of being a primary source of income. Some are held merely to provide recreational land for horses, managed as working farms for secondary income, or simply to bring homeowners closer to nature.

Nucleus estate and smallholder edit

Nucleus estate and smallholder (NES) is a farming system for commodity crops, often oil palm, practised in different world regions. It is most famous today for its application in the palm oil sector in Indonesia. The nucleus is the part of such a plantation that is under concession and management of the company, while another part of the plantation is operated by smallholders typically on their own land but planted by the company. NES farming is a particular form of contract farming.

Croft edit

 
The Shetland Crofthouse Museum at Dunrossness, Shetland, with peat stacked outside
A croft is a traditional Scottish term for a fenced or enclosed area of land, usually small and arable, and usually, but not always, with a crofter's dwelling thereon. A crofter is one who has tenure and use of the land, typically as a tenant farmer, especially in rural areas.

Smallholder Farms edit

Smallholder farms, also known as small-scale farms, encompass a diverse array of agricultural operations, varying from those owning the land they cultivate to those who do not.[25] These farmers, often family-oriented, rely significantly on family labor to meet production needs, with women contributing a substantial portion of farm labor.[26]

The agricultural work on smallholder farms predominantly involves family members, with occasional hired labor, particularly during peak seasons.[26] However, the productivity per hectare tends to increase with higher involvement of family members in farm activities.[26] In addition to farm-related duties, women on smallholder farms often shoulder responsibilities such as collecting fuel and water and engaging in low-value, small-scale trading activities.[26]

Many smallholder farms supplement their income through off-farm work, crucial for sustaining livelihoods, particularly during agricultural downturns like droughts.[26] Engaging in off-farm employment also serves to build social capital and resilience within these communities.[26] Having multiple sources of income or employment opportunities off the farm contributes to the economic stability of smallholder farming households. These off-farm income-generating activities offer a buffer against agricultural shocks and allow for a diversified livelihood strategy, providing families with increased financial security and access to essential resources.

Developing countries edit

In many developing countries, smallholding is a small plot of land with low rental value, used to grow crops.[27] By some estimates, there are 525 million smallholder farmers in the world.[28] These farms vary in land sizes, production and labor intensities.[29] The distribution of farm sizes depends on a number of agroecological and demographic conditions, as well as on economic and technological factors.[30] Smallholders are critical to local and regional food systems, as well as livelihoods, and especially so during periods of food supply chain disruptions.[31] Smallholders dominate production in certain key sectors such as coffee and cocoa. Various types of agribusinesses enterprises work with smallholding farmers in a range of roles including buying crops, providing seed, and acting as financial institutions.[32]

In low-income countries, women make up 43 percent of smallholding agricultural labor but produce 60–80 percent of food crops.[11]

India edit

In India, there is five sizes classification for smallholders. These are 'marginal' less than 1 hectare (2+12 acres), 'small' between 1 and 2 hectares (2+12 and 5 acres), 'semi medium' between 2 and 4 hectares (5 and 10 acres), 'medium' between 4 and 10 hectares (9.9 and 24.7 acres), 'large' above 10 hectares (25 acres). If we use 4 hectares (10 acres) (marginal + small + medium) as a threshold, 94.3% of holdings are small and these constitute 65.2% of all farmland.[5] The bulk of India's hungry and poor people are constituted of smallholder farmers and landless people. 78% country's farmers own less than 2 hectares (5 acres), which constitutes 33% of total farmland but at the same time, they produce 41% of the country's food grains. 20% of the world's poor live in India, although the country was self-sufficient in food production in 2002 due to the first Green Revolution started in the latter half of the twentieth century, numerous households lacked resources to purchase food. Holdings less than 2 ha contributed 41% of total food grain production in 1991 compared to 28% in 1971, which means a substantial increase, whereas medium holdings registered a mere 3% increase in the same period and large holdings registered a decline from 51 to 35%. This signifies the importance of smallholders in the Green Revolution and the attainment of national food security. Smallholder families are becoming more vulnerable and more disadvantaged due to the expansion of international trade liberalisation. The needs and aspirations of small farmers must feature prominently in policies of market reform that seek to improve food and nutritional security. India's total increase rate of productivity across the farming sector was far less in 1990's when compared to previous decades.[33]

Kenya edit

 
Kenyan smallholder dairy farmer

Kenya's smallholder means someone who owns, possess or produces agricultural products in small-scale . smallholder production accounts for 78 percent of total agricultural production and 70 percent of commercial production.[34] Majority of the smallholder population work in farm sizes averaging 0.47 hectares (114 acres).[35] This represents the vast majority of Kenya's rural poor population who depend on agriculture for their livelihood.[36] Adverse risk events during the period 1980–2012 led to production losses in smallholder farms resulting in a drop in agricultural gross domestic product (GDP) of 2 percent or more.[36] Increasing the productivity of smallholder farmers is encouraged due to its potential of improving food availability, increasing rural incomes, lowering poverty rates, and growing the economy.[36] Diversification of crops in smallholder farms is one of the potential strategies in sustaining agricultural productivity, and copping with marketing risks.[37] It is also a transitional step from subsistence to commercial agriculture.[citation needed] Age, education of household head, type of crops, cropping system, amount of credit, and irrigation facilities are some of the factors influencing diversification in smallholder farms.[38]

Tanzania edit

Along the upper and middle reaches of the Nduruma River in the Pangani River Basin, Tanzania, there is not enough water to go around. Smallholder farmers address inequities in land and water distribution by enforcing existing traditional local rules. Whilst larger estate farms may have governmental licences guaranteeing rights to the water, a study found that those large-scale farms which adhere to the traditional water rights structures fare better in terms of social reputation, which better ensures their access to water. Adhering to the water law in order to enforce their permits is less effective, as regional Tanzanian local governments generally attempt to avoid conflict with their populace. On a larger scale, however, existing traditional rules are ineffective in maintaining cooperation among users along the Nduruma River.[39]

Thailand edit

In 1975, there were 4.2 million smallholder farming households in Thailand. In 2013, Thailand had 5.9 million smallholder farming households. The average area of these smallholdings had shrunk from 3.7 to 3.2 hectares (9+14 to 8 acres) over that period. Instead of farms getting larger and less numerous, as has been the case in the Global North, the reverse happened: they got smaller and more numerous.[40]

United States edit

Several definitions of small farm have been formulated in legislation. In 1977 the US Congress, via the Food and Agriculture Act of 1977, defined a small farm as one with sales under $20,000.[41] At the time these comprised 70% of farms in the US.[22] The Act sponsored additional research on small farming operations by US land grant universities and their extension services and mandated that an annual report on these activities be issued by the US Secretary of Agriculture.[22] A 1997 study by the United States Small Farms Commission defined small farms as those with less than $250,000 in gross receipts annually on which day-to-day labor and management are provided by the farmer and/or the farm family that owns the production, or owns or leases the productive assets. In 2000, such farms accounted for about 90% of the more than 2.1 million U.S. farms, but only about 40% of U.S. farm production.

The concentration of production on fewer and larger operations is a longstanding concern among some segments of the agricultural community. Others view these changes as inevitable, and even necessary to maintain the efficiency and competitiveness of the sector.

Farm typology analysis by the USDA Economic Research Service divides the small family farm category into five groups:

  1. limited-resource farms;
  2. retirement farms;
  3. residential/lifestyle farms;
  4. farming occupation/lower-sales,
  5. farming occupation/high-sales.

Technology for small farmers edit

Many farmers are upset by their inability to fix the new types of high-tech farm equipment.[42] This is due mostly to companies using intellectual property law to prevent farmers from having the legal right to fix their equipment (or gain access to the information to allow them to do it).[43] This has encouraged groups such as Open Source Ecology and Farm Hack to begin to make open-source agricultural machinery.

European Union edit

The debate concerning the role of small farms within the European Union is ongoing. The European Commission states that more than three quarters of farm holdings in the European Union are less than 10 hectares, with a large number less than five hectares,[44] although as of 2009 it had not established a formal definition of the term that could be used in its Common Agricultural Policy. The public perception of the possible benefits of small-scale farming has led to requests for further studies from the European Commission.[45]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Gulden, Kathrine Torday. "International Women's Day: Closing the gender gap among smallholders - Nibio". Nibio EN. Retrieved 2021-10-05.
  2. ^ "Small-Scale Agriculture - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics". www.sciencedirect.com. Retrieved 2020-10-17.
  3. ^ a b c Khalil, Clara Aida; Conforti, Piero; Ergin, Ipek; Gennari, Pietro (June 2017). Defining Small-scale Food Producers to Monitor Target 2.3. of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development (PDF) (Report).
  4. ^ . www.ifad.org. Archived from the original on 2013-05-05. Retrieved 2018-01-02.
  5. ^ a b "Investing in smallholder agriculture" (PDF). fao.org. June 2013. Retrieved 23 February 2021.
  6. ^ "How many smallholders are there worldwide producing cocoa? What proportion of cocoa worldwide is produced by smallholders?". www.icco.org. Retrieved 2020-10-17.
  7. ^ "Why Sustainable Cocoa Farming Matters for Rural Development". www.csis.org. 6 September 2012. Retrieved 2020-11-30.
  8. ^ Schneider, Kate; Gugerty, Mary Kay (August 17, 2010). Impact of Export-Driven Cash Crops on Smallholder Households (Report). Evans School Policy Analysis and Research.
  9. ^ Christina Gradl; et al. (March 2013). "Promising agribusiness". dandc.eu.
  10. ^ a b "2.3.1 Productivity of small-scale food producers | Sustainable Development Goals | Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations". www.fao.org. Retrieved 2020-10-17.
  11. ^ a b c "Sustainable Intensification for Smallholders". Project Drawdown. 2020-02-06. Retrieved 2020-10-16.
  12. ^ Beierlein, James G.; Schneeberger, Kenneth C.; Osburn, Donald D. (2003). Principles of Agribusiness Management (3 ed.). Prospect Heights, Illinois: Waveland Press. pp. 10–20. ISBN 1-57766-267-9.
  13. ^ Deolalikar, Anil B. (1981). "The Inverse Relationship between Productivity and Farm Size: A Test Using Regional Data from India". American Journal of Agricultural Economics. 63 (2): 275–279. doi:10.2307/1239565. ISSN 0002-9092. JSTOR 1239565.
  14. ^ Gorelick, Steven; Norberg-Hodge, Helen (2002). Bringing the Food Economy Home: Local Alternatives to Global Agribusiness. Kumarian Press (US). Retrieved 5 November 2014.
  15. ^ Chism, J.W.; Levins, R.A. (1994). "Farm". Minnesota Agricultural Economist. Spring 1994 (676).
  16. ^ "Adaptation for Smallholder Agriculture Programme". IFAD. Retrieved 2020-11-07.
  17. ^ "Building the Resilience of Smallholder Farmers | Land & Water | Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations | Land & Water | Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations". www.fao.org. Retrieved 2020-12-01.
  18. ^ Harvey, Celia A.; Saborio-Rodríguez, Milagro; Martinez-Rodríguez, M. Ruth; Viguera, Barbara; Chain-Guadarrama, Adina; Vignola, Raffaele; Alpizar, Francisco (2018-08-14). "Climate change impacts and adaptation among smallholder farmers in Central America". Agriculture & Food Security. 7 (1): 57. doi:10.1186/s40066-018-0209-x. ISSN 2048-7010. S2CID 52048360.
  19. ^ Kristjanson, Patti; Neufeldt, Henry; Gassner, Anja; Mango, Joash; Kyazze, Florence B.; Desta, Solomon; Sayula, George; Thiede, Brian; Förch, Wiebke; Thornton, Philip K.; Coe, Richard (2012-09-01). "Are food insecure smallholder households making changes in their farming practices? Evidence from East Africa". Food Security. 4 (3): 381–397. doi:10.1007/s12571-012-0194-z. ISSN 1876-4525. S2CID 16140399.
  20. ^ Welle, Deutsche. "How climate change threatens African coffee farmers | DW | 18.11.2020". DW.COM. Retrieved 2020-11-19.
  21. ^ a b "Future Smallholder Deforestation: Possible Palm Oil Risk". Chain Reaction Research. 2019-10-29. Retrieved 2020-10-17.
  22. ^ a b c Martin, Lee R. (1992). A Survey of Agricultural Economics Literature: Traditional fields of agricultural economics, 1940s to 1970s, Volume 1. University of Minnesota Press. p. 30. ISBN 978-0-8166-0801-0.
  23. ^ "Evolving Themes in Rural Development 1950s-2000s" (PDF). Development Policy Review. p. 440. Retrieved 2009-08-20.
  24. ^ Lutz, Ernst (1998). Agriculture and the environment: perspectives on sustainable rural development. World Bank. p. 57. ISBN 978-0-8213-4249-7.
  25. ^ "What is a Smallholder Farmer?". Heifer International. Retrieved 2023-11-18.
  26. ^ a b c d e f Rapsomanikis, G., 2015. The economic lives of smallholder farmers: An analysis based on household data from nine countries. Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Rome. (see pp. 5-20)
  27. ^ Bunnett, R.B. (2002). Interactive Geography 4, pp. 125, 315. SNP Pan Pacific Publishing. ISBN 981-208-657-9.
  28. ^ Nagayets,Oksana (2005). The Future of Small Farms. International Food Policy Research Institute and Overseas Development Institute Vision 2020 Initiative, p. 356.
  29. ^ Commodities and Development Report 2015-Smallholder Farmers and Sustainable Commodity Development. UN. 2015. pp. 2–21.
  30. ^ FAO (2015). The economic lives of smallholder farmers-An analysis based on household data from nine countries. FAO.
  31. ^ Savary, Serge; Akter, Sonia; Almekinders, Conny; Harris, Jody; Korsten, Lise; Rötter, Reimund; Waddington, Stephen; Watson, Derrill (2020-08-01). "Mapping disruption and resilience mechanisms in food systems". Food Security. 12 (4): 695–717. doi:10.1007/s12571-020-01093-0. ISSN 1876-4525. PMC 7399354. PMID 32837660.
  32. ^ International Finance Corporation (2013). Working with Smallholders: A Handbook for Firms Building Sustainable Supply Chains, p. 12. http://www.farms2firms.org
  33. ^ Singh, R.B.; Kumar, P (2002). "Small Holder Farmers in India:Food Security & Agricultural Policy" (PDF). coin.fao.org. FAO Regional office for Asia and Pacific. Retrieved 24 February 2021.
  34. ^ Bank, World; Agriculture, International Center for Tropical (2016-01-15). "Climate-Smart Agriculture in Kenya". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  35. ^ FAO (2015). The economic lives of smallholder farmers-An analysis based on household data from nine countries. FAO.
  36. ^ a b c D’Alessandro, Stephen P.; Caballero, Jorge; Lichte, John; Simpkin, Simon (November 2015). "Kenya". hdl:10986/23350. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  37. ^ Kemboi, Evans; Muendo, Kavoi; Kiprotich, Collins (2020-01-01). Yildiz, Fatih (ed.). "Crop diversification analysis amongst smallholder farmers in Kenya(empirical evidence from Kamariny ward, Elgeyo Marakwet County)". Cogent Food & Agriculture. 6 (1): 1834669. doi:10.1080/23311932.2020.1834669. ISSN 2331-1932.
  38. ^ Kemboi, Evans; Muendo, Kavoi; Kiprotich, Collins (2020-01-01). "Crop diversification analysis amongst smallholder farmers in Kenya(empirical evidence from Kamariny ward, Elgeyo Marakwet County)". Cogent Food & Agriculture. 6 (1). doi:10.1080/23311932.2020.1834669. ISSN 2331-1932.
  39. ^ Condon, Madison; Komakech, Hans; Zaag, Pieter van der (2012-01-01). "The Role of Statutory and Local Rules in Allocating Water between Large- and Small-Scale Irrigators in an African River Catchment". Water SA. 38 (1): 115.
  40. ^ Rigg, Jonathan (3 September 2018). "Modern country, persistent smallholder: Explaining the puzzle of Thailand's truncated agrarian transition". The Asia Dialogue. University of Nottingham, Asia Research Institute. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  41. ^ "Status Report: Small Farms in the US" (PDF). USDA. 1998-05-01. Retrieved 2009-08-20.
  42. ^ "New High-Tech Farm Equipment Is a Nightmare for Farmers". WIRED. 2015-02-05. Retrieved 2016-06-05.
  43. ^ "We Can't Let John Deere Destroy the Very Idea of Ownership". WIRED. 2015-04-21. Retrieved 2016-06-05.
  44. ^ European Commission, The Small Farmers Scheme, accessed 11 October 2022
  45. ^ "Small Farms in the EU: How Small is Small?" (PDF). University of Kent. Retrieved 2009-08-20.

Bibliography edit

  • Thomas, Frieder; Schmidt, Götz (2006). Förderung von Existenzgründungen in der Landwirtschaft: ein Projekt im Auftrag des BMELV (03HS016): Projektbericht. Münster-Hiltrup: Landwirtschaftsverlag. ISBN 3-7843-0513-X.

  This article incorporates public domain material from Jasper Womach. Report for Congress: Agriculture: A Glossary of Terms, Programs, and Laws, 2005 Edition (PDF). Congressional Research Service.

Further reading edit

  • Graham, Peter Anderson (1911). "Allotments and Small Holdings" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 1 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 699–704. This provides an extensive historical and global view as of the early 20th century.

External links edit

smallholding, smallholder, redirects, here, british, magazine, smallholder, magazine, smallholding, smallholder, small, farm, operating, under, small, scale, agriculture, model, definitions, vary, widely, what, constitutes, smallholder, small, scale, farm, inc. Smallholder redirects here For the British magazine see Smallholder magazine A smallholding or smallholder is a small farm operating under a small scale agriculture model 2 Definitions vary widely for what constitutes a smallholder or small scale farm including factors such as size food production technique or technology involvement of family in labor and economic impact 3 Smallholdings are usually farms supporting a single family with a mixture of cash crops and subsistence farming As a country becomes more affluent smallholdings may not be self sufficient but may be valued for the rural lifestyle As the sustainable food and local food movements grow in affluent countries some of these smallholdings are gaining increased economic viability There are an estimated 500 million smallholder farms in developing countries of the world alone supporting almost two billion people 4 5 Woman smallholder farmers in Kenya In many parts of Africa and other parts of the world women are the primary smallholders In many contexts women face unequal access to land markets knowledge and other assets needed to maintain their farms 1 Small vegetable farm in Hainan ChinaSmall scale agriculture is often in tension with industrial agriculture which finds efficiencies by increasing outputs monoculture consolidating land under big agricultural operations and economies of scale Certain labor intensive cash crops such as cocoa production in Ghana or Cote d Ivoire rely heavily on small holders globally as of 2008 90 of cocoa is grown by smallholders 6 These farmers rely on cocoa for up to 60 to 90 per cent of their income 7 Similar trends in supply chains exist in other crops like coffee palm oil and bananas 8 In other markets small scale agriculture can increase food system investment in small holders improving food security Today some companies try to include smallholdings into their value chain providing seed feed or fertilizer to improve production 9 Because smallholding farms frequently require less industrial inputs and can be an important way to improve food security and sustainable food systems in less developed contexts addressing the productivity and financial sustainability of small holders is an international development priority and measured by indicator 2 3 of Sustainable Development Goal 2 10 3 Additionally since agriculture has such large impacts on climate change Project Drawdown described Sustainable Intensification for Smallholders an important method for climate change mitigation 11 Contents 1 Issues 1 1 Productivity 1 2 Food security 1 3 Environmental and climate adaptation 2 Formats 2 1 Hobby farms 2 2 Nucleus estate and smallholder 2 3 Croft 2 4 Smallholder Farms 3 Developing countries 3 1 India 3 2 Kenya 3 3 Tanzania 3 4 Thailand 4 United States 4 1 Technology for small farmers 5 European Union 6 See also 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 Further reading 10 External linksIssues editProductivity edit According to conventional theory economies of scale allow agricultural productivity in terms of inputs versus outputs to rise as the size of the farm rises Specialization has also been a major factor in increasing agricultural productivity for example as commodity processing began to move off the farm in the 19th century farmers could spend more effort on primary food production 12 Although numerous studies show that larger farms are more productive than smaller ones 13 some writers state that whilst conventional farming creates a high output per worker some small scale sustainable polyculture farmers can produce more food per acre of land 14 nbsp A smallholder coffee farmer in Colombia contributing her coffee to an agricultural cooperative Cooperatives give small farmers an opportunity to be more competitive in markets especially markets like coffee and cocoa where many of the purchasers are large businesses with high market power Small farms have some economic advantages Farmers support the local economy of their communities An American study showed that small farms with incomes of 100 000 or less spend almost 95 percent of their farm related expenses within their local communities The same study took into comparison the fact that farms with incomes greater than 900 000 spend less than 20 percent of their farm related expenses in the local economy 15 Small scale agriculture often sells products directly to consumers Disintermediation gives the farmer the profit that would otherwise go to the wholesaler the distributor and the supermarket About two thirds of the revenue is expended on product marketing citation needed If farmers sell their products directly to consumers they receive a higher percentage of the retail price although they will spend more time selling the same amounts of product which is an opportunity cost Food security edit Because smallholding farms frequently require less industrial inputs and can be an important way to improve food security in less developed contexts addressing the productivity and financial sustainability of small holders is an international development priority and measured by indicator 2 3 of Sustainable Development Goal 2 10 3 The International Fund for Agricultural Development has an ongoing program for Adaptation for Smallholder Agriculture 16 During the global COVID 19 pandemic and the attendant disruptions of food systems their role has become more important 17 Environmental and climate adaptation edit While the historical focus on smallholders has been increasing global food supply under climate change and the role played by smallholder communities climate adaptation efforts are still hindered by lack of information on how smallholder farmers are experiencing and responding to climate change There is lack of detailed context specific information on what climate change portends to smallholder farmers in different and widely varying agroecological environments and socio economic realities and what management strategies they are employing to deal with these impacts 18 19 Especially for smallholders working in commodity crops climate change introduces an increasing amount of variability to farmer economic viability for example coffee production globally is under increased threat and smallholders in East Africa such as in the Ugandan Tanzanian or Kenyan industries are rapidly losing both viable coffee land and productivity of plants 20 In some cases smallholders are an important source of deforestation For example smallholders are an important component of the oil palm industry of Southeast Asia contributing 40 of the production Because such farmers are less able to access financing than larger businesses they are unable to fund methods to increase the productivity of their farms when yields decline increasing their need to clear more land 21 Increasing productivity especially amongst smallholder farms is an important way to decrease the amount of land needed for farming and slow environmental degradation through processes like deforestation 11 21 Formats editThe definition of a small farm has varied over time and by country Agricultural economists have analyzed the distinctions among farm sizes since the field s inception 22 Traditional agricultural economic theory considered small farms inefficient a stance that began to be challenged in the 1950s 23 An overview of research published by the World Bank in 1998 indicated that the productivity of small farms often exceeded that of larger ones 24 Hobby farms edit This section is an excerpt from Hobby farm edit A hobby farm also called a lifestyle block acreage living or rural residential is a smallholding or small farm that is maintained without expectation of being a primary source of income Some are held merely to provide recreational land for horses managed as working farms for secondary income or simply to bring homeowners closer to nature Nucleus estate and smallholder edit This section is an excerpt from Nucleus estate and smallholder edit Nucleus estate and smallholder NES is a farming system for commodity crops often oil palm practised in different world regions It is most famous today for its application in the palm oil sector in Indonesia The nucleus is the part of such a plantation that is under concession and management of the company while another part of the plantation is operated by smallholders typically on their own land but planted by the company NES farming is a particular form of contract farming Croft edit This section is an excerpt from Croft land edit nbsp The Shetland Crofthouse Museum at Dunrossness Shetland with peat stacked outside A croft is a traditional Scottish term for a fenced or enclosed area of land usually small and arable and usually but not always with a crofter s dwelling thereon A crofter is one who has tenure and use of the land typically as a tenant farmer especially in rural areas Smallholder Farms edit Smallholder farms also known as small scale farms encompass a diverse array of agricultural operations varying from those owning the land they cultivate to those who do not 25 These farmers often family oriented rely significantly on family labor to meet production needs with women contributing a substantial portion of farm labor 26 The agricultural work on smallholder farms predominantly involves family members with occasional hired labor particularly during peak seasons 26 However the productivity per hectare tends to increase with higher involvement of family members in farm activities 26 In addition to farm related duties women on smallholder farms often shoulder responsibilities such as collecting fuel and water and engaging in low value small scale trading activities 26 Many smallholder farms supplement their income through off farm work crucial for sustaining livelihoods particularly during agricultural downturns like droughts 26 Engaging in off farm employment also serves to build social capital and resilience within these communities 26 Having multiple sources of income or employment opportunities off the farm contributes to the economic stability of smallholder farming households These off farm income generating activities offer a buffer against agricultural shocks and allow for a diversified livelihood strategy providing families with increased financial security and access to essential resources Developing countries editIn many developing countries smallholding is a small plot of land with low rental value used to grow crops 27 By some estimates there are 525 million smallholder farmers in the world 28 These farms vary in land sizes production and labor intensities 29 The distribution of farm sizes depends on a number of agroecological and demographic conditions as well as on economic and technological factors 30 Smallholders are critical to local and regional food systems as well as livelihoods and especially so during periods of food supply chain disruptions 31 Smallholders dominate production in certain key sectors such as coffee and cocoa Various types of agribusinesses enterprises work with smallholding farmers in a range of roles including buying crops providing seed and acting as financial institutions 32 In low income countries women make up 43 percent of smallholding agricultural labor but produce 60 80 percent of food crops 11 India edit In India there is five sizes classification for smallholders These are marginal less than 1 hectare 2 1 2 acres small between 1 and 2 hectares 2 1 2 and 5 acres semi medium between 2 and 4 hectares 5 and 10 acres medium between 4 and 10 hectares 9 9 and 24 7 acres large above 10 hectares 25 acres If we use 4 hectares 10 acres marginal small medium as a threshold 94 3 of holdings are small and these constitute 65 2 of all farmland 5 The bulk of India s hungry and poor people are constituted of smallholder farmers and landless people 78 country s farmers own less than 2 hectares 5 acres which constitutes 33 of total farmland but at the same time they produce 41 of the country s food grains 20 of the world s poor live in India although the country was self sufficient in food production in 2002 due to the first Green Revolution started in the latter half of the twentieth century numerous households lacked resources to purchase food Holdings less than 2 ha contributed 41 of total food grain production in 1991 compared to 28 in 1971 which means a substantial increase whereas medium holdings registered a mere 3 increase in the same period and large holdings registered a decline from 51 to 35 This signifies the importance of smallholders in the Green Revolution and the attainment of national food security Smallholder families are becoming more vulnerable and more disadvantaged due to the expansion of international trade liberalisation The needs and aspirations of small farmers must feature prominently in policies of market reform that seek to improve food and nutritional security India s total increase rate of productivity across the farming sector was far less in 1990 s when compared to previous decades 33 Kenya edit nbsp Kenyan smallholder dairy farmerKenya s smallholder means someone who owns possess or produces agricultural products in small scale smallholder production accounts for 78 percent of total agricultural production and 70 percent of commercial production 34 Majority of the smallholder population work in farm sizes averaging 0 47 hectares 11 4 acres 35 This represents the vast majority of Kenya s rural poor population who depend on agriculture for their livelihood 36 Adverse risk events during the period 1980 2012 led to production losses in smallholder farms resulting in a drop in agricultural gross domestic product GDP of 2 percent or more 36 Increasing the productivity of smallholder farmers is encouraged due to its potential of improving food availability increasing rural incomes lowering poverty rates and growing the economy 36 Diversification of crops in smallholder farms is one of the potential strategies in sustaining agricultural productivity and copping with marketing risks 37 It is also a transitional step from subsistence to commercial agriculture citation needed Age education of household head type of crops cropping system amount of credit and irrigation facilities are some of the factors influencing diversification in smallholder farms 38 Tanzania edit Along the upper and middle reaches of the Nduruma River in the Pangani River Basin Tanzania there is not enough water to go around Smallholder farmers address inequities in land and water distribution by enforcing existing traditional local rules Whilst larger estate farms may have governmental licences guaranteeing rights to the water a study found that those large scale farms which adhere to the traditional water rights structures fare better in terms of social reputation which better ensures their access to water Adhering to the water law in order to enforce their permits is less effective as regional Tanzanian local governments generally attempt to avoid conflict with their populace On a larger scale however existing traditional rules are ineffective in maintaining cooperation among users along the Nduruma River 39 Thailand edit Further information Agriculture in Thailand In 1975 there were 4 2 million smallholder farming households in Thailand In 2013 Thailand had 5 9 million smallholder farming households The average area of these smallholdings had shrunk from 3 7 to 3 2 hectares 9 1 4 to 8 acres over that period Instead of farms getting larger and less numerous as has been the case in the Global North the reverse happened they got smaller and more numerous 40 United States editSeveral definitions of small farm have been formulated in legislation In 1977 the US Congress via the Food and Agriculture Act of 1977 defined a small farm as one with sales under 20 000 41 At the time these comprised 70 of farms in the US 22 The Act sponsored additional research on small farming operations by US land grant universities and their extension services and mandated that an annual report on these activities be issued by the US Secretary of Agriculture 22 A 1997 study by the United States Small Farms Commission defined small farms as those with less than 250 000 in gross receipts annually on which day to day labor and management are provided by the farmer and or the farm family that owns the production or owns or leases the productive assets In 2000 such farms accounted for about 90 of the more than 2 1 million U S farms but only about 40 of U S farm production The concentration of production on fewer and larger operations is a longstanding concern among some segments of the agricultural community Others view these changes as inevitable and even necessary to maintain the efficiency and competitiveness of the sector Farm typology analysis by the USDA Economic Research Service divides the small family farm category into five groups limited resource farms retirement farms residential lifestyle farms farming occupation lower sales farming occupation high sales Technology for small farmers edit Main article Right to repair Many farmers are upset by their inability to fix the new types of high tech farm equipment 42 This is due mostly to companies using intellectual property law to prevent farmers from having the legal right to fix their equipment or gain access to the information to allow them to do it 43 This has encouraged groups such as Open Source Ecology and Farm Hack to begin to make open source agricultural machinery European Union editThe debate concerning the role of small farms within the European Union is ongoing The European Commission states that more than three quarters of farm holdings in the European Union are less than 10 hectares with a large number less than five hectares 44 although as of 2009 update it had not established a formal definition of the term that could be used in its Common Agricultural Policy The public perception of the possible benefits of small scale farming has led to requests for further studies from the European Commission 45 See also editAllotment gardening Asset based community development Building integrated agriculture Croft Family farm Foodscaping Forest gardening Hobby farm Market garden Peasant Permaculture Subsistence agriculture Underground farming Urban agriculture Urban horticulture Urban forestry Vertical farmingReferences edit Gulden Kathrine Torday International Women s Day Closing the gender gap among smallholders Nibio Nibio EN Retrieved 2021 10 05 Small Scale Agriculture an overview ScienceDirect Topics www sciencedirect com Retrieved 2020 10 17 a b c Khalil Clara Aida Conforti Piero Ergin Ipek Gennari Pietro June 2017 Defining Small scale Food Producers to Monitor Target 2 3 of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development PDF Report Operating model ifad org www ifad org Archived from the original on 2013 05 05 Retrieved 2018 01 02 a b Investing in smallholder agriculture PDF fao org June 2013 Retrieved 23 February 2021 How many smallholders are there worldwide producing cocoa What proportion of cocoa worldwide is produced by smallholders www icco org Retrieved 2020 10 17 Why Sustainable Cocoa Farming Matters for Rural Development www csis org 6 September 2012 Retrieved 2020 11 30 Schneider Kate Gugerty Mary Kay August 17 2010 Impact of Export Driven Cash Crops on Smallholder Households Report Evans School Policy Analysis and Research Christina Gradl et al March 2013 Promising agribusiness dandc eu a b 2 3 1 Productivity of small scale food producers Sustainable Development Goals Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations www fao org Retrieved 2020 10 17 a b c Sustainable Intensification for Smallholders Project Drawdown 2020 02 06 Retrieved 2020 10 16 Beierlein James G Schneeberger Kenneth C Osburn Donald D 2003 Principles of Agribusiness Management 3 ed Prospect Heights Illinois Waveland Press pp 10 20 ISBN 1 57766 267 9 Deolalikar Anil B 1981 The Inverse Relationship between Productivity and Farm Size A Test Using Regional Data from India American Journal of Agricultural Economics 63 2 275 279 doi 10 2307 1239565 ISSN 0002 9092 JSTOR 1239565 Gorelick Steven Norberg Hodge Helen 2002 Bringing the Food Economy Home Local Alternatives to Global Agribusiness Kumarian Press US Retrieved 5 November 2014 Chism J W Levins R A 1994 Farm Minnesota Agricultural Economist Spring 1994 676 Adaptation for Smallholder Agriculture Programme IFAD Retrieved 2020 11 07 Building the Resilience of Smallholder Farmers Land amp Water Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations Land amp Water Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations www fao org Retrieved 2020 12 01 Harvey Celia A Saborio Rodriguez Milagro Martinez Rodriguez M Ruth Viguera Barbara Chain Guadarrama Adina Vignola Raffaele Alpizar Francisco 2018 08 14 Climate change impacts and adaptation among smallholder farmers in Central America Agriculture amp Food Security 7 1 57 doi 10 1186 s40066 018 0209 x ISSN 2048 7010 S2CID 52048360 Kristjanson Patti Neufeldt Henry Gassner Anja Mango Joash Kyazze Florence B Desta Solomon Sayula George Thiede Brian Forch Wiebke Thornton Philip K Coe Richard 2012 09 01 Are food insecure smallholder households making changes in their farming practices Evidence from East Africa Food Security 4 3 381 397 doi 10 1007 s12571 012 0194 z ISSN 1876 4525 S2CID 16140399 Welle Deutsche How climate change threatens African coffee farmers DW 18 11 2020 DW COM Retrieved 2020 11 19 a b Future Smallholder Deforestation Possible Palm Oil Risk Chain Reaction Research 2019 10 29 Retrieved 2020 10 17 a b c Martin Lee R 1992 A Survey of Agricultural Economics Literature Traditional fields of agricultural economics 1940s to 1970s Volume 1 University of Minnesota Press p 30 ISBN 978 0 8166 0801 0 Evolving Themes in Rural Development 1950s 2000s PDF Development Policy Review p 440 Retrieved 2009 08 20 Lutz Ernst 1998 Agriculture and the environment perspectives on sustainable rural development World Bank p 57 ISBN 978 0 8213 4249 7 What is a Smallholder Farmer Heifer International Retrieved 2023 11 18 a b c d e f Rapsomanikis G 2015 The economic lives of smallholder farmers An analysis based on household data from nine countries Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations Rome see pp 5 20 Bunnett R B 2002 Interactive Geography 4 pp 125 315 SNP Pan Pacific Publishing ISBN 981 208 657 9 Nagayets Oksana 2005 The Future of Small Farms International Food Policy Research Institute and Overseas Development Institute Vision 2020 Initiative p 356 Commodities and Development Report 2015 Smallholder Farmers and Sustainable Commodity Development UN 2015 pp 2 21 FAO 2015 The economic lives of smallholder farmers An analysis based on household data from nine countries FAO Savary Serge Akter Sonia Almekinders Conny Harris Jody Korsten Lise Rotter Reimund Waddington Stephen Watson Derrill 2020 08 01 Mapping disruption and resilience mechanisms in food systems Food Security 12 4 695 717 doi 10 1007 s12571 020 01093 0 ISSN 1876 4525 PMC 7399354 PMID 32837660 International Finance Corporation 2013 Working with Smallholders A Handbook for Firms Building Sustainable Supply Chains p 12 http www farms2firms org Singh R B Kumar P 2002 Small Holder Farmers in India Food Security amp Agricultural Policy PDF coin fao org FAO Regional office for Asia and Pacific Retrieved 24 February 2021 Bank World Agriculture International Center for Tropical 2016 01 15 Climate Smart Agriculture in Kenya a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help FAO 2015 The economic lives of smallholder farmers An analysis based on household data from nine countries FAO a b c D Alessandro Stephen P Caballero Jorge Lichte John Simpkin Simon November 2015 Kenya hdl 10986 23350 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Kemboi Evans Muendo Kavoi Kiprotich Collins 2020 01 01 Yildiz Fatih ed Crop diversification analysis amongst smallholder farmers in Kenya empirical evidence from Kamariny ward Elgeyo Marakwet County Cogent Food amp Agriculture 6 1 1834669 doi 10 1080 23311932 2020 1834669 ISSN 2331 1932 Kemboi Evans Muendo Kavoi Kiprotich Collins 2020 01 01 Crop diversification analysis amongst smallholder farmers in Kenya empirical evidence from Kamariny ward Elgeyo Marakwet County Cogent Food amp Agriculture 6 1 doi 10 1080 23311932 2020 1834669 ISSN 2331 1932 Condon Madison Komakech Hans Zaag Pieter van der 2012 01 01 The Role of Statutory and Local Rules in Allocating Water between Large and Small Scale Irrigators in an African River Catchment Water SA 38 1 115 Rigg Jonathan 3 September 2018 Modern country persistent smallholder Explaining the puzzle of Thailand s truncated agrarian transition The Asia Dialogue University of Nottingham Asia Research Institute Retrieved 23 April 2020 Status Report Small Farms in the US PDF USDA 1998 05 01 Retrieved 2009 08 20 New High Tech Farm Equipment Is a Nightmare for Farmers WIRED 2015 02 05 Retrieved 2016 06 05 We Can t Let John Deere Destroy the Very Idea of Ownership WIRED 2015 04 21 Retrieved 2016 06 05 European Commission The Small Farmers Scheme accessed 11 October 2022 Small Farms in the EU How Small is Small PDF University of Kent Retrieved 2009 08 20 Bibliography editThomas Frieder Schmidt Gotz 2006 Forderung von Existenzgrundungen in der Landwirtschaft ein Projekt im Auftrag des BMELV 03HS016 Projektbericht Munster Hiltrup Landwirtschaftsverlag ISBN 3 7843 0513 X nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from Jasper Womach Report for Congress Agriculture A Glossary of Terms Programs and Laws 2005 Edition PDF Congressional Research Service Further reading editGraham Peter Anderson 1911 Allotments and Small Holdings In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 1 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 699 704 This provides an extensive historical and global view as of the early 20th century External links edit nbsp Look up smallholding in Wiktionary the free dictionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Smallholding amp oldid 1185748475, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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