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The African Journal of Information and Communication

On-line version ISSN 2077-7213
Print version ISSN 2077-7205

AJIC vol.22  Johannesburg  2018

http://dx.doi.org/10.23962/10539/26171 

ARTICLE

 

Mobile Phone Use by Zimbabwean Smallholder Farmers: A Baseline Study

 

 

Samuel Musungwini

Lecturer, Department of Information Systems, Faculty of Commerce, Midlands State University, Gweru, Zimbabwe; and PhD Candidate, University of South Africa (UNISA), Pretoria

 

 


ABSTRACT

This article provides findings from a baseline study on mobile phone use by smallholder farmers in Zimbabwe. The study investigated use of mobile phones by 58 farming households in a village in Zimbabwe's Midlands Province. Via a survey questionnaire and a focus group discussion, the study found that 100% of the surveyed households identified "asymmetry of information" as a challenge they face in their agricultural activities, and 90% cited "absence of market information" as a challenge. Yet at the same time, the study found low levels of household mobile phone usage, with only 50% of households were found to be using mobile telephony in support of a farming activity. The article concludes with a recommendation for how to close this apparent gap between the smallholder farmers' felt need for increased agricultural information and, at the same time, their lack of use of mobile telephony to access such information.

Keywords: mobile technologies, information and communication technology (ICT), smallholder agriculture, smallholder farmers, spatial arbitrage, time arbitrage


 

 

1. Introduction

Smallholder agriculture has a direct influence on the rural livelihoods of rural Zimbabweans. Viability, productivity and sustainability of smallholder farming are critical for attainment of UN Sustainable Development Goals in Zimbabwe, particularly Goals 1, 2 and 8 (UN, n.d.). Studies have found that smallholder farmers able to secure increased access to information, appropriate technology, suitable markets, suitable credit, and better prices, and insurance are likely to be more productive and more sustainably develop (Bagazonzya, Safdar, & Sen, 2012; Jayne, Mather, & Mghenyi, 2006; Mago, 2012; Musungwini, 2016; Palmer, 2012; Pienaar & Traub, 2015; Tadesse & Bahiigwa, 2015; World Bank, 2011). And smallholder farmers with limited access to the above-listed elements, and often also faced with unsupportive government policies, droughts, and demographic pressures, are underproductive (Mittal, 2012; Mutami, 2015; Von Loeper, Musango, Brent, & Drimie, 2016).

Meanwhile, in Sub-Saharan Africa, as elsewhere in the developing world and in the developed world, the mobile phone and mobile information and communication technologies (ICTs) are transforming the manner in which people interrelate, unlocking exhilarating and unexplored opportunities in support of trade (Musungwini et al., 2014), and transforming all facets of life (Duncombe & Boateng, 2009; Ogunleye, 2010; Walsh & Power, 2011). Among the myriad sectors where mobile ICTs are having a profound impact is in developing-world smallholder agricultural settings.

Most smallholder farming systems are much less productive and profitable than they could be (Brugger, 2011; FAO, 2011; Nguthi, 2007). ICTs, and in particular mobile ICTs, are often seen as game-changers in smallholder agriculture. In one study in Tanzania, mobile phones were found to be responsible for increasing farmers' profits by 15% (Furuholt & Matotay, 2011). De Silva and Ratnadiwakara (2008), researching the impact of ICTs on rural agriculture in Sri Lanka, found that a key challenge smallholder farmers faced, and which ICTs could potentially address, was information asymmetry, or information lop-sidedness, whereby rural smallholders typically possess less of the important market and other information than the buyers and other more powerful actors they interact with in pursuit of their livelihoods. And Qiang, Kuek and Dymond (2011) have found that among the key barriers that developing-world smallholder farmers face are the information and skills gaps that constrain adoption of available technologies and technology-enabled management practices-or reduce the technical efficiency of these practices when adopted (Qiang et al., 2011).

The empirical data on mobile phone use by smallholder farmers in Sub-Saharan African settings is still very limited. The research on which this article is based sought to begin to address that gap in the Zimbabwean context, specifically in respect of the smallholder farmers of Havana Extension village in the Tokwe resettlement area, Shurugwi District, Midlands Province. The specific objectives of the research were to establish: the main agricultural practices of the smallholder farmers; the challenges faced by the farmers in their agricultural activities; the farmers' sources of agricultural information; the farmers' level of mobile phone ownership; the farmers' main uses of mobile phones; and the extent of farmers' use of mobile phones for farming activities.

 

2. Background

Sub-Saharan Africa is home to many countries that have the bulk of their population living below the poverty line and residing in rural areas. The livelihoods of these people are often wholly dependent on farming. According to a 2012 estimate by ZIMSTAT (2012), more than 67% of the population of Zimbabwe, then estimated at 14.7 million people, was residing in rural areas, where they depended on farming as a source of livelihood. Today, Zimbabwe's population is estimated at over 16 million (Trading Economics, n.d.), and it can be presumed that the majority still lives in rural areas given, among other things, the closure of many urban-based companies in the period 2012 and 2017 (as reported by Mugova (2017), Nkomo (2016), Samukange & Mutomba (2014), and Vusani (2015)).

After the country's independence in 1980, the Zimbabwean Government established agriculture marketing boards to administer and manage harvested crops. For example, grain farmers could acquire inputs from the Grain Marketing Board (GMB), and sell their produce to GMB. For cotton, there was the Cotton Marketing Board (CMB) doing the same. However, the CMB was later privatised and became Cotton Company of Zimbabwe (Cottco). The crumbling of the Zimbabwean economy in the 2000s culminated in the collapse of the agro-processing industry and in the agricultural value chain. The GMB no longer functions well, and there have been cases where it has failed to pay farmers for more than two years for grain collected. Recent years have witnessed an increasing presence by middlemen in the agriculture value chain, providing alternative markets for farmers' produce. However, the use of middlemen brings problems of its own. For example, there have been cases where middlemen bought farmers' produce and paid with fake USD notes.

Midlands Province is Zimbabwe's central province, and Shurugwi District is one of the Midlands Province's most vibrant districts in terms of agriculture, second only to Gokwe District. Statistics from the GMB depot at Tongogara growth point, in Shurugwi District, indicate that the bulk of Shurugwi District's maize deliveries since 1985 come from the Tokwe resettlement area. And within Tokwe, according to agricultural extension (Agritex) officers from the area, Havana Extension is the dominant village in terms of both the number of farmers holding Master Farmer certificates (as awarded through the Agritex system), and farmers' performance in agricultural competitions in the area (Havana farmers usually sweep the prizes). It was for these reasons that I undertook the research in Havana Extension.

 

3. Literature review

This literature review focuses on contextualising smallholder agriculture in Sub-Saharan Africa; mobile phone adoption in Sub-Saharan Africa; and mobile phone use in support of smallholder agriculture in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Smallholder agriculture in Sub-Saharan Africa

A number of articles have looked at the challenges faced by smallholder farmers in Sub-Saharan Africa (Gabagambi et al., 2013; Kavoi et al., 2014; Murray et al., 2016; Musungwini, 2016; Pienaar & Traub, 2015; Von Loeper et al., 2016). For example, in the Malawian smallholder-farmer context, Murray, Gebremedhin, Brychkova and Spillane (2016) identify the following challenges:

  • small size of land and asset holdings;

  • low food crop productivity;

  • limited choice in respect of inputs and crop types;

  • limited market information;

  • limited land-use education;

  • shifts in urban food consumption in favour of crops not produced by smallholder farmers;

  • national government shortcomings, e.g., limited national public expenditure on the agriculture sector; and

  • global governance dynamics, including shifts in global agricultural trade policies and declining donor assistance for smallholder farmers.

Similar findings are provided by Masaba (2013), based on research on palm oil smallholder farmers in Uganda, with the following identified as the major challenges:

  • limited markets, market access and related marketing infrastructure;

  • high cost of, and limited access to, high-quality farm inputs and production technology;

  • lack of access to agricultural credit facilities;

  • inadequate agricultural extension services;

  • decline in the agriculture sector growth;

  • lack of ownership and control of land by women; and

  • lack of gender analysis to inform policy formulation, planning and budgeting.

Other literature looks more specifically at issues ofdryland farming (the type offarming practised in Zimbabwe), and the need for rainwater-harvesting and development of water resources. Cooper, Dimes, Rao, Shapiro, Shiferaw and Twomlow (2008) focus on the need for climate change adaptation mechanisms for smallholder farmers in Sub-Saharan Africa. Adjognon, Liverpool-Tasie and Reardon (2017) argue that the availability of technology, inputs, and market information, while important, are of limited value if smallholder farmers do not also get access to tailored credit facilities.

Mobile phone adoption in Sub-Saharan Africa

Across the developing world, mobile phones have pervasively penetrated every facet of life, making tremendous impact on the lives of people (Ilahiane & Sherry, 2009; Waverman et al., 2005; World Bank, 2012), including reducing the costs of communicating (Baumuller, 2015; Wulystan & Andrew, 2013; Zanello, 2011).

Developing-world public-sector, private-sector, and civil society actors alike are now able to send and receive information quickly and cheaply on important economic, political, social, and cultural matters (Annan, 2013; OECD & ITU, 2011; Kushchu, 2004; Page et al., 2013; Potnis, 2014). Accordingly, African policymakers and researchers are now focused on the dynamism and potential provided by the wide variety of mobile digital applications and services. A number of articles have looked at the adoption, use, prevalence, and impact, of mobile telephony in Sub-Saharan Africa. Aker and Mbiti (2010) look at how exponential growth of mobile telephony in Sub-Saharan Africa has opened new possibilities to the continent. In most of Sub-Saharan Africa, the mobile phone is the only technology accessible to many inhabitants and therefore, across social strata, urban and rural divides, and rich and poor divides, it is facilitating connections between people; access to information; access to markets; and access to services (Aker & Mbiti, 2010; Jagun et al., 2008; Mekuria, 2007; Rashid & Elder, 2009; Wamuyu, 2014).

Mobile phone use in support of smallholder agriculture in Sub-Saharan Africa

The UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, in which 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) are identified to be pursued in the quest for a better world for all, gives much prominence to agriculture (UN, n.d.). The development of agriculture is crucial because it has a direct impact on the SDGs 1, 2, 3 and 8, while indirectly impacting 10 of the other SDGs. The mobile phone has been identified as a key driver for achievement of SDGs (Heeks, 2014a; 2014b). Qureshi and Najjar (2017) found that in developing-world small island states, an extra 10 phones per 100 people can boost GDP growth by 0.8%.

A number of articles have been published which show that the reduction in communication costs and instant delivery of messages associated with mobile telephony have brought with them tangible economic benefits which have greatly improved smallholder agricultural activities in developing countries, including Sub-Saharan African countries (Bonthu, 2014; Duncombe, 2012; Ndiwalana et al., 2008; Ogunleye, 2010; Olsen, 2008; Zanello, 2011). ICTs in general, and mobile technologies in particular, are often touted as the key catalyst to levelling the playing field in smallholder agriculture in developing countries. Developing-world, including African, farmers can obtain real-time market pricing information via mobile telephony, saving time and travel and making them better-informed about where and what price to sell their products, thereby raising their incomes and improving the sustainability of their livelihoods (Beuermann et al., 2012; Furuholt & Matotay, 2011; Islam & Grönlund, 2011; Katengeza et al., 2011; Shaffril et al., 2015; Marshall, 2018; Walsh & Power, 2011) .

Integral to the aforementioned challenge of information asymmetry, as a vulnerability for rural African farmers, is their scarcity of access to key information on a range of key matters, during farming, transportation, and marketing of their crops (Furuholt & Matotay, 2011). A study conducted in Niger from 2001 to 2006 found that the introduction of mobile phones reduced grain price dispersion by 6.4%, and reduced price variation by 12%, over the course of one year (Aker & Mbiti, 2010). In a baseline survey conducted in Tanzania in July 2013, it was established that rural farmers were making wide use of Tigo Kilimo, an agricultural information service developed and deployed by mobile network operator (MNO) Tigo (Pshenichnaya & Palmer, 2013).

Generally, smallholder farmers value mobile telephony as a fast and a convenient way to communicate with various stakeholders in the agriculture value chain and to get prompt answers in respect of problems they face (Freeman, 2017; Ogbeide & Ele, 2015). The mobile phone engenders opportunities for the farmers especially in respect of getting marketing and weather information (Churi et al., 2012; Masuka et al., 2016; Ogbeide & Ele, 2015; Tadesse & Bahiigwa, 2015). Through mobile telephony, smallholder farmers can directly keep in touch with many clients in various marketplaces, and offer their produce at competitive prices (Zyl, Alexander, Graaf, & Mukherjee, 2014; Chhachhar, Chen, & Jin, 2016; Furuholt & Matotay, 2011; Mansingh & Erena, 2016). Use of a mobile phone also enables smallholder farmers to be aware of real-time weather forecasts and current information on agricultural inputs such as fertilizers and pesticides (Baumüller, 2015; Mansingh & Erena, 2016; Wulystan & Andrew, 2013).

This mobile handset is carving an indelible mark on the socio-economic processes of rural communities in Sub-Saharan Africa, offering new directions and approaches for rural farmers (Bonthu, 2014; Chhachhar et al., 2016; Etwire et al., 2017; Mittal, 2016). Studies indicate that mobile phone technologies are producing energy and time savings for farmers, and ultimately improving their incomes (Baumüller, 2015; Mansingh & Erena, 2016; Masuka et al., 2016).

In the available literature, the factors found to have a bearing on adoption and effective utilisation of mobile phones in smallholder agriculture can be classified into three categories, as outlined in Table 1.

With its 103% mobile penetration rate and 91% literacy rate (Musungwini et al., 2014), Zimbabwe would appear to be well-placed to see its rural smallholder farmers harness mobile technologies to address some of their challenges.

 

4. Research design

The research data collection instruments used were a survey questionnaire and a focus group discussion. The questions in the survey questionnaire (see Appendix) were multiple-choice with closed-ended responses. I was assisted in the process of administering the questionnaires by two smallholder farmers in the study area. For the focus group discussion, I was the facilitator, and the discussion was recorded on a mobile phone.

Both the survey questionnaire and the focus group sought to probe the following:

  • the main agricultural practices of the smallholder farmers;

  • the challenges they faced in their agricultural activities;

  • their sources of agricultural information;

  • their level of mobile phone ownership;

  • their main uses of mobile phones;

  • and their extent of use of mobile phones for farming activities.

The questionnaire was completed by 58 smallholder farmer households in Havana Extension village. Purposive sampling was used to select Havana out of the other 13 villages in Tokwe resettlement area. As mentioned above, Havana has a history of being generally the most productive village, in terms of agriculture, in the Tokwe resettlement area. There are 60 households in Havana Extension village, and initially it was planned that the questionnaire would be administered to all the households. However, at the time of conducting the research, occupants of two households were not available, and thus 58 households were surveyed. The questionnaires were self-administered, but with participants answering in the presence of a member of the research team and thus able to seek clarification where necessary.

The focus group participants were: an agricultural extension (Agritex) officer; a veterinary officer who serves farmers in the Tokwe resettlement area; and five smallholder farmers in Tokwe. The farmers were chosen based on their being holders of Master Farmer certificates and via a snowball sampling technique, i.e., after the Agritex officer, veterinary officer, and one farmer had been identified, these three people were asked to help identify the other four farmers. The focus group discussion was conducted primarily in the Shona language, as all participants were found to be more comfortable expressing themselves in Shona than in English. Some of the participation was in a mixture of Shona and English. While there were guiding questions to the focus group discussion (linked to the survey questionnaire questions as provided in the Appendix), some degree of unfocused discussion was included.

Methodological limitations

Zimbabwe has smallholder farmers in many different areas, including resettlement areas, small-scale farms, and tribal trust lands commonly called "reserves". Havana Extension village in the Tokwe resettlement area is but one village, and therefore, the experiences of Havana Extension farmers cannot be said to be representative of all Zimbabwean smallholder farmers.

Additionally, while focus group discussions are a vital tool for qualitative research data collection, they also have inherent weaknesses that can affect the outcome of research. Among focus group participants, some may dominate the discussion, and this affects the outcome of the research. Moreover, according to Calder (1977) and Eliot & Associates (2005), focus groups cannot necessarily be expected to produce reliable data on sensitive topics that appeal to feelings and emotions, with poverty being one such issue. Finally, it must be acknowledged that, in some cases, focus group participants have been found to say things that are contrary to actual observable reality.

 

5. Findings

Respondents'farming activities

The focus group participants provided valuable contextual information about the farming activities being carried out by smallholder farmers in the area under study:

Farming is a practice which is usually practised by people from all walks of life. When everything else has failed, you find yourself going to the rural areas, and to survive you have to practice farming. Farmers in this area come from diverse backgrounds, but most have a general farming background. (focus group participant)

Farming involves land preparation, which is done [...] usually during harvesting around April-August. We usually plant crops around October and November and [...] late December due to change in weather patterns. It is critical to prepare and plant your crops on time in order to get a good yield. (focus group participant)

The focus group participants indicated that the farmers in the area mainly produced cereals, with maize the main product-as it is the staple food for the majority of the Zimbabwean populace. This finding was echoed in the survey results, with all 58 surveyed households indicating that they produce maize more than any other crop (often in combination with other crops such as groundnuts (peanuts), rapoko (millet), sunflowers, and castor beans).

Twenty-seven of the households indicated that they produced cotton up until 2012 but then stopped. (Cash crops such as cotton can be problematic for smallholder farmers because they are not for household consumption. As a consequence, marketing options for cash crops can become unreliable.) The farmers in the study said they ceased producing cotton because they had, as one research participant put it, been "robbed" by Cottco, the aforementioned company set up by government to oversee production and buying of all cotton in Zimbabwe. The farmers expressed deep displeasure at the way Cottco had treated them.

The farmers said they had entered into contract-farming relationships with Cottco, in which each farmer was given inputs for cotton production. Cottco had promised the farmers that upon harvesting, they would be able sell their cotton produce to Cottco at USDl/kg. But after harvesting, the farmers were notified that the price was now USD0.24/kg. The farmers refused to sell for some time, hoping for an improvement in the price. But the price did not change, and they eventually had to sell the cotton to Cottco at the USD0.24/kg price. The farmers then ended up owing Cottco money, after the company subtracted the value of inputs (seeds, fertiliser and chemicals) it had advanced to each farmer at the beginning of the farming season. As a result of this experience, all the farmers who participated in this research vowed that they will never produce cotton again. Some of the farmers have started to produce other cash crops, e.g., sunflowers and castor beans.

Thirty-nine of the surveyed households were found to also practise livestock-keeping, for draught power and for selling of animals to augment their incomes, and seven households were practising poultry farming. Twenty-one of the households were practising market gardening, i.e., producing vegetables and tomatoes to sell within the community. Figure 1 shows the survey findings on farming activities.

Respondents' challenges faced in agricultural activities

The survey participants generally agreed that there are inherent problems with smallholder farming in their area. In general, it was found that they see themselves as suffering from an inherent vicious cycle of poverty, i.e., poverty causing poverty.

As seen in Figure 2, the two most-cited challenges in respect of agricultural activities were asymmetry of information and absence of market information, cited by 58 (100%) and 52 (90%) of surveyed households respectively. This tallies with findings by Aker et al. (2016), Jagun et al. (2008), Kadigi et al. (2013), and Mittal (2016), who have found that such information asymmetry and information absence are major impediments to the development of smallholder agriculture.

Asymmetry of information, absence of market information

The respondents stated that, in some cases, perishable products go bad due to unavailability of markets, and that when the farmers produce good yields, they seldom benefit as fully as they could. Key causes cited for these difficulties were spatial arbitrage (different market prices for the same commodity in different market places at the same time) and time arbitrage (different prices for the same product at different time intervals).

According to one focus group participant,

[...] the major challenge is [that] the market price after harvesting is usually very bad, [so] that a farmer may not be able to recover money for input costs. Sometimes when preparing for the crop season, we get very remarkable prices being announced, but soon after harvesting we are told of very low prices. Sometimes as farmers we are compelled to sell our produce to private buyers [middlemen], who come with their cars and buy. And they go on to sell to such perennially dry places as Chirumanzu and Chivi Districts. (focus group participant)

What this focus group participant describes is an illustration of spatial arbitrage: The middlemen, after buying the grain from the farmers, then go and sell the grain at premium prices in drought-stricken areas such as Chivi and Chirumanzu.

In respect of use of time arbitrage, it was said that middlemen and some of the more-established smallholder farmers in Shurugwi District are the chief culprits. The more-established smallholder farmers were said to practise hoarding, i.e., they will not sell when they feel the price is not right, and keep their grain until the price goes up. They also buy grain from less-established smallholder farmers at very low prices-and sometimes even sell it back to these very same farmers at high prices when the farmers are desperate for money (to, for instance, buy food to feed their households, or pay school fees).

Respondents spoke of the myriad forms of persuasion middlemen use to entice farmers to part with their yields. For instance, when winter is commencing, the middlemen come with items such as jackets, vaseline, blankets, and sugar. Farmers' circumstances induce them to buy these products from the middlemen, with payment in the form of grain. According to the focus group discussion, in most cases the middlemen have much more pricing information and other important market information than the farmers, allowing the middlemen to be highly exploitative. The farmers said that by the time they get the information they need, it is typically stale and no longer useful.

Respondents'sources of agricultural information

As shown in Figure 3, all 58 surveyed households said they get agricultural information from an Agritex officer. The next most-used source of agricultural information was found to be radio (47 households), followed by television (27). Twenty-three households said they get farming information through word-of-mouth. Significantly for the purposes of this research, only 12 (21%) of the households indicated that they receive agricultural information via their mobile phones.

Respondents' uses of mobile phones

It was found that all 58 households had a mobile phone of some sort, and 37 had more than one (with some households owning up to five mobile phones). Thirty-two of the households had at least one smart phone. Figure 4 shows the uses of mobile phones by the 58 households. All 58 households said, as Figure 5 shows, they use the phones for voice-calling, SMS-messaging and mobile money transfer. The farmers indicated that, through these three uses, the mobile phone has transformed their day-to-day lives.

One focus group participant had this to say, in Shona, concerning mobile phones:

Kune munhu asina cellphone mazuva ano? Ndikasiya cellphone yangu ndinoita sendisina kupfeka. Cellphone yangu yakakosha kudarika doro zvokuti ndikawana mari chekutanga kutenga "juice card" ndozofunga zvedoro.

In English, this translates as:

Is there anyone without a mobile phone these days? When I mistakenly leave my mobile phone I feel like I am naked. My mobile phone is more important than beer and if I get any money the first thing that comes to my mind is to buy a "juice card" [airtime] and then think of beer later. (focus group participant)

Another focus group participant, who had children living in South Africa, stated that:

With my phone, I will never be stranded. Once I SMS my children that I need some money, I receive it within minutes, and I go to the nearest shop and cash out my money. (focus group participant)

The 32 households that had smart phones were found, unsurprisingly, to be the ones who take photos, and use WhatsApp, Facebook and other internet services, with their phones (activities that are not possible on non-smart feature phones).

Respondents' uses of mobile phones in support of farming activities

Earlier we saw, in Figure 3, that only 12 (21%) of the households stated that they use mobile phones as a source of agricultural information. However, later in the survey and as shown in Table 2 below, when respondents were given a list of nine farming activities (several of which were agriculture information-gathering activities, such as "enquire for inputs") and asked which ones they use their mobile phones for, it was found that somewhere between 14 and 29 households-i.e., between 24% and 50%-were engaging in each of the nine farming activities via their mobile phones. Thus, the number of households using mobile phones for agricultural information (as defined with more nuance in this latter part of the survey) would seem to be higher than the figure of 12 households (21%) from earlier in the survey suggests.

 


Table 2- Click to enlarge

 

Nevertheless, even the higher percentages of mobile-phone engagement with agricultural information detected do not top 50%, meaning that-since 100% of the households were found to have at least one mobile phone-there are still at least 50% of households not yet using their mobile phones in support of obtaining agricultural information and conducting their farming activities.

As seen in Table 2, the highest-percentage response for use of mobile phones in support of farming activities, at 50%, was for use for "general farming housekeeping". The lowest percentage, at 24%, was for use of a mobile phone for enquiring to "[obtain] market price for produce"-an interesting finding given the fact that, as we saw above, "absence of market information" was the second-most cited challenge faced in agricultural activities. (This apparent contrast between the farming households' strong felt need to get more market information and, at the same time, there weak adoption of mobile telephony as a means to acquire this information, is, at first glance, puzzling given that there are existing mobile agricultural information platforms in Zimbabwe, e.g., EcoFarmer, Mobi Agri, eMKambo and eHurudza. However, during the survey and the focus group discussion, it was found that not one of the respondents had heard of any of these platforms.)

Researcher observations

From the general observations I was able to make at the time of carrying out the research, those households that were using mobile phones in support of many of their farming activities were those that were comparatively well-resourced among the 58 surveyed households. These households tended to have homestead assets such as scotch carts (two-wheeled carts), granaries, and cattle. Meanwhile, the households not using mobile phones for agricultural purposes tended to be less-well-resourced. However, it was not within the ambit of this baseline research to probe potential correlations between livelihood success and mobile phone use for agricultural purposes.

 

6. Analysis, conclusions and recommendations

This baseline study found that mobile phone use is prevalent among the smallholder farming households in Zimbabwe's Havana Extension village, with every household that participated in the research having at least one mobile phone of some sort. But at the same time, the study found that when respondents were prompted to consider how they might be using their mobile phones for farming activities, a full 50% (29) of the households did not select any of the nine options. Meanwhile, the two key agricultural challenges selected by more than 50% of respondent households were asymmetry of information (selected by 100% of households) and absence of market information (selected by 90% of households)-two challenges that could be addressed, at least to some extent, through acquisition of information via mobile telephony.

Thus, while much of the available literature (see Ilahiane & Sherry, 2009; Masuka et al., 2016; Wyche & Steinfield, 2016; Zanello, 2011) posits a relationship between farmers' mobile phone use and positive effects on the farmers' agricultural activities, the findings of this baseline study show that the relationship is by no means automatic, at least in respect of the farmer households in the particular Zimbabwean village studied.

It seems clear that many, if not all, of the smallholder farmers of Havana Extension could benefit, at least to some extent, from using their mobile phones to engage with one or more of the existing mobile agricultural platforms serving Zimbabwe, e.g., the aforementioned EcoFarmer, Mobi Agri, eMKambo and eHurudza. But, as mentioned above, none of the surveyed farmers said they knew of these platforms. Accordingly, there could be merit in the Zimbabwean Government taking a leading role in facilitating the development of an all-encompassing mobile application that could be used to disseminate agricultural information in respect of prices and availability of inputs (e.g., seeds, fertilisers, chemicals); and market information, as provided by different buyers, for sale of agricultural products.

Such a mobile application could facilitate negotiation between smallholder farmers and both input providers and agricultural product buyers. For instance, based on the information available through such an application, smallholder farmers could collectively negotiate with suppliers and send representatives to collect inputs on behalf of a group of farmers, thus cutting travel costs and allowing selection of well-priced inputs. Similar collective actions could be undertaken for sale of the farmers' products.

Such an application could be supported by the Government of Zimbabwe through the Ministry of Agriculture. At the time of carrying out this research, the government, through the Ministry of Health and Child Welfare, was facilitating health information, through mobile phones, to all citizens. Therefore, it would seem that, with political will, an all-encompassing application in support of Zimbabwean smallholder agriculture could also come to fruition.

 

Acknowledgements

The author thanks all those who participated in this research; for without them, this work would not have been a success. Special thanks go to two farmers, who will remain anonymous, for their immense contribution in this work through assisting the researchers in administering the questionnaires.

 

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Appendix: Survey questionnaire

This study is important because smallholder farmers have become critical in the economic welfare of Zimbabwe. Over the past two decades the Zimbabwe economy experienced a continued downfall which resulted in the collapse of the commercial farming and the agribusiness formal industry. As a result farmers are faced with challenges when it comes to selling their products. Therefore understanding the smallholder farmers' operations and how they are using mobile technologies in their business has become critical to the ICT4D [ICT for development] discourse. This study will provide greater nuances to the people into the understanding of the implications of mobile communication technologies to assist in the achievement of development initiatives.

Your responses will only be used for the purposes of this research. To ensure your anonymity, you will not be asked about your name [...].

1) What are the agricultural practices you are involved in? Please tick all that apply to you.

I. Cereals II. Cash crops

III. Market gardening

IV. Livestock keeping V. Poultry

2) What are the challenges you face in the agricultural activities? Please tick all that apply to you.

I. Asymmetry of information

II. High production costs

III. Absence of market information

IV. Lack of capital

V Challenge of finding agriculture inputs

VI. Crop and animal diseases

3) What are the sources of agricultural information for you? Please tick all that apply to you.

I. Radio

II. Television

III. Agritex

IV. Word of mouth V. Mobile phones

4) a) Does anyone in the household own a mobile phone? Tick where appropriate.

I. Yes

II. No

b) Does anyone in the household own a smartphone? Tick where appropriate.

I. Yes

II. No

c) What do you use the mobile phone for? Please tick all that apply to you.

I. Listening to radio

II. Voice calling

III. SMS

IV. Photography

V. Mobile money services

VI. Facebook and other internet services

VII. WhatsApp

d) Which farming activities do you use your mobile phone for? Please tick all that apply to you.

I. Pre-planting management

II. Enquire for inputs

III. Market price for inputs

IV. Market price for produce

V. Pest and disease control information

VI. General farming housekeeping

VII. Weather information

VIII. Post harvesting management

IX. Animal husbandry

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