The gender and geography of agricultural commercialisation: what implications for the food security of Ghana’s smallholder farmers?
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Taylor & Francis Group
Abstract
Using a comparative mixed methods approach involving two
districts each in Southern and Northern Ghana, this article
addresses the question: under what conditions, and at what scale
does smallholder agricultural commercialisation promote or hinder
food security? Specifically, it presents an analysis of how gender
and spatial inequalities in resource control determine differential
capacities to commercialise and the implications of agricultural
commercialisation for food security in an export commodity
dominated Southern Ghana versus a food crop dominated
Northern Ghana. We found gender gaps in commercialisation
capacity that did not seem to disappear even in the presence of
land abundance because the gaps are structural. We also found
that, in some contexts, high rates of commercialisation do not
mean accumulation. Among females in parts of Northern Ghana,
apparent high commercialisation rates are driven by necessity, and
thus constitutes ‘distress push commercialisation’, which has
negative food security implications. While we found no evidence
of an overall positive association between commercialisation and
food security, we show that in the export crop dominated high
commercialisation zone of Southern Ghana, commercialisation
enhances food security only up to a threshold above which further
resource allocation towards non-food cash crops hurts food
security because of inefficient food markets.
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Research Article