Journal Article

IDS Bulletin Vol. 43 Nos. 6

Youth Farming and Nigeria’s Development Dilemma: The Shonga Experiment

Published on 1 November 2012

Youth farming is undergoing a transformation in Nigeria as the incentive framework for small‐scale farming changes.

Rural‐urban migration, rural poverty, education and the new opportunities it affords, and technological change are among the drivers of this transformation. Meanwhile, as the demand for food commodities increases with urbanisation, an exodus of labour from the countryside threatens food sufficiency at the national level. Agrarian policy faces a difficult threefold choice between state‐supported large‐scale commercial farming, training young farmers for small‐scale commercial farming, and continuing present policies of improving incentive structures for small‐scale peasant farmers. In Kwara State, the Shonga experiment in large‐scale commercial methods, involving 13 Zimbabwean farmers, is viewed through the lens of youth farming and the necessary transfer of national food provisioning to a new generation of producers. It is found that youth farming is likely to be as dependent on state subsidies as the Zimbabweans are.

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This article comes from the IDS Bulletin 43.6 (2012) Youth Farming and Nigeria’s Development Dilemma: The Shonga Experiment

Cite this publication

Ariyo, J., A. and Mortimore, M. (2012) Youth Farming and Nigeria's Development Dilemma: The Shonga Experiment. IDS Bulletin 43(6): 58-66

Authors

Joseph Ayodele Ariyo

Michael Mortimore

Publication details

published by
Institute of Development Studies
doi
10.1111/j.1759-5436.2012.00379.x

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About this publication

Region
Nigeria Zimbabwe

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