Lampung Province has organic rice fields which always increase with a planting area of 65.78 hectares. The problem of farmers is the limited access to the organic rice market. Products can't be sold at organic prices; some are still sold by farmers at non-organic prices. Organic rice supply chain networks need to be identified by farmers so that farmers have market information and supply chain performance. For this reason, this research purpose to analyze the supply chain of organic rice in Pringsewu Regency. Data analysis method uses the concept of supply chain performance with the Supply Chain Operations Reference (SCOR) approach. SCOR consists of five elements including flexibility, reliability, responsiveness, assets, and cost. The results of performance organic rice supply chains at all levels in the attributes of flexibility and responsiveness have achieved the superior performance position. The performance of organic rice supply chains attributes of asset at the farm level only achieves an advantage. But the supply chain performance in the attribute of reliability has not been able to reach a good performance position. So, there needs to be an improvement effort through disciplinary shipping arrangements and product quality improvements to improve supply chain performance.
The problems that often occur in marketing organic rice is marketing channels have not been efficient. The purpose in this research was to identify the marketing channels of organic rice and analyze marketing efficiency of organic rice in Lampung Province. The location of the study was conducted purposive in organic rice producing districts, namely Pringsewu and South Lampung Regency. The research method uses descriptive methods. Data analysis uses qualitative and quantitative analysis (marketing margin and farmer’s share). Total respondents were 20 producer farmers, farmer groups, 2 village collecting traders, and 1 retailer. The results showed that there were 3 types of marketing channels, namely channel I (farmers - traders - consumers), channel II (farmers - farmer groups - retail - consumers), and channel III (farmers - tengkulak - consumers). In terms of the economics of marketing channels organic rice II is more efficient than marketing channels I and III. The market channel II has the highest farmer’s share value of 80.95% with the lowest margin of IDR.4,000 per kg.
This study aims to analyze technical efficiency of onion farming and the factors that influence the technical inefficiency of onion farming. This research is conducted purposely in Ketapang Sub-district. The respondents are 49 farmers collected by sensus method. He research data is taken in September to November 2016. The technical efficiency is measured by frontier production function and estimated by Maximum Likelihood Estimation (MLE) method with Frontier 4.1c computer program. The estimation of factor that influences the technical inefficiency is applied by linear regression model simultaneously obtained by using the frontier production function. The results showed that the average of technical efficiency of onion farming in Ketapang Sub-district was 0.93 which meant very efficient. Furthermore, the factors that significantly influenced the technical inefficiency of onion farm in Ketapang Sub-district were the farming experience and counseling frequency.
Poverty is one of the indicators in judging the succeded sustainable development efforts. This study aims to analyze correlation between poverty alleviation budget programs by the Government and Local Government of Pagar Alam City with the percentage of poverty levels and determine poverty alleviation priority programs can be pursued by the Local Government of Pagar Alam City related to the achievement of SDGs mainstreaming target on 2030. The analytical method in this study uses the Pearson Correlation and Analytical Hierarchy Process (AHP). The results showed that the poverty allevation program budget had a signifiant corelation to the poverty percentage reduction in collaborative and synergistic budgeting through the APBD of Pagar Alam with APBN. Based on the assessment in the AHP model, the Social Welfare Services and Rehabilitation Program is first ranked or the first choice in the framework of poverty alleviation by SDGs mainstreaming.
This research aims to analyze the contribution of catfish cultivation enlargement to household income and the welfare of catfish cultivators household. The research data was collected in Sub-District of Natar of South Lampung regency in December 2017 -January 2018. Respondents in this research were 30 cultivators of catfish enlargement, chosen on purpose for they have been actively running their business and 4 expert people in catfish cultivation. Primary data was obtained by interviewing the respondents, while secondary data was obtained from several related institutions. Collected household income was included cultivation income of catfish, off-farm income, and non-farm income. The level of household welfare was analyzed by three criterias namely Sajogyo, Badan Pusat Statistik (BPS) and Badan Kependudukan dan Keluarga Berencana Nasional (BKKBN). The result showed that the average income of catfish cultivators business contributed 44,27 percent of the total household income of Rp52.340.376,00 per year. The household welfare level based on Sajogyo showed that 20 percent of households were in the almost-poor category, 50 percent in moderate, and 30 percent in decent living class. Based on BPS and BKKBN category showed that 20 percent of households were in the less prosperous and 80 percent were prosperous.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.