2012
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-8268.2012.00322.x
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Non‐farm Income Diversification in Rural Ghana: Patterns and Determinants

Abstract: Evidence abounds in the rural livelihoods literature that rural households do not only receive a significant proportion of their incomes from non-farm sources, but also it is a significant source of employment for rural folks. This paper examines the pattern and determinants of non-farm income diversification in rural Ghana. Results show that off-farm income constituted 43 percent of rural household income in 2005/6. Female-headed households tend to have larger off-farm income shares compared to male-headed ho… Show more

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Cited by 62 publications
(62 citation statements)
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“…Although, many different efforts were made by governments of developing countries to fight rural poverty, the heterogeneous nature of the problem along with diversified livelihood strategies adopted by households made the efforts more difficult; and therefore poverty reduction remained to be the major policy challenge facing almost all countries in the developing world. In fact, poverty reduction requires that individuals be engaged in productive employments and economic activities that could help them generate adequate income to secure better living; and that development endeavors need to be targeted to the sectors where most of the poor employed and live (Ellis, 2001;Haggblade et al, 2010;Bernardin, 2012). Obviously, in the context of developing countries, the appropriate area is the rural and agricultural sector.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although, many different efforts were made by governments of developing countries to fight rural poverty, the heterogeneous nature of the problem along with diversified livelihood strategies adopted by households made the efforts more difficult; and therefore poverty reduction remained to be the major policy challenge facing almost all countries in the developing world. In fact, poverty reduction requires that individuals be engaged in productive employments and economic activities that could help them generate adequate income to secure better living; and that development endeavors need to be targeted to the sectors where most of the poor employed and live (Ellis, 2001;Haggblade et al, 2010;Bernardin, 2012). Obviously, in the context of developing countries, the appropriate area is the rural and agricultural sector.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This same period saw the intense advocacy of diversification into nonfarm activities by farm households in rural areas of developing countries (see inter alia, Barrett & Reardon, 2000;Reardon et al, 2006;Barrett et al, 2001;World Bank, 2003;Davis, 2006;Senadza, 2012;Owoo & Naudé, 2014;Senadza, 2014). In theory, literature reveals that "demand-pull" and "distress-push" factors motivate farm households to diversify into nonfarm activities (Davis, 2006).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, their results also show that the households' dependence on enterprise income is positively correlated with poverty. The consequence of the published results from this earlier set of articles is to establish, as an empirical regularity, the importance of the contributions of small enterprises in poor countries in terms of income generation and employment (Senadza, ).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%