2021
DOI: 10.4314/as.v20i3.4
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The effect of mechanization on labour employment and cropland expansion in northern Nigeria

Abstract: The study investigated the effects of mechanized agriculture on farm labour employment and cropland expansion due to the incursion of tractors into the country. Primary data were collected using specially design pretested schedule by interview method and using panel survey data, to analyze the effects of mechanization on labour employment and cropland expansion in northern Nigeria, respectively. A sample of 240 farmers were taken for the study. Tabular, percent and linear regression… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…But, more significant, is the exploitation of women that tractors provoke. The strict separation of tasks between men (tilling) and women (weeding and harvesting) precludes the possibility of reallocating to men the extra harvesting labour that tractor-tilled fields create, so that tractors actually have a harmful, exploitative effect on female labourers (Shani and Musa 2021). The findings of the present study coincides with the study by FAO (2022) that adaptation of new technology in agriculture gives rise to gender inequalities (P 46), consequently resulting in low-pay and low-status of female centric occupations.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…But, more significant, is the exploitation of women that tractors provoke. The strict separation of tasks between men (tilling) and women (weeding and harvesting) precludes the possibility of reallocating to men the extra harvesting labour that tractor-tilled fields create, so that tractors actually have a harmful, exploitative effect on female labourers (Shani and Musa 2021). The findings of the present study coincides with the study by FAO (2022) that adaptation of new technology in agriculture gives rise to gender inequalities (P 46), consequently resulting in low-pay and low-status of female centric occupations.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This could be because of the total dependence of beneficiaries on the Gurara irrigation facilities, and exposure to more advanced or mechanized way of farming, which yielded increased output from their farm activities, unlike the non-beneficiaries who depended on rainfall, streams, and rivers to irrigate their farms, with less exposure to more advanced irrigation facilities. Shani and Musa (2021) opined that most farming households in Nigeria do not possess adequate wealth to own irrigation machinery hence the nation's mechanization rate of 0.27 horsepower per hectare is well below the international recommended rate of 1.5 horsepower per hectare. The aggregate income gap (AIG) of Gurara dam beneficiaries and non-beneficiaries was -31.06 and ₦172.00, respectively.…”
Section: Food Security Status Of Beneficiary and Non-beneficiary Farm...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Using farm labour for any of the operations depends the on availability of labourers as most of the operations can take days to be completed if there are not enough hands to execute the work. Many farmers lack the resources to acquire agricultural machinery like tractors and ploughs (Shani and Musa 2021). The mixed cropping system practised by most Nigerian farmers discourages the use of machines.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%