Demand and experiences with financial products and services in climate smart villages

Groot, A and van Steenis, O and Jans, W and Bolt, J S and Recha, J and Kimeli, P and Radeny, M and Muhimbo, O and Osmond, E and Kitondo, D and Martinez Baron, D and Santacruz, V and Khatri-Chhetri, A and Jat, M and Aggrarwal, P and Chanana, N and Pant, A and Phuong Thanh, P and Dinh Tien, N and Korner, J and Sebastiaan, L and Ouedraogo, M and Zougmore, R B and Nyour, B and Ibrahim, H and Maalong-Gae, P and Bawa, T and Diop, M and Long, T and van Asseldonk, M and Wattel, C J (2018) Demand and experiences with financial products and services in climate smart villages. Technical Report. Wageningen, Wageningen.

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Research Program : West & Central Africa

Additional Information

This research was funded by the CCAFS programme

Abstract

This study ‘Demand for and experiences with financial products and services’ describes and discusses the results of a survey to provide a first insight into the financial services that the smallholder farmers from climate smart villages use and to explore how these are related to climate smart agricultural technologies & practices. The study is one of three preliminary studies of a multi-year international research project (2016-2022) on ‘Business models, incentives and innovative finance for scaling climate smart agriculture (CSA)’. The knowledge and insights developed are used to further support ongoing and emerging climate smart projects in which CCAFS is involved. A survey was conducted to identify smallholder farmers and the small to medium enterprises (in different stages of the value chain) and their demand for and experiences with financial products and services. There were 148 respondents from 24 villages from Latin America, West Africa, East Africa, Southeast Asia and South Asia. The targeted number of female respondents (50%) was nog met in all regions, for example in India where the role of female farmers in irrigated agriculture would be limited. A limitation to the results is that in different regions a different number of villages was involved, making it more difficult to generalise results. Sometimes it would prove challenging to make conclusions about the reasoning behind the answers. The study is about adoption climate smart agriculture, but does not define the extent of adoption. ..

Item Type: Monograph (Technical Report)
Divisions: Research Program : West & Central Africa
CRP: CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS)
Uncontrolled Keywords: CSA, climate smart villages, climate smart agriculture, financial products and services, financial institutions, financial services, CSA technologies & practices, small farmers, climate change, Africa, Asia
Subjects: Others > Climate Smart Agriculture (CSA)
Others > Climate Resilient Technologies
Others > Climate Change
Depositing User: Mr Ramesh K
Date Deposited: 18 Jul 2018 09:44
Last Modified: 18 Jul 2018 09:46
URI: http://oar.icrisat.org/id/eprint/10801
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