The supply of inorganic fertilizers to smallholder farmers in Uganda: Evidence for Fertilizer Policy Development
Citation
Benson, Todd; Lubega, Patrick; Bayite-Kasule, Stephen; Mogues, Tewodaj; Nyachwo, Julian. 2012. The supply of inorganic fertilizers to smallholder farmers in Uganda: Evidence for Fertilizer Policy Development. IFPRI Discussion Paper 1228. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). https://hdl.handle.net/10568/154070
Abstract/Description
Inorganic fertilizer is one of a handful of agricultural technologies that has immense potential for raising the productivity of poor smallholder farmers, enabling them to increase income, accumulate assets, and set themselves economically on a pathway out of poverty. The very low prevalence of fertilizer use by Ugandan farmers—well below 5 percent—is evidence that farmers find it difficult to access fertilizers for their crops at a price that will allow them to obtain sufficient and reliable returns from their investment in fertilizer.
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Author ORCID identifiers
Tewodaj Mogues https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3816-8445
