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AAD

Agnes Andersson

Professor, dean

AAD

In-kind transfers of maize, commercialization and household consumption in Kenya

Author

  • Agnes Andersson Djurfeldt
  • Stephen K. Wambugu

Summary, in English

This article discusses in kind food transfers and whether such transfers should be interpreted as a sign of the failure of grain markets to meet the food demands of the poor. The paper elucidates on aspects of both consumption and in kind transfers of maize against a backdrop of poorly functioning markets. The paper adds to the theoretical understanding of household based linkages and provides a documentation of in kind commodity flows missing in many discussions of such linkages. The purpose of the paper is twofold: First, it sheds light on the phenomenon of in kind transfers of staple crops in the Kenyan context. Secondly, the article assesses the wider reciprocal and livelihood implications for the transferring households. The paper relies on three sets of data with respect to the methodology. It uses quantitative data collected at the household level in 2008, qualitative data collected at the village level in 2002 and 2008 as well as qualitative household level data gathered through in depth interviews with 30 heads of household and farm managers in Western Kenya in June and July of 2006. The survey found that 38% of the households transferred maize to their relatives. The explanations for in kind transfers are not primarily related to poor price incentives, but the functioning of household support systems across space. In kind transfers therefore at times drain the food resources of the sending households while constituting important sources of food security for receiving households. While the focus in the literature generally is on rural urban linkages, the direction of maize transfers was primarily rural to rural. The article concludes that existence of food transfers underpins the necessity of improving the commercial incentives for maize and other foodstuffs and eliminating the physical barriers to the free movement of foodstuffs across the national space.

Department/s

  • Department of Human Geography

Publishing year

2011

Language

English

Pages

447-464

Publication/Series

Journal of Eastern African Studies

Volume

5

Issue

3

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Topic

  • Human Geography

Keywords

  • maize
  • Kenya
  • agricultural production
  • In kind transfers
  • consumption
  • households
  • reciprocity

Status

Published

Research group

  • Afrint team

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1753-1055