Asia & the Pacific Policy Studies (May 2019)

Stepping up from subsistence to commercial intensive farming to enhance welfare of farmer households in Indonesia

  • Joko Mariyono

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/app5.276
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 2
pp. 246 – 265

Abstract

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Abstract This article assesses the welfare impact of intensive chilli farming and determines the factors motivating farmers to engage in commercial farming. This study uses a structural equation model that measures the direct and indirect effects of explanatory variables on intensive chilli production and welfare. This study uses data of field surveys of randomly selected 220 farmers in three regions of Java. The results show that stepping up to intensive and profit‐oriented farming improved farmers' welfare. Internal and external factors, directly and indirectly, affected farmers' decision to devote more resources to commercial chilli farming. Farmers' knowledge, as well as access to credit, technology adoption, marketplace, and traders, played significant roles in improving rural welfare. The government needs to reform marketing system of horticultural products and establish market infrastructures to accommodate oversupply during peak season. Easy and flexible credit should be available and accessible to farmers, with technology applicable to such agriculture.

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