Abstract

In an efforts to increase the production of rice for food security and reduced deflation of foreign reserves, the Nigerian government eases access to fertilizer, extension services and improved rice seed. Therefore, the paper examines the effect of access to fertilizer and extension services infrastructures and improved rice seed on the productivity of rice farmers as well as identify their level productivity in the Kadawa rice cluster. A five Likert structured questionnaire randomly administered to a sample of 80 rice farmers in the 2018 crop season. The Cobb-Douglas stochastic frontier production model was used to analyze the data. The descriptive result shows that males (83.3%) dominated rice farming. The economically active age group are 53%, the married group are 65.2%, those with at least six years of experience in rice farming are 74.2%, and 22.7% attained tertiary education. Further, the stochastic frontier result shows that improve rice seed and extension services positively affect rice production, while fertilizer negatively affects rice production. Further, the result shows that years of experience in rice farming reduces technical inefficiency. While qualification, age, and marital status reduce rice production. Therefore, the study recommends the provision of educational facilities for quality education. Expanding extension workers’ services to farmers, since one visit per crop season seems to be not enough to offer the necessary information to farmers. Finally, to attract experienced, educated young married farmers to partake in rice cultivation in the study area.

Highlights

  • Rice (Oryza sativa) is one of the critical crops due to the rate of its consumption because it is the most consumed crop in the state and Nigeria (Maji, Bashir, Oduba, Gbanguba, & Audu, 2015)

  • This paper attempt to examine the effect of nitrogen fertilizer, improve rice seed, and extension services on the productivity of rice farmers as well as their level of productivity in Kadawa rice cluster of Kano

  • The result of the study shows that improvement in access to improved rice seed and extension services positively impact on the productivity of rice farmers

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Rice (Oryza sativa) is one of the critical crops due to the rate of its consumption because it is the most consumed crop in the state and Nigeria (Maji, Bashir, Oduba, Gbanguba, & Audu, 2015). Tanko, Kang, and Islam (2019) reported that full harnessing of irrigated rice potentials in Kano could produce 81% of the rice demanded in the country. Rice farmers in the Kano cannot produce rice that can meet the demand of the state. To increase the productivity of rice farmers in the country, the government devised a policy that improves the ability of farmers to access nitrogen fertilizer, improved rice seed, and extension services. Productivity is said to have increased when the rate of growth of output is faster than the growth rate of inputs used in the production (Tanko, Yong, & Islam, 2019). This paper attempt to examine the effect of nitrogen fertilizer, improve rice seed, and extension services on the productivity of rice farmers as well as their level of productivity in Kadawa rice cluster of Kano

LITERATURE REVIEW
MATERIALS AND METHOD
AND DISCUSSION
Findings
CONCLUSIONS
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