Abstract

Increasing poultry product consumption trends have attracted researchers and development practitioners to look for interventions that transform the low-input low-output-based village chicken production to a high yielding production system. However, due to the intricate nature of the production system, there is a dearth of evidence that helps design comprehensive interventions at the smallholder level. Using national-level representative data collected from 3555 village chicken producers in Ethiopia, Nigeria, and Tanzania, this study examines the technical efficiency of village chicken production and investigates the main factors that explain the level of inefficiency. We applied a stochastic frontier analysis to simultaneously quantify the level of technical efficiency and identify factors associated with heterogeneity in inefficiency. We found that the level of technical efficiency is extremely low in the three countries, suggesting enormous opportunities to enhance productivity using available resources. The heterogeneity in technical efficiency is strongly associated with producers’ experience in breed improvements and flock management, limited technical knowledge and skills, limited access to institutions and markets, smaller flock size, gender disparities, and household livelihood orientation. We argue the need to adopt an integrated approach to enhance village producers’ productivity and transform the traditional subsistence-based production system into a commercially oriented semi-intensive production system.

Highlights

  • Genetic Gains (ACGG) project, which was conducted in Ethiopia, Nigeria, and Tanzania in 2015

  • The average number of local hens owned by village producers is five, with a minimum of three in Ethiopia and six in Tanzania and Nigeria

  • Village chicken production supports the livelihoods of many smallholder farmers in Africa, but the sector is widely known for low production and productivity

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Summary

Introduction

Village chicken production is an essential contributor of animal-source protein and income to the resource-poor and marginal groups of the society [1,2]. This sub-sector produces the largest proportion of chicken products consumed by rural and urban households, and these products have important cultural and religious values. Village chicken production is an integral part of the farming system that converts low-quality feeds and household wastes into high-quality proteins and supply manure for crop production. Despite the momentous contribution of the sub-sector to household livelihood and overall wellbeing, the level of production and productivity

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