The influence of privatised agricultural extension on downward accountability to smallholder tea farmers

Peer Reviewed
9 June 2021

Purpose
To assess the extent to which privatised extension service, which is premised to be demand-driven, delivers downward accountability to smallholder farmers who are both owners and users of agricultural services.

Design/methodology/approach
The research collected data through focus group discussions with smallholder tea farmers and key informant interviews after which the information were corroborated with semi-structured interviews with 104 smallholder farmers.

Findings
Our findings show that KTDA (Kenya Tea Development Agency) extension service has in recent years embraced methodologies that allow two-way information exchange and farmers’ involvement in planning, implementing and evaluation of extension programmes. While this transition has provided opportunities for increased accountability and empowerment of smallholder farmers, downward accountability is limited by among others; presence of multiple accountabilities, a heavy top-down governance structure, higher incentives for upward accountability, limited resourcing of extension delivery, excessive workload and unrealistic targets on the part of extension staff and weak extension–research–farmer linkages.

Practical implications
The findings of this study may be used by policymakers, extension practitioners and organisations delivering extension services to improve downward accountability and quality of advisory services

Theoretical implications
The paper contributes to the debate on outcomes of privatisation on extension provision using the accountability lens in an area dominated by perceptions on costs and payment for the services.

Robert M. Mbeche, George N. Mose, Josiah M. Ateka

Topics
EfD Authors

Files and links

Country
Sustainable Development Goals
Publication reference
Mbeche, R. M., Mose, G. N., & Ateka, J. M. (2021). The influence of privatised agricultural extension on downward accountability to smallholder tea farmers. The Journal of Agricultural Education and Extension, 28(3), 341–362. https://doi.org/10.1080/1389224x.2021.1932538
Publication | 10 January 2024