Overcoming the Barriers to Entry of Newcomer Sustainable Farmers: Insights from the Emergence of Organic Clusters in Japan
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. Newcomer Sustainable Farmers and the Challenges They Face
2.2. Spatially Distanced and Spatially Proximate Newcomer Networks: From Communities of Practice to Clusters
2.3. Sustainable Farming and Newcomers in Japanese Agriculture
2.4. Challenges Faced by Japanese Newcomers in Organic Farming
3. Methods
3.1. Case Study Area
3.2. Data Collection and Analysis
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Respondents’ Characteristics
4.2. Challenges Faced by Newcomers
The first land plot is difficult. It is difficult to move from having zero land to one. If you’ve just moved here, they [local farmers] don’t want to lend to someone they don’t know. If someone else living here tells them ‘please lend it to him’, maybe you’ll be able to rent. That depends on how much confidence that person has in you. You definitely need a ‘sponsor’ to look after you. After you rent a plot and start growing things, once the people in the surroundings know that you can do it, it becomes easier when you want to rent somewhere else.(male, 46, island area)
I would like to do [full-time farming]. When I worked at [workplace name], it was very hard work. I was always returning home with the last train. At that time, I really wanted to quit and talked with my family about quitting and wanting to do farming, but my family was absolutely against it. At that time I had two children, and I was told ‘you absolutely cannot do it’. […] in Japan, agriculture has the image of ‘not being profitable, not being able to make a living’, so if you say you will quit an office job and do farming, people will usually be opposed and surprised.(male, 37, middle area)
I went to the city hall to apply for the subsidy. The first thing the staff asked me was ‘how much do you want to earn in a year?’. Not about what kind of vegetables I wanted to grow or something like that. I guess it wasn’t wrong. It was not wrong but I thought, ’wow’ [negatively surprised]. […] Money comes first in the support system. What about basic things like ‘let’s grow and eat healthy food?’ […]. I think the order is all wrong.(female, 43, mountain area)
Among people who want to start farming, those who want to do organic farming are a lot. But the way of thinking of the government regarding new farmers is that large-scale, single-crop farmers are better than organic farmers. The first kind of people can get support, but if a young person who wants to do organic farming comes, there is no specific support system for them. This is a problem.(female, 44, middle area)
There is a strong nuance of ‘getting farmers to do what the prefecture wants’. The most important thing for the government is how to create a strong farm business. My job is all about giving that kind of support. […] The prefecture doesn’t really ‘touch’ organic farming. In organic farming there are large-scale farms too, but among the people who want to do organic farming, most want to do small scale farming […]. Therefore, they are not the target of the prefecture’s work.(male, 37, middle area)
[It’s hard to] make time for everything. The time required to manage the farm, and then the time to go to events, go to market, or to go on business trips to sell. […] if you don’t have a place to sell, once you produce things you don’t know what to do with them; but if you go out to find a place where to sell, then nobody is working in the field. So the [conventional] farmers around me were saying that I didn’t go out in the fields […], that I wasn’t a farmer but a trader, and so on. It was really harsh.(male, 45, island area)
4.3. Organic Farmer Clusters
4.3.1. Characteristics of the Local Context and Community
I guess it’s because the local people support and accept people who want to do this type of agriculture. They are not full-time farmers, many people do part-time farming, so maybe their way of thinking is more flexible, ‘softer’. There are many people with an open-minded way of thinking, who are more accepting.(male, 38, middle area)
In other areas, you face a lot of opposition if you grow without pesticides. In another city in the Prefecture, called [city name], it is not possible to do it. I have friends there, but they have been told that they’re not allowed to grow rice if they don’t use pesticides. They can’t do it. I heard this kind of story. Here, I have never been told this kind of thing. So, it was easy for me to do organic farming.(male, 46, island area)
[The owners] haven’t used this land for about 20 years, and their children don’t live here either. Whenever the land becomes overgrown with weeds, the neighbours would give them a phone call. But since they don’t come to the island, it’s bothersome to come just for cutting the grass.(male, 49, island area)
[Town name] is about 1 hour away by car from Hiroshima city. And there is a lot of farmland too. However, there are no large farmland areas, many are scattered here and there in the mountains, so it is not suitable for large scale farming. However, because it is close enough to the consumption area of Hiroshima city, it is easy to go and sell vegetables. In this case, I think that a model of farming focused on growing many diversified vegetables that can fetch high unit prices, such as rare and organic vegetables, is suitable for this area. If you go to […] places with large farmland areas, [farmers] go in the direction of doing conventional farming, such as growing nothing but cheap cabbage. But here, if you want to grow cabbage in that way there isn’t too much space, mechanization is also difficult, so rather than doing this, it is better to make diversified vegetables.(male, 42, mountain area)
4.3.2. Presence of Charismatic Pioneer Farmers Acting as “Attractors”
Every month, the people who are doing organic farming in this area meet at [pioneer farmers’ name]’s place. We have about 8 members now, it’s a group we created by ourselves to exchange information. […].(male, 42, mountain area)
Since everyone is doing a similar style of farming, ‘companions’ (nakama) with similar characteristics keep gathering here. I was the first, then […] various other people came here, and little by little, a good cycle has been created. […] here there are more younger people because we are relatively closer to the city, so maybe it’s easier to do organic farming.(male, 38, middle area)
4.3.3. Advantages of Organic Clusters
Most of the people around me […] are people growing food for themselves. [...] Very rarely do they come to my farm to talk about sales or farming techniques [...]. They are very encouraging, but at the same time you wish you had more mentors, more people helping you, or giving you new ideas... but I don’t really have that.(male, 31, island area)
There are other organic farming groups, but we wanted to make one for this area, so we did it by ourselves, with people from the same generation. […] and we wanted to create it within the community so we could talk. If we go far, the weather will be different, and the crops you produce will be different, so in order to learn about cultivation methods that would be directly useful to us, we limited the group to people in our vicinity. Other than that, there are a lot of merits in the fact that when you’re busy you can help each other, and that’s why it’s good to have people nearby.(male, 42, mountain area)
If people like [pioneer newcomer organic farmer name] had more visibility, those who want to start farming without using chemical fertilizers or pesticides would feel more encouraged. The people who have the intention of doing organic farming are many, so if […] the impression that this kind of farming is actually possible became stronger, newcomers would increase, and it would create a good cycle.(male, 46, island area)
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Characteristics | n | % |
---|---|---|
Age cohort of starting farming of principal manager | ||
20–29 | 8 | 25 |
30–39 | 8 | 25 |
40–49 | 12 | 37.5 |
50+ | 4 | 12.5 |
Marital status | ||
Married/Partner | 28 | 87.5 |
Single | 4 | 12.5 |
Educational level | ||
High school | 5 | 15.6 |
University | 27 | 84.4 |
Type of respondents by principal manager’s gender and characteristics of farm management | ||
Male sole manager | 17 | 53.1 |
Couple co-managing the farm | 13 | 40.6 |
Co-managed with non-spouse family members | 2 | 6.3 |
Part/Full time (principal manager) | ||
Full-time | 23 | 71.9 |
Part-time, agriculture main occupation | 2 | 6.3 |
Part-time, agriculture secondary occupation (including post-retirement farming) | 7 | 21.9 |
Farming family background (access to family land) | ||
Access to family land | 8 | 25 |
No access to family land | 24 | 75 |
Relationship to place/Migration pathway (of principal manager) | ||
I-turn (urban to rural migrant) | 25 | 78.1 |
U-turn (return migrant) | 7 | 21.9 |
Main Way of Acquiring Knowledge Related to Sustainable Agricultural Practices Upon Starting Farming | n | % |
---|---|---|
Formal training (traineeships, employment at other farms) | 14 | 43.8 |
Informal learning/training (short farm visits, volunteering) | 10 | 31.3 |
Mainly self-study and direct experience | 7 | 21.9 |
Formal education (college, university) | 1 | 3.1 |
Use of hired labour | ||
Yes | 6 | 18.8 |
No | 26 | 81.3 |
Use of volunteer labour | ||
Yes | 17 | 53.1 |
No | 15 | 46.9 |
Use of new farmer subsidy | ||
Yes | 7 | 21.9 |
No | 25 | 78.1 |
Type of farm in terms of production | ||
Diversified vegetables main | 12 | 37.5 |
Diversified vegetables main + rice | 8 | 25 |
Citrus main | 5 | 15.6 |
Other single crops (grapes; garlic; wheat) | 4 | 12.5 |
Rice main | 3 | 9.4 |
Reuse of abandoned farmland | ||
Yes | 29 | 90.6 |
No | 3 | 9.4 |
Farmland size (average) | ha | |
Total (owned + rented) | 1.28 | |
Rented | 0.96 | |
Owned | 0.99 |
Theme | n | % |
---|---|---|
Being able to access only a farmland of poor quality or long abandoned, especially at the beginning | 17 | 53.1 |
Being unable to earn a living wage in the first years of farming | 17 | 53.1 |
Negative perception of Japanese government’s agricultural policies in relation to sustainable farming | 17 | 53.1 |
Difficulty in accessing a farmland due to lack of connections to local farmers or community members | 15 | 46.9 |
Difficulty in accessing marketing channels and drawbacks of having to find customers independently | 14 | 43.8 |
Labour scarcity in comparison to the higher labour requirements of sustainable farming practices | 12 | 37.5 |
Facing opposition from local conventional farmers | 11 | 34.4 |
Difficulty in finding suitable housing | 10 | 31.3 |
Lack of concrete support for organic farming (financial, technical, etc.) | 10 | 31.3 |
Choosing not to use subsidies for new entrant farmers on account of their conditions being considered unsuitable | 9 | 28.1 |
Lack of information on sustainable farming techniques and of places where to learn them | 8 | 25.0 |
High upfront investment cost to buy the necessary farming equipment | 7 | 21.9 |
Facing opposition from family members concerning the decision of starting farming or to farming-related choices | 7 | 21.9 |
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Zollet, S.; Maharjan, K.L. Overcoming the Barriers to Entry of Newcomer Sustainable Farmers: Insights from the Emergence of Organic Clusters in Japan. Sustainability 2021, 13, 866. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13020866
Zollet S, Maharjan KL. Overcoming the Barriers to Entry of Newcomer Sustainable Farmers: Insights from the Emergence of Organic Clusters in Japan. Sustainability. 2021; 13(2):866. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13020866
Chicago/Turabian StyleZollet, Simona, and Keshav Lall Maharjan. 2021. "Overcoming the Barriers to Entry of Newcomer Sustainable Farmers: Insights from the Emergence of Organic Clusters in Japan" Sustainability 13, no. 2: 866. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13020866
APA StyleZollet, S., & Maharjan, K. L. (2021). Overcoming the Barriers to Entry of Newcomer Sustainable Farmers: Insights from the Emergence of Organic Clusters in Japan. Sustainability, 13(2), 866. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13020866