Financing Sustainable Agriculture in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Review of the Role of Financial Technologies
Abstract
:1. Introduction
FinTech and Potential Contribution to Sustainable Agriculture in SSA
- Which digital financial technologies are accessed and utilized by smallholder farmers in SSA?
- How does FinTech help finance sustainable agriculture in SSA, and what are the current challenges?
- How does FinTech help promote financial inclusion in SSA?
2. Conceptual Framework
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Study Area
3.2. Data Collection
- “FinTech and agriculture”;
- “Financial services and agriculture”;
- “Digital agriculture”;
- “Digital credit and agriculture”;
- “Digital savings and agriculture”;
- “Digital payments and agriculture”;
- “Insurance and agriculture”.
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Which Financial Technologies Are Being Accessed and Utilized by Smallholder Farmers in SSA?
4.2. How does FinTech Help Finance Sustainable Agriculture in SSA and What Are the Current Challenges?
- Economic sustainability—characterized by less input costs, high farm production, good market prices, and increased incomes for farmers. This results in increased farm productivity, profitability, adaptation and strengthened food production systems in the long term;
- Environmental sustainability—characterized by mitigation activities, such as reduced greenhouse gas emissions, carbon sequestration on farmlands, use of fortified agrochemicals, and renewable energy sources by farmers; and
- Infrastructural and resource sustainability—this entails that platforms that provide financial services to smallholder farmers should continually be maintained and upgraded.
4.2.1. Digital Credit
4.2.2. Digital Savings
4.2.3. Digital Insurance
4.2.4. Digital Payment Platforms
4.2.5. Current Challenges
4.3. How does FinTech Help Promote Financial Inclusion in SSA
4.3.1. M-PESA in Kenya
4.3.2. The Agriculture and Climate Risk Enterprise (ACRE) Africa
4.3.3. MyAgro
4.3.4. FinTech Associations in Africa
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Category of Product | Product Name | Country | Description | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|
Digital Savings | MyAgro | Senegal, Mali, and Tanzania | MyAgro is an input retailer in West Africa that helps farmers to develop savings habits. Smallholder farmers can save small amounts of money that they can invest in their farms in the future to boost production. It also offers smallholder farmers a convenient method of paying for inputs like certified seeds and fertilizers that help improve farm profits and harvests. | [42] |
Insurance | Bundled Insurance | Kenya | After purchasing certified seeds, smallholder farmers receive a free hybrid crop insurance service. This improves the uptake of certified seeds, and willingness to pay for insurance in the area under cultivation. | [17] |
Digital Credit | AgroTech- Digital platforms for trust in credit provision | Ghana | Through the AgroTech platform, smallholder farmers in Ghana have access to hybrid seeds that have significant resistance to droughts, resulting in efficient production. They also receive information that helps them respond to pest and disease outbreaks. | [24] |
Digital Payments and Digital Credit | SmartFarmer | Botswana, Malawi, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Tanzania, Lesotho, South Africa, and Mozambique | The SmartFarmer innovation was launched by Riskflow DBS in 2019. It seeks to connect agricultural actors such as funders, farmers, input providers, government departments, etc. to agricultural value chains. The innovation also provides agricultural producers with extension services and information on best agricultural practices and general agricultural information that helps them adapt/mitigate climate change. The information supports farmers in farm-level decision-making, leading to improved profits and agricultural productivity. | [13] |
Digital Credit and Digital Savings | M-SHWARI | Kenya | Through M-SHWARI, farmers have access to credit/capital for purchasing fertilizers, quality seeds, and farm machinery. This increases farm productivity and incomes. | [40] |
Digital Credit | M-KOPA | Kenya Tanzania and Uganda | M-KOPA supports smallholder farmers in adopting renewable energy sources, irrigation, and purchasing inputs, e.g., small livestock farmers in Kenya use solar-powered LED bulbs to keep their poultry warm, increasing productivity. | [25,41] |
Insurance | NWK Agri-Services/Farmershield weather | Zambia | Farmershield trained smallholder cotton farmers on yield improvement. Through this, the area cultivated under cotton production in Zambia increased. | [39] |
Digital Credit | Rice mobile Finance RiMFin | Ghana | Through RiMFin, rice producers found it easier to hire farm laborers for harvesting, land preparation, and other farm activities. Through the service, rainfed/irrigation outgrower farmers also received training on pest and disease control, seed and fertilizer placement, and water management, thus improving their productivity. | [39] |
Digital Credit | DigiFarm | Kenya | Through a partnership with Mezzanine, DigiFarm provides smallholder farmers with information on affordable/discounted inputs and technical advice on best farm practices for sustainable agriculture. Farmers are trained in planting, application of agrochemicals, and post-harvest management. | [42] |
Digital Credit | MobiGrow | Kenya and Rwanda | MobiGrow is a financial innovation that supports farmers and pastoralists with credit. In addition to providing credit in Kenya, MobiGrow supports farmers with a mobile-based platform that gives farmers information on sustainable crop and livestock management practices to improve farm productivity. Farmers are also trained in financial literacy and business management. | [42,57] |
Insurance | ACRE- Agriculture and Climate Risk Enterprise | Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania, Zambia, Malawi, Mozambique | ACRE insures smallholder farmers’ loans for buying certified/improved seeds and fertilizers, improving their adoption of insurance and quality seeds, as well as farm productivity. | [8,38,54] |
Digital Payments | Hello Tractor | Nigeria, Kenya, Mozambique, Senegal, South Africa, and Tanzania | Hello Tractor is also known as the ‘uber of tractors.’ Hello Tractor addresses the challenge of under-cultivation of arable land by small-scale farmers who have small plots of land. Due to increased mechanization, farm productivity increases. In addition, small-scale farmers are provided with information that helps them optimize input usage and manage other resources on their farms. | [27,42,47] |
Digital Credit | ECLOF- Climate-Smart Lending Platform | Kenya | Under the ECLOF climate-smart lending platform in Kenya, lenders ensure that the credit provided to smallholder farmers has the intended sustainable land use management practices. The adoption of climate-smart farming by smallholder farmers is monitored through a mobile-based technology, in compliance with the loan requirements, and this forms the basis for credit scoring. | [58] |
Digital Credit | Apollo Agriculture | Kenya | In addition to supporting smallholder farmers with credit for the purchasing of inputs, Apollo provides tailored agronomic advice through mobile phones. | [42] |
Digital Payments and Insurance | AgUnity | Papua New Guinea, and Kenya | AgUnity is a mobile-based platform that uses blockchain technology to enable farmers to remotely contact and connect with each other and coordinate/organize sustainable farming activities such as crop rotation programs, harvesting, equipment hiring, etc. | [59] |
Digital Savings and Digital Credit | M-PESA | Kenya | M-PESA enables rural women and farmers to save and invest in sustainable off-farm livelihood strategies such as fishing. In addition, they have access to credit to purchase farm inputs such as high-yielding seed varieties. M-PESA also provides farmers with fast money to finance farm-related activities such as early planting, casual labour, purchasing of improved breeds for livestock, etc. | [26,28,43] |
Digital Savings and Digital Credit | FarmDrive | Kenya | FarmDrive supports financial institutions in Kenya to use machine learning algorithms to develop small-scale loans for smallholder farmers. With these loans, farmers purchase quality inputs to improve farm productivity | [60] |
Digital Payments, Digital Savings and Digital Credit | M-CASH | Uganda | M-CASH is a mobile-based product that facilitates the issuance of subsidized inputs from agro-input dealers to smallholder farmers in Uganda. Through this product, farmers have access to farming goods and services that are certified by the industry and cheaper. In addition, farmers do not have to travel long distances/incur costs in trying to access input providers. Inputs are delivered by the agro-input dealers to the agreed points nearest to the farmer. This enhances the adoption of good-quality inputs by smallholder farmers. | [61] |
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SSA Region | Total No. of Countries | No. of Countries Shortlisted |
---|---|---|
Southern Africa | 13 | 7 |
East Africa | 13 | 4 |
West Africa | 15 | 5 |
Central Africa | 7 | 1 |
Total | 48 | 17 |
Type of Article | Number |
---|---|
Peer-reviewed | 19 |
Reports | 29 |
Peer-reviewed * | 8 |
Web pages | 5 |
Total | 61 |
Title | Year | Findings |
---|---|---|
Digital platforms for smallholder credit access: The mediation of trust for cooperation in maize value chain financing. | Agyekumhene et al., 2018 [24] | Interaction between farmers and traders on a digital credit platform increases farmers’ access to information that helps them address farm conditions. Farmers’ access to hybrid seeds that are drought-resistant and have high-yield potential also increased. |
Defamiliarizing the Domestic: Exploring “M-Kopa Solar” and Sustainable Practices in Rural Kenyan Households | Wyche et al., 2018 [25] | M-Kopa Solar is a green solution to the problem of limited access to electricity faced by farmers in rural Kenya. Small livestock farmers in Kenya use M-Kopa solar-powered LED bulbs to keep their poultry warm, increasing productivity. |
Use of mobile financial services among farmers in Africa: Insights from Kenya | Parlasca et al., 2022 [26] | Through platforms like M-PESA, smallholder farmers have access to fast money to finance farm-related activities, such as early planting, casual labor, purchasing of improved breeds for livestock, etc. |
Does bundling crop insurance with certified seeds crowd in investments? Experimental evidence from Kenya | Bulte et al., 2020 [17] | After receiving a free hybrid crop insurance product, farmers increased investments in agriculture and expanded land under production. They also invested more in complementary inputs such as fertilizers. |
Uber for tractors? Opportunities and challenges of digital tools for tractor hire in India and Nigeria | Daum et al., 2021 [27] | Smallholder farmers in Nigeria benefit indirectly as the supply-side constraints to mechanization are relaxed. However, transaction cost effects are limited for both smallholder farmers and service providers who own tractors. |
The Social and Economic Impact of M-PESA on the Lives of Women in the Fishing Industry on Lake Victoria | White 2012 [28] | M-PESA enables rural women and farmers to save and invest in sustainable off-farm livelihood strategies like fishing. In addition, they have access to credit to purchase farm inputs like high-yielding seed varieties. |
Mobile phone use is associated with higher smallholder agricultural productivity in Tanzania, East Africa | Quandt et al., 2021 [29] | In Tanzania, the use of mobile phones by farmers helped increase maize yields, agricultural profits, and reduced the costs associated with farming. |
Risk Sharing and Transactions Costs: Evidence from Kenya’s Mobile Money Revolution | Jack and Suri 2014 [30] | Households that use M-PESA receive more remittances and money than non-users when faced with shocks. |
After the Drought: The Impact of Microinsurance on Consumption Smoothing and Asset Protection | Janzen and Carter 2013 [31] | Upon receipt of a pay-out, insured households are less likely to sell their livestock and to anticipate reducing food consumption, unlike their uninsured neighbours. |
Facilitating Savings for Agriculture: Field Experimental Evidence from Malawi | Brune et al., 2015 [32] | In Malawi, farmers with access to savings accounts increased farm investments by 13 percent and crop output by 21 percent. |
Selection into Credit Markets: Evidence from Agriculture in Mali | Beaman et al., 2014 [33] | Farmers that received loans in Mali increased their investment and expenditure on agricultural inputs. |
Seasonal Credit Constraints and Agricultural Labor Supply: Evidence from Zambia | Fink et al., 2014 [34] | The provision of credit to farmers in Zambia during the growing season helped boost their outputs and revenues by about 10 percent. The increase in credit was also associated with an increase in consumption and local farm wages. |
Maize Productivity and Household Welfare Impacts of Mobile Money Usage in Tanzania | Kilombele et al., 2015 [35] | Farmers with access to mobile money services increased their maize productivity by approximately 124 kg/acre and reduced their poverty likelihood by nearly 25 percent. |
Scaling up index insurance for smallholder farmers: Recent evidence and insights scaling up index insurance for smallholder farmers | Greatrex et al., 2015 [36] | In Kenya, Rwanda, and Tanzania, farmers insured through the ACRE program had more earnings and invested more in agriculture compared to their uninsured counterparts. In Ethiopia, farmers insured through the Rural Resilience Initiative program increased savings, grain reserves, and number of livestock owned compared to the uninsured. In Kenya and Ethiopia, farmers insured through the index-based livestock insurance program increased their herd sizes and had reduced total livestock mortality risks. |
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Mapanje, O.; Karuaihe, S.; Machethe, C.; Amis, M. Financing Sustainable Agriculture in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Review of the Role of Financial Technologies. Sustainability 2023, 15, 4587. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15054587
Mapanje O, Karuaihe S, Machethe C, Amis M. Financing Sustainable Agriculture in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Review of the Role of Financial Technologies. Sustainability. 2023; 15(5):4587. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15054587
Chicago/Turabian StyleMapanje, Olga, Selma Karuaihe, Charles Machethe, and Mao Amis. 2023. "Financing Sustainable Agriculture in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Review of the Role of Financial Technologies" Sustainability 15, no. 5: 4587. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15054587
APA StyleMapanje, O., Karuaihe, S., Machethe, C., & Amis, M. (2023). Financing Sustainable Agriculture in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Review of the Role of Financial Technologies. Sustainability, 15(5), 4587. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15054587