1. Introduction
The continuous recurrence and prevention tactics used in response to the COVID-19 pandemic have increased the risk of family farms’ green production. Developing green agriculture is at the heart of the Rural Revitalization Strategy in China, and the family farm is the focus of green agriculture development. According to the third agricultural census in 2017, with an annual growth rate of 26.5% and an average farm scale of 11.7 ha. A total of 54.9 thousand family farms are currently operational, occupying 461.1 million ha of cultivated land. COVID-19 prevention measures, such as traffic control and forced quarantine, presented an unprecedented challenge, and increased the risk for farmers [
1]. The public was required to quarantine at home [
2], which created a labor shortage. Due to the deepening of the social divisions of the labor system, the supply of pre-production in agriculture, the availability of socialized services during production, and the sale of post-production agricultural products all depend on the market, and traffic control [
3] leads to serious production obstacles, interruption of the logistics chain of the market, and delays in the farming season [
4]. Many dealers and agents were unable to buy and sell products, leading to an imbalance of supply and demand in the market, as well as pricing instability [
5]. The characteristics of agricultural production, such as a long investment return period and strong market dependence, determine that agricultural risks such as market, nature, technology, and policy are a greater threat, which increases the vulnerability, exposure, and sensitivity of small-scale farmers’ decentralized production processes [
1]. This indicates that green agriculture faced greater risks and uncertainties during the pandemic. The use of chemical fertilizers and pesticides was reduced, resulting in higher technical requirements and higher input costs. Therefore, it is important to explore the impact of pandemic risk on continuous green production and construct a set of effective risk-response measures to maintain farmers’ livelihoods while continuing to tackle COVID-19.
The new model of agricultural organization based on a digital platform has provided an important means to reduce the risk overflow from COVID-19. Chinese agriculture has formed a digital platform-based internet business model called C2F (Company–Platform–Farmers), which was conducive to improving green agriculture development because of platform features such as digitization, marketization, and organization. Using last-generation digital technologies, such as the Internet of Things (IoT) and Artificial Intelligence (AI), the digital platform of C2F provided a new networked Farm Management Information System (FMIS) that could ensure output and reduce the use of water, fertilizer, and pesticides. Based on a shared economy, the C2F carries out joint production and management. It is characterized by organized open distribution, and it integrates a variety of resource allocation mechanisms [
6], making it an important measure to revitalize inventory and improve efficiency and service provision [
7]. Through the benefit-linking of the digital platform [
8], farmers, enterprises, platforms, and governments can be associated with management and supervision [
9], rationally arrange green production plans, optimize resource allocation [
10], and improve farms’ digital level [
11]. By realizing product digitization to increase profits, market branding to reduce costs, and operation platform to reduce risks, C2F provides opportunities to prevent the risk overflow of COVID-19.
We conducted extensive research on the impact of organization on farmers’ green production based on risk perception and decision theory. Policy regulation, benefit incentive, and risk cognition exerted a main effect on people’s decisions [
12]. Driven by benefit incentives, the organization improved farmers’ social capital to adapt green production through regulatory constraints, value co-production, and value sharing [
13], with a lasting impact on the prioritization of choices [
14]. As a social capital, agricultural organizations can actively benefit incentives through value sharing, which in turn, has a positive impact on their green production [
15]. The policy regulation of an organization included normative factors such as trust, fairness, and reciprocity [
16,
17], which promote social and cultural identity [
18,
19,
20], while subjective norms ensured the coordination and sustainable behaviors of farming groups. Through unified management and service of organizations, a closer benefits linkage could effectively achieve the effect of “risk sharing and benefit sharing” [
21], realize different farmers’ balance benefits [
8], and improve the overall ability to withstand risks. The level of farmers’ risk cognition (risk perception and risk preference) determined their decisions [
22], because most farmers relied on intuitive risk judgment for green production [
22,
23,
24]. With the increased risk of COVID-19 overflow, the impact of the effects and path of digital platform organization in C2F on continuous green production requires additional research.
Based on the C2F, we developed a green product for family farmers, regional farmers (users) were taken as the research subjects. Applying risk decision theory, we built a theoretical framework based on platform organization, pandemic risk, perception value, risk preference, subjective norms, and production continuity, and ascertained the impacted effects and path using the PLS-SEM model. We analyzed the impact of the risk of COVID-19 overflow on production continuity, demonstrated the possibility of digital platform organization to withstand pandemic risk, studied the behavior moderating motivation of farmers with different risk preferences and subjective norms in tackling the pandemic, and provided suggestions or measures for maintaining farmers’ livelihoods while continuing to tackle COVID-19.
5. Conclusions and Suggestions
5.1. Conclusions
Based on the C2F we developed for family farmers’ green products, regional family farmers (users) were taken as the research objects. Applying risk decision theory, we built a theoretical analysis framework based on platform organization, pandemic risk, perception value, risk preference, subjective norms, and farmers’ willingness, and ascertained the impact effects and path using the PLS-SEM model. We analyzed the impact of the risk of the COVID-19 pandemic on farmers’ green production willingness, demonstrated the potential of the digital platform organization in terms of resistance to pandemic risk, and studied the regulation effects of subjective norms and risk preference on the digital platform organization in relation to farmers’ resistance to pandemic risk. Finally, we proposed suggestions and measures for maintaining farmers’ livelihoods through the sale of green products to tackle COVID-19. The results showed that the risks of the COVID-19 pandemic significantly affected family farms’ green production continuity, which reduced green technology adoption intentions, increased livelihood costs, and cut down moderate-scale effects. However, the stable benefit linkage of platform organizations based on the C2F model could significantly reduce the risk of COVID-19 for family farms’ green production continuity. We also explained the behavior motivation of farmers with different risk preferences in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The risk preference and subjective norms had visible effects on farmers’ green production continuity.
5.2. Suggestions
Perfect the functions of digital platform organizations to optimize the benefit linkages in C2F. The willingness of farmers to adopt green production increased with the improvement in the degree of interest linkage with C2F platform organizations. We suggest strengthening the organization and construction of the C2F platform, which will improve the mechanism of benefit-linking. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, business entities have been seriously affected by traffic and personnel flow control, so the advantage of this platform is that it can break the spatial barrier and provide more agricultural production technology training for farmers online. Holding a variety of production exchanges and other activities to publicize and clarify the purpose, content, and significance of the activities of farmers can mobilize farmers’ enthusiasm to participate in collective activities, promote their communication and interaction, and enhance the level of trust between farmers and C2F platform organizations.
Accelerate farmers’ digitization abilities for cultivation to increase their cognitive risk level. Strengthen the guidance and training for the digital ability of farmers. Through education and training, farmers’ knowledge can be expanded, and their cognitive ability, understanding ability, and acceptance of digital platforms can be improved. Farmers’ awareness and penetration rate of digital platforms and technologies can be promoted. Then, the large data from the platform can be used to strengthen their grasp of the market and their resource integration ability during the COVID-19 pandemic, including the distribution of green crops, market information on green agricultural products, the collection of market supply and demand, agricultural prices, and other big data to improve their risk awareness. Production and marketing docking can be strengthened, and sales channels expanded. Through digital platforms, farmers can effectively capture the wave of community "group buying" caused by the isolation of community residents during the pandemic and alleviate the market risk.
Strengthen the policy guidance of COVID-19 prevention to reduce the influence of farmer subjective norms. We should take full advantage of the moderating role of subjective norms. Local agricultural upgrading is influenced by local forces [
51]. On the one hand, the government can encourage farmers to participate in green production through subsidies and awards to ease the economic pressure on farmers or strengthen policy guidance. For example, during the COVID-19 pandemic control period, agricultural products such as vegetables, livestock, and poultry should be included in the “green channel” for emergency transportation so as to ensure prioritization and convenient access to ease logistics and sales congestion. On the other hand, in rural societies, loudspeakers, the internet, TV, newspapers, posters, publicity columns, and other resources can be used to strengthen the publicity of green production so that the development of green ecological agriculture becomes a social consensus. Then, we can positively adjust farmers’ willingness to carry out green production.