Impact of Agricultural Cooperatives on Farmers’ Collective Action: A Study Based on the Socio-Ecological System Framework
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Research Framework
2.2. Theoretical Analysis and Research Hypotheses
2.2.1. Agricultural Cooperatives (S4-1) Promote the Collective Action of Farmers (O1-1) by Cultivating Village Public Leadership (A5-1)
2.2.2. Agricultural Cooperatives (S4-1) Promote the Collective Action of Farmers (O1-1) by Enhancing Villagers’ Sense of Belonging to the Village (A6-1)
2.2.3. Agricultural Cooperatives (S4-1) Promote the Collective Action of Farmers (O1-1) by Increasing Financing Capacity of Villagers (A2-1)
2.2.4. Agricultural Cooperatives (S4-1) Promote Farmers’ Collective Action (O1-1) by Promoting Farmers’ Use of Green Production Technologies (A9-1)
2.3. Methodology
2.3.1. Study Site
2.3.2. Sampling and Sample Size
2.3.3. Data Collection
2.3.4. Analytical Model
3. Results
3.1. Benchmark Model Analysis Results
3.2. Lumped Plasticity Model (LPM) Robustness Test
3.3. Robustness Test by Propensity Score Matching (PSM)
3.4. Heterogeneity Analysis
3.4.1. Farmers of Different Generations
3.4.2. Farmers with Different Household Economic Conditions
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions and Suggestions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Social, Economic, and Political Background (S) S1—Economic Development; S2—Demographic Trends; S3—Policy Stability; S4—Other Governance Systems; S5—Marketization; S6—Media Organizations; S7—Technology; S4-1 Cooperative | |
---|---|
Resource system (RS) | Governance system (GS) |
RS1: Resource sector RS2: Clarity of system boundaries RS3: Size of the resource system RS4: Human-made facilities RS5: Productivity of the system RS6: Balance RS7: Predictability of system dynamics RS8: Resource storage feature RS9: Location | GS1: Government organizations GS2: Non-governmental organizations GS2-1: Market players GS2-2: Social agents GS3: Network structure GS4: Property rights system GS5: Operational rules GS5-1: Collective resource integration GS5-2: Benefit sharing GS6: Collective selection rules GS6-1: Collective decision making GS6-2: Institutional constraints GS7: Constitutional rules GS8: Rules of supervision and punishment GS8-1: Internal oversight |
Resource units (RAs) | Users (A) |
RA1: Mobility of resource units RA2: Growth or update rate RA3: Interaction between resource units RA4: Economic value RA5: Number of resource units RA6: Obvious marking RA7: Spatiotemporal distribution RA8: Importance of resources | A1: The number of actors A2: Socio-economic attributes of actors A2-1: Differences in economic status among villagers A3: History of usage A4: Location A5: Leadership or business management skills of actors A5-1: Public leadership in the village A6: Conventional social norms (special trusting and reciprocal agreements)/social capital A6-1: Villagers’ sense of belonging to the village A7: Knowledge or mindset about SES A8: Importance of resources (dependency) A9: Options of technologies A9-1: Use of green production technologies |
Interaction (I)—Outcome (O) | |
I1: Level of resources obtained I2: Information sharing I3: Negotiation I4: Conflicts I5: Investment activities I6: Lobbying activities I7: Self-organizing activities I8: Network activity I9: Oversight activities I10: Assessment activities | O1: Social performance measurement O1-1: Collective action by farmers O2: Ecological performance measurement O2-1: Farmers’ ecological values O2-2: Development of green agricultural products O2-3: Construction of ecological system O3: Impact/externality to other SES |
Associated ecosystems (ECO) ECO1—Climatic Conditions; ECO2—Contamination Situation; ECO3—Inflow and Outflow of the Focused SES |
Variable Category | Variable | Description | Mean | Standard Deviation |
---|---|---|---|---|
Dependent variable | Farmers’ adoption of water-saving irrigation technologies | Whether a farmer adopts water-saving irrigation technology; yes = 1, no = 0 | — | 0.500 |
Independent variable | Farmer’s participation in cooperatives | Whether a farmer participates in cooperatives; yes = 1; no = 0 | — | 0.487 |
Control variable | Gender | Male = 1; female = 0 | — | 0.371 |
Age | Respondent’s self-reported age (years) | 46.027 | 10.451 | |
Health condition | Self-rated health status: very healthy = 1; somewhat healthy = 2; healthy = 3; unhealthy = 4; very unhealthy = 5 | 1.765 | 1.043 | |
Years of education | Respondent’s self-reported years of education (years) | 7.673 | 2.711 | |
Off-farm employment | Whether respondents worked outside the home in the past five years; yes = 1, no = 0 | — | 0.483 | |
Proportion of household labor force | The proportion of labor force individuals aged 16-65 to the total number of family members | 0.506 | 0.216 | |
Proportion of household farm income | The proportion of farm income to total household income | 0.474 | 0.346 | |
Average farmland area | The total area of agricultural land divided by the total number of agricultural lands (ha) | 16.255 | 19.531 | |
Degree of water scarcity | Self-rated degree of water scarcity: severe shortage = 1; shortage = 2; merely enough = 3; abundant = 4; very abundant = 5 | 2.987 | 1.153 | |
Difficulty level of irrigation | Difficulty level of applying WSIT for the managed lands: unable = 1; difficult = 2; easy = 3; very easy = 4 | 3.783 | 0.612 |
Variable | Logit | LPM | |
---|---|---|---|
Coefficient | Marginal Effect | Coefficient | |
Farmers’ participation in cooperatives | 0.393 (0.373) ** | 0.056 (0.053) ** | 0.038 (0.054) ** |
Gender | 0.813 (0.521) | 0.116 (0.071) | 0.139 (0.082) |
Age | −0.086 (0.022) | −0.012 (0.003) | −0.013 (0.003) |
Health condition | 0.069 (0.192) | −0.010 (0.027) | 0.007 (0.028) |
Education level | −0.023 (0.075) * | −0.003 (0.011) * | −0.004 (0.010) * |
Off-farm employment | 0.171 (0.384) | 0.024 (0.055) | 0.008 (0.059) |
Proportion of household labor forces | 0.086 (0.891) | 0.012 (0.127) | −0.019 (0.120) |
Proportion of household farm income | 2.921 (0.645) *** | 0.417 (0.078) *** | 0.550 (0.100) *** |
Average farmland area | 0.054 (0.021) ** | 0.008 (0.003) ** | 0.005 (0.001) *** |
Degree of water scarcity | −0.123 (0.176) | −0.178 (0.025) | −0.022 (0.026) |
Difficulty level of irrigation | 0.826 (0.360) *** | 0.118 (0.050) *** | 0.118 (0.049) *** |
Constant | −1.529 (1.935) | 0.319 (0.293) | |
Pseudo-R2 | 0.3626 | ||
LR chi2 | 58.01 | ||
Sample size | 381 | 381 | 381 |
Matching Method | Treatment Group | Control Group | Average Effect of Treatment on the Treated (ATT) | Standard Error | t-Test Value |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nearest neighbor matching | 0.278 | 0.137 | 0.087 | 0.033 | 2.32 ** |
Caliper matching | 0.278 | 0.143 | 0.093 | 0.036 | 2.345 *** |
Kernel matching | 0.278 | 0.151 | 0.076 | 0.031 | 2.63 *** |
Variable | New-Generation Farmers | Old Farmers | Farmers with Poor Economic Conditions | Farmers with Good Economic Conditions | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Coefficient | Marginal Effect | Coefficient | Marginal Effect | Coefficient | Marginal Effect | Coefficient | Marginal Effect | |
Participation in cooperatives | 0.368 | 0.055 | 0.567 * | 0.067 * | 0.266 | 0.035 | 0.583 ** | 0.082 *** |
(0.337) | (0.047) | (0.367) | (0.045) | (0.345) | (0.057) | (0.252) | (0.037) | |
Control variable | Controlled | Controlled | Controlled | Controlled | ||||
Pseudo-R2 | 0.164 | 0.078 | 0.106 | 0.137 | ||||
LRchi2 | 35.52 *** | 42.67 *** | 31.6 *** | 47.34 *** | ||||
Sample size | 152 | 74 | 93 | 133 |
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Zhu, X.; Wang, G. Impact of Agricultural Cooperatives on Farmers’ Collective Action: A Study Based on the Socio-Ecological System Framework. Agriculture 2024, 14, 96. https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture14010096
Zhu X, Wang G. Impact of Agricultural Cooperatives on Farmers’ Collective Action: A Study Based on the Socio-Ecological System Framework. Agriculture. 2024; 14(1):96. https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture14010096
Chicago/Turabian StyleZhu, Xiaoyan, and Guangyao Wang. 2024. "Impact of Agricultural Cooperatives on Farmers’ Collective Action: A Study Based on the Socio-Ecological System Framework" Agriculture 14, no. 1: 96. https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture14010096
APA StyleZhu, X., & Wang, G. (2024). Impact of Agricultural Cooperatives on Farmers’ Collective Action: A Study Based on the Socio-Ecological System Framework. Agriculture, 14(1), 96. https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture14010096