Addressing the Problem of Poverty through an International Cooperation Project: The Case Study of Agriculture Development by JICA in Cameroon
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
3. Methodology
3.1. The Concept of Poverty Reduction
3.2. Goal-Free Evaluation
3.3. Case Study Area
- (1)
- The Project for the Development of Rainfed Rice;This project implemented to the tune of 6.6 million JPY. Approximately 13,000 households have been involved in this project.
- (2)
- Upland Rice Development Project of the Tropical Forest Zone.This project implemented to the tune of 3.2 million JPY. Approximately 10,000 households have been involved in this project.These projects are highlighted in orange on the map.
3.4. Methods
3.4.1. Sampling and Data Collection
3.4.2. Study Instruments
4. Results
4.1. Evaluations of JICA Implemented Projects in the Case Study Area
4.2. The Results of Social Inquiry of Agriculture Development Project
4.2.1. Respondent Characteristics
4.2.2. Contribution to the Reduction in Income Poverty
4.2.3. Contributions to Poverty Reduction Based on Other MPI
- Meals
- Electricity
- Drinking water
- Njangi
- Social insurance
- Agriculture development
4.2.4. Narrative Comparison between Beneficiaries and Non-Beneficiaries
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions and Recommendations
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Questionnaire
(B5) | BEFORE THE PROJECT | AFTER THE PROJECT | Comments | ||
Were there sometimes you were NOT able to eat 3 square meals | Yes☐ | NO☐ | Yes☐ | NO☐ | |
Has someone ever fallen sick in your house because they did not have food to eat? | Yes☐ | NO☐ | Yes☐ | NO☐ | |
Has a child below 18 ever died in your house? | Yes☐ | NO☐ | Yes☐ | NO☐ |
S/N | Question | Strongly Disagree (SD) | Disagree (D) | Undecided (UD) | Agree (A) | Strongly Agree (SA) |
(C1) Before the project, women had rights to own land | ||||||
(C2) As a result of the project, women have the rights to own land | ||||||
(C3) The project introduced relevant disaster management techniques | ||||||
(C4) Before the project, I experienced disaster in my farm | ||||||
(C5) As a result of the project, these disasters have reduced/ stopped | ||||||
(C6) Before the projects there were no schools in the project area | ||||||
(C7) As a results of the project, schools were opened in the project area | ||||||
(C8) Before the projects there were no health facilities in the project area | ||||||
(C9) As a results of the project, health facilities were opened in the project area |
Appendix B. Interview and Focus Group Discussion Guide
- ■
- Researcher introduces himself and explains purpose of research and ethical requirements.
- ■
- He asks respondents to introduce
- ○
- Please tell me about yourself (your marital status, the number of people living with you in your house etc.)
- ○
- How long have you been involved in the project?
- ■
- Has there been any benefits for you and other famers as a result of this project? If so, are some of the benefits?
- ○
- To you as an individual
- ○
- To your family
- ○
- To this community
- ○
- To other farmers
- ■
- Have you acquired any additional assets because of your involvement of the project? If yes, name some of them?
- ■
- Do you belong to any njangi or insurance scheme because of the project? If yes, describe it and the advantages of belonging to such a group
- ■
- What are some of the disadvantages brought to you by the project?
- ■
- Can you say the project has contributed to reducing poverty in this area? If yes, explain how
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IRRP | URDP | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
N | % | N | % | ||
10–19 y | 0 | 0 | 7 | 4% | |
20–29 y | 4 | 3% | 19 | 12% | |
30–39 y | 33 | 22% | 36 | 23% | |
Age | 40–49 y | 52 | 35% | 43 | 27% |
50–59 y | 38 | 26% | 35 | 22% | |
60–69 y | 17 | 12% | 12 | 8% | |
70 and over | 3 | 2% | 5 | 3% | |
Gender | Male | 71 | 48% | 106 | 68% |
Female | 76 | 52% | 51 | 32% | |
Single | 16 | 11% | 39 | 25% | |
Cohabited | 0 | 0 | 14 | 9% | |
Marital Status | Married | 113 | 76% | 97 | 62% |
Divorced | 2 | 1% | 2 | 1% | |
Widowed | 17 | 11% | 5 | 3% | |
1–3 | 6 | 4% | 23 | 15% | |
Household Size | 4–10 | 97 | 66% | 97 | 65% |
10 and over | 43 | 29% | 29 | 19% | |
Less than 1 year | 2 | 1% | 40 | 25% | |
1–2 y | 13 | 9% | 50 | 32% | |
Years Involved in the JICA Project | 3–4 y | 21 | 14% | 25 | 16% |
4–5 y | 51 | 34% | 14 | 9% | |
Above 5 years | 61 | 41% | 28 | 18% |
IRRP | URDP | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
N | % | N | % | |
No profit | 34 | 23% | 13 | 9% |
Less than USD 400 | 73 | 50% | 50 | 33% |
USD 400–799 | 27 | 18% | 34 | 23% |
USD 800–1199 | 9 | 6% | 17 | 11% |
USD 1200–1599 | 2 | 1% | 17 | 11% |
USD 1600–1999 | 0 | 0 | 12 | 8% |
USD 2000 and above | 2 | 1% | 8 | 5% |
IRRP | URDP | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
N | % | N | % | |
No profit | 4 | 3% | 59 | 38% |
Less than USD 400 | 51 | 34% | 57 | 36% |
USD 400–799 | 46 | 31% | 22 | 14% |
USD 800–1199 | 36 | 24% | 14 | 9% |
USD 1200–1599 | 5 | 3% | 2 | 1% |
USD 1600–1999 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
USD 2000 and above | 6 | 4% | 3 | 2% |
IRRP | URDP | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
N | % | N | % | |
Acquisition of additional land | 118 | 80 | 63 | 40 |
Improved farming skills | 148 | 100 | 145 | 92 |
Easy access to farm input | 106 | 72 | 136 | 87 |
Easy access to market | 88 | 60 | 134 | 85 |
Disaster reduction | 127 | 86 | 61 | 39 |
Relevant disaster management technique introduction | 124 | 84 | 105 | 67 |
Elements | Non-Rice Farmers | Situation before JICA Project | Situation after JICA Project |
---|---|---|---|
Food availability | Very little rice available for consumption Very low, below 1 ton, usually donated by family members | Little rice available for consumption (less than 1 ton a year) | Abundant rice for consumption (more than 2 tons a year) |
Buying more than 4 tons of rice to be consumed yearly | Buying of rice specially imported rice (more than 1 ton a year) | Selling of rice (5 tons a year) | |
Poor quality rice produce | Quality rice available | ||
Little or no rice available for sales | |||
Buying of house provision | Insufficient house provision because the means to buy is not there | Very little house provision bought with money gained from rice farming | Enough house provisions bought with money gained from rice farming |
Health care | Insufficient medical intervention No knowledge about diseases caused by rice farming No knowledge about intervention for diseases | Insufficient medical intervention Little knowledge about diseases caused by rice farming Little knowledge about intervention for diseases | Moderate medical intervention Knowledge about the prevention of diseases caused by rice farming Exposed to knowledge about medical intervention for diseases caused by rice farming |
Payment of children school fees | Barely paying children school fees and provision of school needs | Barely paying children school fees and provision of school needs | Provision of children school needs, payment of school fees, and even sending children to higher education |
Construction of houses | Construction of thatches houses | Construction of less modern houses | Construction of modern and equipped houses |
Creation of other businesses | Traditional farming | Buying of bicycle | Buying of motorbikes |
Opening of farms for maize and other crops | Opening of provision stores | ||
Opening of rice mills | |||
Buying of transports cars and lorries | |||
Opening of tomatoes and vegetable farms | |||
Skill and technology | Traditional methods | Using cutlasses, hoes, digging axe, application of fertilizers, poor drainage systems, traditional weeding methods, traditional harvesting methods | Traditional technology and the introduction of tractors, better drainage systems, spying on the farms in the place of weeding, harvesting with machine such as the combine harvesters |
Inputs | Traditional methods | Poor seeds | Hybrid seeds |
Crude tools and methods | Application of fertilizer | ||
Draught animals | Labor hire | ||
Subsidized farming input | |||
Insecticides and pesticides | |||
Tractors and combined harvesters | |||
Outputs | No output in the form of rice | Poor quality rice, on average 3 tons per year | Improved rice quality with an average yearly production of 6 tons |
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Bamenju, A.O.; Liu, X.; Yu, J.; Okubo, K. Addressing the Problem of Poverty through an International Cooperation Project: The Case Study of Agriculture Development by JICA in Cameroon. Earth 2022, 3, 1185-1206. https://doi.org/10.3390/earth3040068
Bamenju AO, Liu X, Yu J, Okubo K. Addressing the Problem of Poverty through an International Cooperation Project: The Case Study of Agriculture Development by JICA in Cameroon. Earth. 2022; 3(4):1185-1206. https://doi.org/10.3390/earth3040068
Chicago/Turabian StyleBamenju, Agho Oliver, Xiaoyue Liu, Jeongsoo Yu, and Kazuaki Okubo. 2022. "Addressing the Problem of Poverty through an International Cooperation Project: The Case Study of Agriculture Development by JICA in Cameroon" Earth 3, no. 4: 1185-1206. https://doi.org/10.3390/earth3040068
APA StyleBamenju, A. O., Liu, X., Yu, J., & Okubo, K. (2022). Addressing the Problem of Poverty through an International Cooperation Project: The Case Study of Agriculture Development by JICA in Cameroon. Earth, 3(4), 1185-1206. https://doi.org/10.3390/earth3040068