Space, Markets and Employment in Agricultural Development: Malawi
Investigates the spatial and institutional linkages between agricultural development and non-farm employment in Malawi
Abstract
The objective of the study was to investigate the spatial and institutional linkages between agricultural development and non-farm employment in the rural areas of Malawi. Specifically, first we explored the nature of spatial and institutional linkages that connect agriculture with non-farm employment, and the implications for employment, poverty, vulnerability and food security. Second, we developed an understanding of which kinds of agricultural development (with reference to scale, capital intensity, value chain governance and local political and administrative institutions) could support broad-based, employment-intensive rural development.
The 4 main questions investigated in the study were:
- How are farm/non-farm linkages affected by spatial arrangements of production, processing, and market access, and by the organisation and governance of value chains?
- How are they affected by the social, institutional and political arrangements and relationships that shape these ‘real market’ relations and forms of economic coordination?
- How are they shaped by the scale and capital intensity of agricultural investment and development models? Do large-scale agri-investment and small farmer development have significantly different impacts on non-farm employment?
- What are the gendered poverty and employment impacts of different local spatial articulations of farm/non-farm employment?
There is a research report and a policy brief
This research is part of the ‘Space, Markets and Employment in Agricultural Development: Case Studies from Southern Africa’ project
Citation
Ephraim Chirwa, Mirriam Matita (2015) Space, Markets and Employment in Agricultural Development: Malawi country report. Institute for Poverty, Land and Agrarian Studies Research Report No. 45
Ephraim Chirwa, Mirriam Matita (2015) Space, Markets and Employment in Agricultural Development: Malawi. University of the Western Cape. Institute for Poverty, Land and Agrarian Studies Policy Brief 36
Links
Space, Markets and Employment in Agricultural Development: Malawi country report