IMPACT OF STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT PROGRAMS ON AGRICULTURAL SECTOR GROWTH IN KENYA
Pollyne Mbithe () and
Prof. Germano Mwabu ()
International Journal of Economics, 2016, vol. 1, issue 1, 79 - 102
Abstract:
Purpose: The study was an examination of the impact of structural adjustment programs on agricultural growth in Kenya. Methodology: The study examined the short run and long run determinants of agricultural sector performance in Kenya. To achieve this, the study use time series regression modeling for data spanning from 1975 to 2010. Tests of normality, unit roots test and cointegration test was applied to determine the properties of the data. Upon proof of cointegration, an error correction model was estimated to link the short run and the long run relationships.Results: Results indicate that structural adjustment programme (SAPs) had a negative and significant long run effect on per capita agriculture GDP. The study concluded that Post Election Violence has a negative and significant long run effect on the per capital agriculture GDP. The study also concluded that the lagged per capital agricultural performance has a positive and significant effect on the per capita agricultural performance. The results also led to the conclusion that the long run per capita agricultural growth may be linked to the short run growth by an error correction term of -0.242583 which indicates that 0.242% of the disequilibria in short run per capita agricultural sector GDP achieved in one period are corrected in the subsequent period. The results also conclude that weather indicators (temperature and precipitation), and per capita infrastructure did not have a significant effect on the short run and long run per capita Agricultural GDP Correlation and regression results indicate that human resource management practices have a positive and significant relationship with firm performance. This was supported by correlation coefficient of 0.346; (p value 0.039) and a regression coefficient of 0.32 ;( p value 0.039) The results led to the acceptance of hypothesis that human resource management practices have a positive effect on firm performance.Unique contribution to theory, practice and policy: The study recommends that some harmful policies need to be eliminated such as the removal of subsidies. Other policy recommendation are to enhance the adaptation of privatized agricultural institutions; encouragement of value addition in primary agricultural products; non price mechanisms such as Infrastructure should be encouraged especially in the rural areas; and enhancement of the political stability of the country especially during electioneering years.
Keywords: SAP; determinants. agricultural growth (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2016
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:bdu:ijecon:v:1:y:2016:i:1:p:79-102:id:124
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