An evaluation of the impact of soil carbon enhancing practices on farm output in Western Kenya

cg.contributor.affiliationInternational Center for Tropical Agricultureen
cg.coverage.countryKenya
cg.coverage.iso3166-alpha2KE
cg.coverage.regionEastern Africa
cg.creator.identifierEvan Girvetz: 0000-0002-1062-9764en
cg.creator.identifierStanley Karanja Ng'ang'a: 0000-0002-6166-7920en
cg.identifier.urlhttps://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/295725en
cg.placeAbuja, Nigeriaen
dc.contributor.authorKaranja Ng'ang'a, Stanleyen
dc.contributor.authorAnyango Jalang'o, Dorcasen
dc.contributor.authorGirvetz, Evan Hartunianen
dc.date.accessioned2019-11-25T19:41:45Zen
dc.date.available2019-11-25T19:41:45Zen
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10568/105883
dc.titleAn evaluation of the impact of soil carbon enhancing practices on farm output in Western Kenyaen
dcterms.abstractSustainable agricultural practices that enhance soil carbon simultaneously improve farm yields and income. Despite the expansive literature on adoption of soil carbon practices in Kenya, there is limited information on the impact of the elemental practices on farm output. This study attempts to fill this literature gap by evaluating the impact of soil carbon practices on farm output in Western Kenya. Results show that agroforestry, maize-legume intercropping, terracing and use of inorganic fertilizer are dominant soil carbon practices. Howbeit, the propensity score matching results reveal that maize-legume intercropping solely has observable impact on farm output. On average, farmers involved in the practice have an increase of 27% on maize output as opposed to those who don’t, and as such adoption could improve their welfare. The findings suggests that interventions targeted on facilitating the uptake of maize-legume intercropping among resource-poor rural smallholder farmers should be pursued.en
dcterms.accessRightsOpen Access
dcterms.bibliographicCitationNg’ang’a, Stanley Karanja; Jalang'o, Dorcas Anyango & Girvetz, Evan (2019). An evaluation of the impact of soil carbon enhancing practices on farm output in Western Kenya. In: ICINCO 2019 - 6th African Conference of Agricultural Economists. 23-26 Sept, 2019. Abuja, Nigeria, 1-14 p.en
dcterms.extent14 p.en
dcterms.issued2019-09-23en
dcterms.languageen
dcterms.licenseCopyrighted; all rights reserved
dcterms.publisherAfrican Association of Agricultural Economistsen
dcterms.subjectcarbonen
dcterms.subjectsoil erosionen
dcterms.subjectsustainable agricultureen
dcterms.subjectfarmersen
dcterms.typeConference Paper

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