4.1 Article

The Value of Seed Potatoes from Four Systems in Kenya

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF POTATO RESEARCH
Volume 91, Issue 1, Pages 109-118

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12230-013-9342-z

Keywords

Formal seed system; High-quality seed; Willingness to pay

Categories

Funding

  1. GTZ
  2. Government of Kenya
  3. USAID
  4. CIP

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Although potatoes are the second most valuable crop in Kenya, poor seed potato quality has limited industry expansion. The objectives of this study were to describe the seed potato system, identify problems, determine use of high-quality seed and estimate farmer willingness to pay (WTP) for different types of seed. Data was collected from interviews, forums and surveys. A contingent valuation method (CVM) model was also developed to analyze the factors that influence farmer WTP. It was found that the seed system consists of three sub-components: Formal, Semi-Formal and Farmer. More than 96 % of Kenya seed potatoes were produced in the Farmer category, and were considered to be poor quality. Growers identified bacterial wilt, viral diseases and late blight as the most serious problems. The WTP model revealed that farmer age, distance to seed source, potato training, gender and region were statistically significant explanatory variables. The study recommends that training be conducted to increase production of clean seed and positively-selected seed in the Semi-Formal part of the seed system.

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