ABSTRACT
The study investigated the resource use efficiency among
Fadama crop farmers in Ibadan
Ibarapa agricultural zone of Oyo state, Nigeria. Data were
collected from 120 respondents who
were randomly selected and interviewed using both interview
schedule and questionnaire. The
data collected were presented using percentage and means.
The findings o revealed that there
was no significant difference in the productivity between
Fadama and non fadama (soko)
farmers, while there was a significant difference between
the productivity of Fadama and non
fadama (watermelon) farmers as well as Fadama and non fadama
maize farmers.The gross
margin analysis of Fadama and non Fadama crop farmers
revealed that Fadama soko farmers and
Fadama maize farmers were more profitable than the non
Fadama farmers in the area. For
watermelon, the non fadama farmers were more profitable
because they had higher output. The
findings also revealed that labour, fertilizer, insecticides
and seed influenced the technical
efficiency of soko farmers. Herbicides and insecticides
influenced the technical efficiency of
watermelon farmers, while labour, insecticide and seed
influenced the technical efficiency of
maize farmers. The positive coefficient for age variable
implies that the older farmers were more
technically inefficient than theyounger ones. Also negative
coefficient for education implies that
the farmers level of technicalinefficiency declined with
more education. With regards to farmerspecific
factors, especially education, there is the need for
policyto promote formal education as
a means of enhancing efficiency in production over the
long-term period. This is because it
would enable farmers make better technical decision and also
help in allocatingtheir production
inputs effectively.
In the short-term, informal extension education could be
effective, especially
when targeted at farmers who have had limited formal
educational opportunities.The coefficient
of farming experience was estimated to be negative as
expected andstatistically significant at the
5-percent level. The implication is that farmers with more
years offarming experience tend to be
more efficient in crop production. It is possible that such
farmers gained more years of
farming experience through “learning by doing,” and thereby
becoming more efficient.The study
also found that farmers under Fadama harvested more per unit
ofland of output of crop than
non fadama farmers for soko and maize and this confirms the
hypothesis that programme
intervention has the capacity to succor farm production
problems while accruing more income to
farmers.