Worker welfare on Kenyan export vegetable farms

Empirical study
Journal article

Published June 2014 by Elsevier. Authored by Ehlert, C.R., Mithoefer, D., Waibel, H., Ehlert, C.R and Mithöfer, D.

Summary

The paper analyses farm worker welfare on three different types of farms in Kenya producing vegetables for export. The three types of farms differ by certification to international production standards as well as by size. A multidimensional approach measures welfare using human capital, income, physical and mental health, and life satisfaction. The findings suggest that GlobalGAP certification has a positive impact on worker welfare as farm workers are given more training. Workers on large certified farms earn more than those on small farms but also show more health problems. Certification on small farms is associated with higher satisfaction of workers with their life compared to workers on non-certified small farms. From a development policy perspective this paper does not support a clear cut policy on which types of farm to support as overall benefits of a support strategy will depend of the number of beneficiaries reached through the different farm types.
Research detail

Worker welfare on Kenyan export vegetable farms

Empirical study
Journal article

Published June 2014 by Elsevier. Authored by Ehlert, C.R., Mithoefer, D., Waibel, H., Ehlert, C.R and Mithöfer, D.

We currently don't have the rights to host this resource on Evidensia.
Users are encouraged to access the resource through the publisher's website.