Impact of participatory guarantee systems on sustainability outcomes: the case of vegetable farming in Vietnam

Sustainable food systems require mechanisms that assure consumers about the sustainability of agricultural production. Building on the existing literature on the impact of sustainability standards, this study is the first to assess the effectiveness of participatory guarantee systems (PGS) for the certification of organic produce. The study uses representative farm-level data on local vegetable value chains in northern Vietnam and uses a broad set of sustainability outcomes as well as counterfactual analysis, including systematic robustness checks. The results show that PGS significantly improves farm profitability (+117%), agroecology performance (+40%), and gives farmers more choice of sales channels (+23%). However, PGS had no significant effect on returns to labour and reduced the average crop yield. Capacity development on nursery practices, transplanting of healthy seedlings rather than direct seeding, reduced tillage, and collective crop planning and management are some of the innovations that can counter adverse effects on crop yields, increase soil health as well as improve returns to labour, and thus attract more youth to farming. Overall, the study shows that organic PGS can make vegetable production more economically viable and more agroecologically sustainable.

ទិន្នន័យ និងធនធាន

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ប្រភេទផលិតផលចំណេះដឹង បណ្ដាញកសិអេកូឡូស៊ី មិនមាន
ចំណងជើង Impact of participatory guarantee systems on sustainability outcomes: the case of vegetable farming in Vietnam
ការពិពណ៌នា Sustainable food systems require mechanisms that assure consumers about the sustainability of agricultural production. Building on the existing literature on the impact of sustainability standards, this study is the first to assess the effectiveness of participatory guarantee systems (PGS) for the certification of organic produce. The study uses representative farm-level data on local vegetable value chains in northern Vietnam and uses a broad set of sustainability outcomes as well as counterfactual analysis, including systematic robustness checks. The results show that PGS significantly improves farm profitability (+117%), agroecology performance (+40%), and gives farmers more choice of sales channels (+23%). However, PGS had no significant effect on returns to labour and reduced the average crop yield. Capacity development on nursery practices, transplanting of healthy seedlings rather than direct seeding, reduced tillage, and collective crop planning and management are some of the innovations that can counter adverse effects on crop yields, increase soil health as well as improve returns to labour, and thus attract more youth to farming. Overall, the study shows that organic PGS can make vegetable production more economically viable and more agroecologically sustainable.
ប្រភេទកសិអេកូឡូស៊ី
  • សេដ្ធកិច្ច និងប្រាក់ចំណូល
  • ការសហការ
  • សមធម៌
  • ចំណេះដឹង និងគុណតម្លៃ
ពាក្យគន្លឹះ Agroecology
  • សេដ្ឋកិច្ចសាមគី
  • ការចូលរួមរបស់សហគមន៍
  • សហគមន៍
  • ក្រុមកសិករ
  • វិធីសាស្រ្តចូលរួម
អង្គការដែលរួមចំណែក Research Institute of Organic Agriculture (FIBL), Frick, Switzerland; Center for Agricultural Research and Ecological Studies, Vietnam National University of Agriculture, Hanoi, Vietnam; Faculty of Natural Resources and Environment, Vietnam National University of Agriculture, Hanoi, Vietnam; World Vegetable Center, Bangkok, Thailande Faculty of Economics and Rural Development, Vietnam National University of Agriculture, Hanoi, Vietnam; Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Rome, Italy
Author Christian Grovermann, Pham Van Hoi, Nguyen Thi Bich Yen, Pepijn Schreinemachers, Minh Ngo Hai & Pierre Ferrand
ឆ្នាំ 2024
ប្រភេទឯកសារ Scientific & Research
ភាសា អង់គ្លេស
ប្រទេស ប្រទេសវៀតណាម
កម្រិតរដ្ឋបាល ១
កម្រិតរដ្ឋបាល ២
Web Link https://doi.org/10.1080/14735903.2024.2338028