A Review of the Economic Impact of Value Addition and Food Processing on Farmers’ Income: An Extension Perspective
Shashank Bhai
Department of Agricultural Economics, Acharya Narendra Deva University of Agriculture & Technology, Kumarganj, Ayodhya, 224 229, Uttar Pradesh, India.
Veena Rathore
Department of Agricultural Economics, K.N.K. College of Horticulture, Mandsaur, RVSKVV, Gwalior India.
Anuradha Kumari
Dairy Technology Division, ICAR-National Dairy Research Institute (Deemed University), Karnal, Haryana-132001, India.
Ravindra Kumar Yadav
Dairy Technology Division, ICAR-National Dairy Research Institute (Deemed University), Karnal, Haryana-132001, India.
Khan Chand
Department of Agricultural Engineering, School of Agricultural Sciences, Nagaland University, Medziphema Campus- 797106, Dist: Chumukedima, Nagaland, India.
Anil Kumar *
Department of Agronomy, School of Agriculture, Eklavya University Damoh, Madhya Pradesh- 470661, India.
Gayatty Easter Dkhar
Department of Fisheries Extension, Economics and Statistics, College of Fisheries, Central Agriculture University, Imphal-795004, India.
Rahul Pradhan
Division of Silviculture and Forest Management, Institute of Wood Science and Technology (ICFRE-IWST), Bengaluru-560003, India.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
Ensuring improved income for farmers and financial viability in agricultural development is still a focus, especially in developing nations where most farming households are found. Though production has improved, farmers still get only a nominal part of the consumer price due to post-production losses, poor market integration, and limited involvement in value addition activities. This review underlines that value addition through processing, grading, packaging, branding, and quality certification can greatly improve farm income, and food processing can also reduce losses, diversify, and stabilize farm income. Research shows that farmers involved in value addition can increase their income by 15-40% compared to those not involved.
Agricultural extension services are important in facilitating technology transfer, skill building, market access, and institutional linkage, including assistance to farmer producer organizations and cooperatives. But its adoption is impeded by infrastructure, lack of credit, skill, market information, and policy issues. It is important to strengthen extension services and develop public-private partnerships, ICT-enabled advisory services, and supportive policies to promote value addition and food processing to improve farm income, rural entrepreneurship, and sustainable agricultural development.
Keywords: Value Addition, food processing, agricultural extension, Post-harvest management