Crony Capitalism, Collective Action, and ICT: Evidence from Kenyan Contract Farming

This paper examines the relationship between a large sugar cane contract farming company and small farmers in Western Kenya

Abstract

The shift from subsistence to commercial economies creates surplus, but often induces conflict over it. Under extractive institutions and weak contract enforcement, crony capitalism may emerge and limit the benefits of modernization. We examine the relationship between a large sugar cane contract farming company and small farmers in Western Kenya, in a setting with many features of crony capitalism. We document frequent violations of the company’s contractual obligations and propose a simple theory of how farmers’ collective action problems may make it harder to enforce contracts. We then test the direct effects of an ICT-based intervention that reduces farmers’ cost of complaining, potentially addressing company’s moral hazard and farmers’ free riding problems.

This work is part of the Private Enterprise Development in Low Income Countries (PEDL) programme

Citation

Casaburi, L., Kremer, M., & Ramrattan, R. (2019). ““Crony Capitalism, Collective Action, and ICT: Evidence from Kenyan Contract Farming Working Paper

Crony Capitalism, Collective Action, and ICT: Evidence from Kenyan Contract Farming

Published 15 October 2019