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A Financial Analysis of Homestead Native Chicken Raising: A Climate-Smart Agriculture Option Adopted in the Province of Koh Kong, Cambodia

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Title A Financial Analysis of Homestead Native Chicken Raising: A Climate-Smart Agriculture Option Adopted in the Province of Koh Kong, Cambodia
 
Creator Manilay, Alessandro A.
Phen, Bunthoeun
Cabriole, Marie Aislinn
Thy, Or
Gonsalves, Julian F.
Monville-Oro, Emilita
Barbon, Wilson John
 
Subject agriculture
climate-smart agriculture
climate change
food security
 
Description In 2018, the International Institute for Rural Reconstruction (IIRR) and the Cambodian Center for Study and Development for Agriculture (CEDAC) under the Asian Development Bank’s Cambodia Biodiversity Conservation Corridors Project (BCC) implemented the Community Development Funds Project in the Koh Kong and Mondul Kiri provinces which included the capacity building activity on improving native chicken production for smallholder farmers specifically, broiler production, and hatchery. This study supported by the International Research and Development Center (IDRC) analyzed the financial benefits gained by households in the Koh Kong province from this climate smart agriculture approach to small scale poultry production.
When native chickens were raised for meat purposes (broiler production), the total net income received by the households amounted to USD 6,286.00 in 2019, and USD 8,003.00 in 2020. As the volume of sales increased, the average net income showed an increasing trend while the production cost per kilogram of broiler sold decreased. The study also revealed that profitability was highest among households that sold more than 100 kg of broilers compared to other households with lesser sales volume (using the Operating Profit Margin Ratio as a gauge). Hatchery operators earned a total net income of USD 10,136.00 in 2019 which increased to USD 13,604.00 in 2020.
Broiler production and hatchery operation can be useful climate resilient enterprises to supplement the household income while complementing the existing economic activities of the village households such as growing crops and raising small livestock. Local food systems are enriched in the process and agrobiodiversity of small livestock is conserved through their sustainable use. This native chicken project was also gender fair and of special relevance to women in the communes.
 
Date 2021-09-07
2021-09-07T13:58:38Z
2021-09-07T13:58:38Z
 
Type Working Paper
 
Identifier Manilay AA, Phen B, Cabriole MA, Thy O, Gonsalves J, Monville-Oro E, Barbon WJ. 2021. A Financial Analysis of Homestead Native Chicken Raising: A Climate-Smart Agriculture Option Adopted in the Province of Koh Kong, Cambodia. CCAFS Working Paper no. 362. Wageningen, the Netherlands: CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS).
https://hdl.handle.net/10568/114901
PII_SEA_CSVscaling
 
Language en
 
Relation CCAFS Working Paper
 
Rights CC-BY-NC-4.0
Open Access
 
Format 48 p.
application/pdf
 
Publisher CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security