Quality Certification in Agricultural Supply Chains: Implications from Government Information Provision

Author(s):  
Yiwen Bian ◽  
Shuai Yan ◽  
Zelong Yi ◽  
Xu Guan ◽  
Ying‐Ju Chen
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 2060
Author(s):  
Doriane Desclee ◽  
David Sohinto ◽  
Freddy Padonou

Contributing to Sustainable Development Goals and Agenda 2030 is a shared objective of all institutions and people. The challenges differ according to the characteristics of every context. In developing countries, strongly dependent on the agricultural sector, agricultural supply chains are recognized as crucial for economic growth and enablers for livelihood improvement. Moreover, sustainable development issues are correlated and can meet in agricultural supply chains. For several decades, parallel to decision-makers, the research community has elaborated sustainability assessment tools. Such tools evolved to fit with actuality, but it is challenging to find decision-making support tools for sustainable development adequate in agricultural supply chains and developing countries contexts. There is a necessity to define evidence-based tools and exhaustive analytical frameworks according to sustainability multidimensionality and strategical tradeoffs necessity. The VCA4D method aims to go beyond the limits of previous methods. It proposes a combination of multidisciplinary analytical tools applied empirically to analyze agricultural supply chains in their context. It provides evidence-based analytical results allowing to identify enablers for strategic sustainable and inclusive interventions. However, to even better meet contextual exhaustiveness’s expectations and indicators’ robustness to lead to relevant interventions, we should insist on a stricter framing of contextual data collection processes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 1928980
Author(s):  
Tanyaradzwa Rukasha ◽  
Brighton Nyagadza ◽  
Rumbidzai Pashapa ◽  
Asphat Muposhi

MIS Quarterly ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 35 (3) ◽  
pp. 599 ◽  
Author(s):  
Banker ◽  
Mitra ◽  
Sambamurthy ◽  
Mitra

2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (22) ◽  
pp. 12365
Author(s):  
Liurui Deng ◽  
Wentang Xu ◽  
Juan Luo

In recent years, many countries have proposed various sustainable development strategies around environmental issues. The implementation of green supply chain management is an effective sustainable development approach that combines “environmental awareness” and “economic development.” Therefore, introducing the concept of “green” effectively is the main direction for the sustainable development of agriculture in the future. The impacts of green credit policies on agricultural supply chains have rarely been discussed before. Therefore, we focus on the incentive mechanism of green credit policies in the agricultural supply chain. We use the Stackelberg Leadership Model to construct a pricing model which adds the interest subsidy and required reserve ratio (RRR) cuts, and determines the pricing rules of bank loans and production decisions of the farmer in the agricultural supply chain under the incentive policy of green credit by quantifying the optimization problems of the bank and the farmer. The result shows that optimal decisions exist for both farmer and bank in the supply chain game framework. The implementation of the green credit policies contributes to both of their profits. Additionally, the green credit policies give the bank room to reduce interest rates so that the overall utility level of the supply chain could be improved.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 109
Author(s):  
Pooja Malhotra ◽  
Digvijay Pandey ◽  
Binay Kumar Pandey ◽  
P. Madhusudana Patra

Author(s):  
Luise Pufahl ◽  
Bridie Ohlsson ◽  
Ingo Weber ◽  
Garrett Harper ◽  
Emma Weston

2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 1162 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claudia Parra Paitan ◽  
Peter Verburg

The increasing international trade of agricultural products has contributed to a larger diversity of food at low prices and represents an important economic value. However, such trade can also cause social, environmental and economic impacts beyond the limits of the countries directly involved in the exchange. Agricultural systems are telecoupled because the impacts caused by trade can generate important feedback loops, spillovers, rebound effects, time lags and non-linearities across multiple geographical and temporal scales that make these impacts more difficult to identify and mitigate. We make a comparative review of current impact assessment methods to analyze their suitability to assess the impacts of telecoupled agricultural supply chains. Given the large impacts caused by agricultural production on land systems, we focus on the capacity of methods to account for and spatially allocate direct and indirect land use change. Our analysis identifies trade-offs between methods with respect to the elements of the telecoupled system they address. Hybrid methods are a promising field to navigate these trade-offs. Knowledge gaps in assessing indirect land use change should be overcome in order to improve the accuracy of assessments.


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