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Agricultural Marketing

Agricultural Marketing. ApEc 3071. Cell (Mobile) Phones, Marketing & Development. Jeffrey Sachs (dev. guru) has referred to them as “ the single most transformative tool for development (currently”.

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Agricultural Marketing

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  1. Agricultural Marketing ApEc 3071

  2. Cell (Mobile) Phones, Marketing & Development • Jeffrey Sachs (dev. guru) has referred to them as “ the single most transformative tool for development (currently”. • First cell-phones were thought of as niche product fro urban businessmen & wealthy in developing countries. • However, prices fell & cell-phone networks spread . • Much cheaper to build a cell-phone network than a wire-line one. • Theft of copper line.

  3. Plus Pre-Paid payment system developed • All cash; these are cash societies and small only have small amounts at once. • Can load up phone with credit (minutes) & use it until the time runs out; then buy new credit. • Vouchers sold in small shops & on street corners. • Top-up vouchers sold for as little as 50 cents. • Went from a luxury to a commodity. • Price of basic cell-phone has fallen to $20 or less. • Group of village women could get micro-financing to buy a cell-phone then rent it to others –village-phone.

  4. Liberalization of Telecom Markets • In developing countries telecom has typically been a government-run monopoly. • Many countries deregulated telecom, at lest for cell-phones. • Mobile tele-density: cells per hundred people. • 40 in Africa. • 4 billion mobile phone subscriptions in the world, only 1 billion of those in developed countries (in 2008).

  5. Impacts on Marketing • One study off coast of southern India in 2007 by Robert Jensen. • Found access to cell-phones as they spread down the coast between 1997 & 2001 allowed fisherman to market their catch much more efficiently. • Could call several markets in nearby coastal villages while still at sea instead of just going back to home village. • Then go to market with best price that day.

  6. continued • Dramatically reduced variation in price between villages along the coast. • Reduced consumer prices by 4% & raised fisherman’s profits by 8%. • Information makes market work, & better markets improve welfare. Regular people call around to find best prices. • In another study in 2008 in Niger, cell-phones reduced price variation between village markets by a minimum of 6.4% & more in remote, hard to reach ones.

  7. Impact of Micro-Entrepreneurship • 50-60% of businesses globally; 90% in Africa. • Self-employed carpenters, porters, etc. can post notices to lamp-posts, etc. with their cell-phone #’s. • In Bangladesh a barber who couldn’t afford to rent a shop bought a cell-phone and motor-bike instead. • Then posted his # & prices and made appointments to go to customer’s homes. • One street merchant found his business increased by 70% after he started using a cell-phone & posting ads. • Could also negotiate with different suppliers to get better prices.

  8. Source of Employment • Creates new jobs, stimulates investment, & a source of government revenue. • Afghanistan’s largest private company, investor & tax payer is Roshan, a mobile phone company. • Has a network of 25,000 agents who sell top-up cards. • Grameen Bank’s Mr. Yonus, 2006 Nobel Peace Prize winner, said: • When you have a mobile phone, it is almost like having a card to get out of poverty.

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