Impact of Agricultural Credit on the Employability of Rice Farmers in a Context of Ecological Change: A Causal Analysis in the Logone Valley, Chad
Mahamat Mallah Choukou
*
Department of Economics, Faculty of Science and Business Technology, University of Moundou, Moundou, Chad.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
Aims: In a context of demographic pressure and ecological change in sub-Saharan Africa, agricultural credit is promoted as a key lever for rural employment. This study assesses its causal impact on the employability of rice farmers in the Logone Valley in Chad.
Study Design: A mixed methodology combining a survey of 96 rice farmers with qualitative interviews.
Place and Duration of Study: Logone Valley, Chad; data collected in November 2025.
Methodology: Econometric models (Negative Binomial regression, OLS with interaction terms, Instrumental Variable (2SLS), and Propensity Score Matching) were employed to control for endogeneity bias linked to selective access to credit.
Results: The results reveal that credit preferentially targets farmers already endowed with land, social capital (cooperative) and human capital (training). Nevertheless, its causal effect is positive: it multiplies the creation of seasonal employment by 2.32 (IRR = 2.321, p = 0.003) and increases incomes (elasticity of 0.176, p < 0.001). However, this impact is doubly conditioned. It is amplified by access to training (interaction effect: +0.341, p = 0.047) and membership in a cooperative (interaction effect: +0.412, p = 0.008), but is severely attenuated by climatic shocks, which reduce incomes by 41.2% (β = -0.412, p = 0.003). Economic diversification is favored (OR = 3.459, p = 0.009), but the jobs created remain precarious.
Conclusion: Agricultural credit is an effective but imperfect and vulnerable lever. Its potential is conditioned by complementary services and cancelled out by uncovered climatic risks. A transformation of financial policies is required, integrating climate insurance, technical support and a systemic "service package" approach for inclusive and resilient rural transformation.
Keywords: Rural finance, rural employment, climate change, adaptation, Lake Wey, Chad