L’INEFFICACITÉ DES CIRCUITS DE COMMERCIALISATION COMME DÉTERMINANT MAJEUR DE LA PAUVRETÉ DES MÉNAGES AGRICOLES AU KASAÏ ORIENTAL (RÉPUBLIQUE DÉMOCRATIQUE DU CONGO)

Authors

  • Pierrot MUKA MULAMBA
  • Moïse KALAMABAIE BINM MUKANYA
  • John TSHIBAMBA MUKENDI
  • Charledoux MBUYI TSHILUMBA
  • Déborah MADIYA MUTOMBO
  • Anne Marie MUJINGA KALAMBAYI
  • Geneviève NZEBA MUKANYA
  • Marie Eve LUSAMBA wa BAYA

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20568158

Keywords:

Rural poverty 1; Marketing channels 2; Agricultural households 3; Kasaï Oriental 4; DRC 5; Multidimensional poverty index (mpI) 6; Poverty line 7; Agricultural profitability 8; Rural development

Abstract

Rural poverty remains a structural challenge in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), especially in the Kasaï Oriental province, where over 70% of agricultural households live below the monetary poverty line. This study investigates how inefficient marketing channels contribute to persistent poverty in Nkuadi, Tshilenge territory. Based on a survey of 400 rural households, combining quantitative (structured questionnaires) and qualitative approaches (interviews, focus groups), findings reveal that 71.8% of households live on less than $1 (2400 FC) per day per capita, while the Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI) reaches 63.2%, indicating severe deprivations in energy, housing, health, education, and access to clean water.
Statistical analysis (χ² tests, linear regression, Foster-Greer-Thorbecke methodology) confirms a strong and significant correlation (p < 0.05) between reliance on closed local marketing channels (village-level, with no access to urban markets like Mbujimayi) and poverty status. Farmers sell maize—the main cash crop—at an average price of 3585 FC/meka, considered “low” by over half of them (50.25%), often imposed or poorly negotiated due to the absence of collective organization, lack of accounting practices, and ignorance of key management tools such as break-even analysis or safety margin. Selling price and marketing channel emerge as critical economic determinants of poverty, alongside household size, which negatively impacts living standards (β = –362.03; p < 0.001).
The study demonstrates that agricultural production alone cannot lift households out of poverty without structured markets, targeted policy support, and agricultural management capacity-building. It calls for formalizing farmer organizations into cooperatives, implementing price alert systems, strengthening financial literacy, and renewed state commitment to pro-poor agricultural policies. Without these interventions, agricultural growth will remain ineffective against entrenched rural poverty.

Published

2026-06-06

How to Cite

Pierrot MUKA MULAMBA, Moïse KALAMABAIE BINM MUKANYA, John TSHIBAMBA MUKENDI, Charledoux MBUYI TSHILUMBA, Déborah MADIYA MUTOMBO, Anne Marie MUJINGA KALAMBAYI, Geneviève NZEBA MUKANYA, & Marie Eve LUSAMBA wa BAYA. (2026). L’INEFFICACITÉ DES CIRCUITS DE COMMERCIALISATION COMME DÉTERMINANT MAJEUR DE LA PAUVRETÉ DES MÉNAGES AGRICOLES AU KASAÏ ORIENTAL (RÉPUBLIQUE DÉMOCRATIQUE DU CONGO). Revue Internationale De La Recherche Scientifique (Revue-IRS), 4(3), 4592–4602. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20568158

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