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T., Chisango Future Fortune
- Impact of Training Couples on Decision Making and Planning on Food and Income Security: A Case of Cowpeas Farmers in Guruve District, Zimbabwe
Authors
Source
International Journal of Innovative Research and Development, Vol 4, No 5 (2015), Pagination:Abstract
The study’s main aim was to evaluate the impact of gender household targeted training (added to technical skills acquired) on decision making and planning on food and income security. Determining the level of women participation in household decision making and planning on income level and assets accrued from sales of cowpeas produce and appraising training impact were the guiding objectives. The T-Test analysis results showed a significance difference of 1between trained and untrained women’s level of participation in household decision making and planning with (0.015 p value), income realised from cowpea produce (0.041 p value), ownership of productive assets (0.017 p value and food security (0.039 p value). The significant differences in favour of the treatment (trained) group signified the positive impact of targeted couple trainings. Thus, training proved to have promoted women participation in economic household decision making processes with their improved self-confidence, signifying significances of targeted training. Trainings also improved coordination between spouses in areas of input acquisition, planning, decision making as well as marketing and accountability over use of proceeds. The implication of these results was that development partners and extension agents should add couple/ household targeted gender and agricultural trainings to tackle gender challenges that retard commercialization of cowpeas production and other potential crops labeled ‘women’s crops’.
Keywords
Gender training, smallholder farmer, poverty, food security- Perception on the Impact of Corruption and Salary Gate Scandals on the Image and Reputation of Parastatal Entities in Zimbabwe: A Case of Premier Service Medical Aid Society PSMAS and Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation ZBC, Gweru
Authors
Source
International Journal of Innovative Research and Development, Vol 4, No 4 (2015), Pagination:Abstract
The salary gate scandals that broke out in the mainstream print media in late 2013 were a defining moment in the history of state enterprises, parastatals or quasi government firms in Zimbabwe. The revelations by media outlets exposed the rot in corporate governance of some strategic national companies, where managers earned up to US$530 000 a month against the background of non-performing economy, towering loses and poor service delivery. Most notorious being Premier Service Medical Aid Society PSMAS and Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation ZBC, who both hogged the limelight parallel to the public outrage over preposterous incomes afforded to chief executive officers. The study therefore sought to assess and evaluate, for such organizations, the impact of the salary gate scandals on corporate reputations in the public relations framework. The study sought to determine, the public’s trust of PSMAS and ZBC in the wake of the malpractices. The research explored institutional corruption, public relations and media discourses, while referencing Zimbabwe’s ranking on the Transparency International Corruption Perception Index. Earlier scandals like Willowgate backdrop the nature of impropriety by institutions, and officials mandated to safeguard public interest in the country that eventually set the tone to what is now widely known as the exposes of salary gate. Public opinion was a central complimentary theme in the study, the selected newspapers; The Chronicle and The Daily News stories on salary gate were used in the study as exhibits to demonstrate the extent of reputation damage on Zimbabwe’s national companies. The major participants in the study were stakeholders, staff at companies implicated and broader members of society who were interrogated to provide insights on deeper perspective on salary gate scandals in the country. The generated data from publications and questionnaire responses from the public was analysed qualitatively. Findings revealed that the majority of Zimbabweans viewed salary gate as gross betrayal of the liberation struggle, where few individuals personalized state wealth and resources. The study therefore recommended better forms of conduct for national companies to avoid recurrence of such gross impropriety.