1 Department of Business and Information Technology, Texila American University, Zambia.
2 Department of Biochemistry, Texila American University, Zambia.
3 Department of Social Sciences, Mulungushi University, Kabwe, Zambia.
International Journal of Science and Research Archive, 2026, 18(03), 652-660
Article DOI: 10.30574/ijsra.2026.18.3.0478
Received on 30 January 2026; revised on 08 March 2026; accepted on 10 March 2026
The Paper presents a study that analyzed the pricing strategies employed by smallholder farmers in Zambia and their effects on income and sales volume. A mixed-methods approach was used, surveying 80 farmers from Luapula and other provinces. Findings reveal that 51% of farmers use market-based pricing, 31.4% use cost-plus pricing, 8.8% use penetration pricing, and 8.8% use skimming pricing. Market research is conducted by 85% of farmers, yet 52.9% rely primarily on peer information. Key challenges include fluctuating market prices (29.7%), crop seasonality (20.3%), inconsistent production costs (17.6%), and limited access to market information (16.2%). Correlation analysis showed market-based pricing positively correlates with income and sales volume (ρ = 0.226, p = 0.044), while cost-plus pricing showed a negative correlation (ρ = -0.302, p = 0.006). Skimming pricing negatively correlated with market-based pricing (ρ = -0.236, p = 0.035), and penetration pricing showed no significant effect. These findings suggest that strategy effectiveness depends on crop type, market conditions, and access to accurate pricing information. Recommendations included strengthening market information systems, cooperative marketing, cost analysis training, and diversified pricing approaches.
Smallholder farmers; Pricing strategies; Challenges; Income; Sales volume and Zambia
Preview Article PDF
Victoria Kafula Bwalya, Jacqueline Siwale, Victor Chikampa and Chimuka Mwaanga. Pricing strategies of smallholder farmers in Zambia: Challenges and implications for income and sales. International Journal of Science and Research Archive, 2026, 18(03), 652-660. Article DOI: https://doi.org/10.30574/ijsra.2026.18.3.0478.






