Why dairy farmers leave the industry: The role of control, autonomy, and self-efficacy

Authors: Holmes, G., Osei, M., Bray, J. and Discetti, R.

Journal: Journal of Rural Studies

Volume: 116

ISSN: 0743-0167

DOI: 10.1016/j.jrurstud.2025.103600

Abstract:

While global demand for milk and dairy products grows, the number of dairy farms in the United Kingdom has fallen by 56% in the last 20 years, coupled with a decline in cows and farmers' numbers. Research has explored a wide range of factors impacting dairy farmers' decision to leave the industry early; however, these factors are collated from a diversity of individual studies, and we lack a comprehensive understanding of what individual factors are more prominent in driving dairy farmers' decision and how factors may interplay within a single study context. To address this gap, we utilised an explanatory sequential mixed-methods research design, including a questionnaire (n = 335) followed by in-depth interviews (n = 21) with current and former dairy farmers in the UK. Findings identified a complex interplay among Profitability, Compliance and Regulation, Milk Price, Investments, Mental Health, Physical Health, Availability of Labour, Animal Welfare, Anti-dairy Sentiment, Succession, Milk Contracts, Climate Change, and Family Pressures. Our paper contributes to existing literature in three ways. First, we offer a comprehensive overview of the factors influencing dairy farmers’ intention to leave the industry early; second, we discuss how these factors interrelate dynamically, providing a model of the phenomenon highlighting the central role of control, autonomy, and self-efficacy; third, we provide insights on a fruitful empirical context, as the UK context captures current European trends on dairy farm exit and includes a diversity of farm types found across different geographic contexts, increasing the wider applicability of findings.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/40777/

Source: Scopus

Why dairy farmers leave the industry: The role of control, autonomy, and self-efficacy

Authors: Holmes, G., Osei, M., Bray, J. and Discetti, R.

Journal: JOURNAL OF RURAL STUDIES

Volume: 116

eISSN: 1873-1392

ISSN: 0743-0167

DOI: 10.1016/j.jrurstud.2025.103600

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/40777/

Source: Web of Science (Lite)

Why dairy farmers leave the industry: The role of control, autonomy, and self-efficacy

Authors: Holmes, G., Osei, M., Bray, J. and Discetti, R.

Journal: Journal of Rural Studies

Publisher: Elsevier

eISSN: 1873-1392

ISSN: 0743-0167

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/40777/

Source: Manual

Why dairy farmers leave the industry: The role of control, autonomy, and self-efficacy

Authors: Holmes, G., Osei, M., Bray, J. and Discetti, R.

Journal: Journal of Rural Studies

Volume: 116

Publisher: Elsevier

ISSN: 0743-0167

Abstract:

While global demand for milk and dairy products grows, the number of dairy farms in the United Kingdom has fallen by 56% in the last 20 years, coupled with a decline in cows and farmers’ numbers. Research has explored a wide range of factors impacting dairy farmers’ decision to leave the industry early; however, these factors are collated from a diversity of individual studies, and we lack a comprehensive understanding of what individual factors are more prominent in driving dairy farmers’ decision and how factors may interplay within a single study context. To address this gap, we utilised an explanatory sequential mixed-methods research design, including a questionnaire (n=335) followed by in-depth interviews (n=21) with current and former dairy farmers in the UK. Findings identified a complex interplay among Profitability, Compliance and Regulation, Milk Price, Investments, Mental Health, Physical Health, Availability of Labour, Animal Welfare, Anti-dairy Sentiment, Succession, Milk Contracts, Climate Change, and Family Pressure. Our paper contributes to existing literature in three ways. First, we offer a comprehensive overview of the factors influencing dairy farmers’ intention to leave the industry early; second, we discuss how these factors interrelate dynamically, providing a model of the phenomenon highlighting the central role of control, autonomy, and self-efficacy; third, we adopt a fruitful empirical context, as the UK study context captures current European trends on farm exit and includes a diversity of farm types found across different geographic contexts, increasing the wider applicability of findings.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/40777/

https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/journal-of-rural-studies

Source: BURO EPrints