The Role of Production Risk in Sustainable Land-Management Technology Adoption in the Ethiopian Highlands
Abstract
This paper provides empirical evidence of production risk impact on sustainable land- management
technology adoption, using two years of cross-sectional plot-level data collected in the Ethiopian highlands. We
used a moment-based approach, which allowed a flexible representation of the production risk (Antle 1983,
1987). Mundlak’s approach was used to capture the unobserved heterogeneity along with other regressors in the
estimation of fertilizer and conservation adoption. The empirical results revealed that impact of production risk
varied by technology type. Production risks (variance and crop failure as measured by second and third central
moments, respectively) had significant impact on fertilizer adoption and extent of adoption. However, this
impact was not observed in adoption of conservation technology. On the other hand, expected return (as
measured by the first central moment) had a positive significant impact on both fertilizer (adoption and
intensity) and conservation adoption. Economic instruments that hedge against risk exposure, including
downside risk and increase productivity, are important to promote adoption of improved technology and reduce
poverty in Ethiopia.
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Date
2009-11-30Author
Kassie, Menale
Yesuf, Mahmud
Köhlin, Gunnar
Keywords
Production risk
sustainable land management technology adoption
moment based estimation
Ethiopia
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
407
Language
eng