Do Safety Nets Promote Technology Adoption? Panel data evidence from rural Ethiopia
Abstract
We use panel data from rural Ethiopia to investigate if participation in a safety net program enhances fertilizer adoption. Using a difference-in-difference estimator and inverse propensity score weighting we find that participation in Ethiopia’s food-for-work program increased fertilizer adoption. Results also indicate that the likelihood of adopting and the intensity of fertilizer usage increased with livestock holdings for food-for-work-participant households providing some
evidence that the intervention helped asset-rich farm households more than asset-poor households. We find no significant effects of free distribution on fertilizer adoption or intensification. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that safety nets can be viewed as mechanisms that allow households to take on more risk to pursue higher profits. The paper highlights important policy implications related to the inter-related dynamics of safety nets and extension services that aim at promoting productivity enhancing modern agricultural technologies.
Other description
JEL Classification: O12; O33; Q12; Q16
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2013-02Author
Alem, Yonas
Broussard, Nzinga H.
Keywords
safety net
fertilizer use
inverse propensity score weighting
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
556
Language
eng