Improving Welfare through Climate-friendly Agriculture: The Case of the System of Rice Intensification
Abstract
We use rich survey data to investigate the impact of a climate-friendly rice farming method
known as the system of rice intensification (SRI) on the welfare of rain-dependent small-holder
farmers in Tanzania. SRI reduces water consumption by half, which makes it a promising
farming system in the adaptation to climate change in moisture-constrained areas, and it
does not require flooding of rice fields, resulting in reduced methane emissions. Endogenous
switching regression results suggest that SRI indeed improves yield in rain-dependent areas,
but its profitability hinges on the actual market price farmers face. SRI becomes profitable only
when the rice variety sells at the same market price as that of traditional varieties, but results
in loss when SRI rice sells at a lower price. We argue that the effort of promoting adoption
of such types of climate-friendly agricultural practices requires complementary institutional
reform and support in order to ensure their profitability to small-holder farmers.
Other description
JEL: D13, J32, O33, Q12
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2015-10Author
Alem, Yonas
Eggert, Håkan
Ruhinduka, Remidius
Keywords
Adaptation to climate change
Endogenous switching regression
Impact evaluation
System of rice intensification
Tanzania
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
630
Language
eng