Heterogeneity in male and female farmers’ preference for a profit‐enhancing and labor‐saving technology: The case of Direct‐Seeded Rice (DSR) in India

Labor‐saving and income‐increasing technologies may affect women farmers differently from men. However, very few studies explicitly account for women's preferences for new technologies. We carried out a discrete choice experiment with 337 female and 329 male farmers in Maharashtra, India, to measure...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Joshi, Pramod K., Khan, Mohammed Tajuddin, Kishore, Avinash
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Wiley 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/103635
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author Joshi, Pramod K.
Khan, Mohammed Tajuddin
Kishore, Avinash
author_browse Joshi, Pramod K.
Khan, Mohammed Tajuddin
Kishore, Avinash
author_facet Joshi, Pramod K.
Khan, Mohammed Tajuddin
Kishore, Avinash
author_sort Joshi, Pramod K.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Labor‐saving and income‐increasing technologies may affect women farmers differently from men. However, very few studies explicitly account for women's preferences for new technologies. We carried out a discrete choice experiment with 337 female and 329 male farmers in Maharashtra, India, to measure their willingness to pay (WTP) for direct‐seeded rice (DSR) with drum seeder and to understand the gender differences in marginal valuations of key attributes. We used the Women's Empowerment in Agriculture Index (WEAI) to collect self‐reported data on the role and say of women in different domains of decision making. The respective gender roles of women and men in the family and on the farm are aligned with their preferences. Men have a greater say over how the family spends the cash. Accordingly, men tend to have a higher WTP for attributes that increase income (increase in yield) or reduce cash costs (reduction in seed rate). Women contribute a large share of the labor for transplanting rice, much of which is unpaid work on family farms. Women, therefore, seem to value labor saving more. Women in our sample were more interested in the new technology and had a higher WTP for it.
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spelling CGSpace1036352025-02-24T06:45:24Z Heterogeneity in male and female farmers’ preference for a profit‐enhancing and labor‐saving technology: The case of Direct‐Seeded Rice (DSR) in India Joshi, Pramod K. Khan, Mohammed Tajuddin Kishore, Avinash climate change agriculture food security gender rice willingness to pay role of women technology adoption direct sowing farmers technology empowerment experimental design profit women Labor‐saving and income‐increasing technologies may affect women farmers differently from men. However, very few studies explicitly account for women's preferences for new technologies. We carried out a discrete choice experiment with 337 female and 329 male farmers in Maharashtra, India, to measure their willingness to pay (WTP) for direct‐seeded rice (DSR) with drum seeder and to understand the gender differences in marginal valuations of key attributes. We used the Women's Empowerment in Agriculture Index (WEAI) to collect self‐reported data on the role and say of women in different domains of decision making. The respective gender roles of women and men in the family and on the farm are aligned with their preferences. Men have a greater say over how the family spends the cash. Accordingly, men tend to have a higher WTP for attributes that increase income (increase in yield) or reduce cash costs (reduction in seed rate). Women contribute a large share of the labor for transplanting rice, much of which is unpaid work on family farms. Women, therefore, seem to value labor saving more. Women in our sample were more interested in the new technology and had a higher WTP for it. 2019-09 2019-09-13T14:43:11Z 2019-09-13T14:43:11Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/103635 en https://hdl.handle.net/10568/77341 Limited Access Wiley Joshi PK, Khan MT, Avinash K. 2019. Heterogeneity in male and female farmers’ preference for a profit‐enhancing and labor‐saving technology: The case of Direct‐Seeded Rice (DSR) in India. Canadian Journal of Agricultural Economics 67(3):303-320.
spellingShingle climate change
agriculture
food security
gender
rice
willingness to pay
role of women
technology adoption
direct sowing
farmers
technology
empowerment
experimental design
profit
women
Joshi, Pramod K.
Khan, Mohammed Tajuddin
Kishore, Avinash
Heterogeneity in male and female farmers’ preference for a profit‐enhancing and labor‐saving technology: The case of Direct‐Seeded Rice (DSR) in India
title Heterogeneity in male and female farmers’ preference for a profit‐enhancing and labor‐saving technology: The case of Direct‐Seeded Rice (DSR) in India
title_full Heterogeneity in male and female farmers’ preference for a profit‐enhancing and labor‐saving technology: The case of Direct‐Seeded Rice (DSR) in India
title_fullStr Heterogeneity in male and female farmers’ preference for a profit‐enhancing and labor‐saving technology: The case of Direct‐Seeded Rice (DSR) in India
title_full_unstemmed Heterogeneity in male and female farmers’ preference for a profit‐enhancing and labor‐saving technology: The case of Direct‐Seeded Rice (DSR) in India
title_short Heterogeneity in male and female farmers’ preference for a profit‐enhancing and labor‐saving technology: The case of Direct‐Seeded Rice (DSR) in India
title_sort heterogeneity in male and female farmers preference for a profit enhancing and labor saving technology the case of direct seeded rice dsr in india
topic climate change
agriculture
food security
gender
rice
willingness to pay
role of women
technology adoption
direct sowing
farmers
technology
empowerment
experimental design
profit
women
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/103635
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