Social incentives as nudges for agricultural knowledge diffusion and willingness to pay for certified seeds: Experimental evidence from Uganda

A transition from low-input subsistence farming in Sub-Saharan Africa will require the use of yield-increasing agricultural technologies. However, in developing countries, most farmers continue to rely heavily on pestinfested and disease-infected recycled seed from own or local sources leading to lo...

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Autores principales: Okello, J.J., Shikuku, Kelvin Mashisia, Lagerkvist, Carl Johan, Rommel, J., Jogo, W., Ojwang, S.O., Namanda, S., Elungat, J.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/131203
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author Okello, J.J.
Shikuku, Kelvin Mashisia
Lagerkvist, Carl Johan
Rommel, J.
Jogo, W.
Ojwang, S.O.
Namanda, S.
Elungat, J.
author_browse Elungat, J.
Jogo, W.
Lagerkvist, Carl Johan
Namanda, S.
Ojwang, S.O.
Okello, J.J.
Rommel, J.
Shikuku, Kelvin Mashisia
author_facet Okello, J.J.
Shikuku, Kelvin Mashisia
Lagerkvist, Carl Johan
Rommel, J.
Jogo, W.
Ojwang, S.O.
Namanda, S.
Elungat, J.
author_sort Okello, J.J.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description A transition from low-input subsistence farming in Sub-Saharan Africa will require the use of yield-increasing agricultural technologies. However, in developing countries, most farmers continue to rely heavily on pestinfested and disease-infected recycled seed from own or local sources leading to low yields. This study used a field experiment to examine the effect of a social incentive combined with goal setting on the diffusion of agricultural knowledge and uptake of quality certified seed by farmers. We relaxed the seed access and information/knowledge constraints by introducing improved varieties of sweetpotato in the study villages and providing training to carefully selected progressive farmers who were then linked to co-villagers. We find that social incentives combined with goal setting reduced the likelihood of the trained progressive farmers reaching out to co-villagers to share information and discuss farming. Further, social incentive combined with goal setting had no significant effect on knowledge and experimentation by progressive farmers, and on willingness to pay for improved seed – as elicited through auctions, our proxy for experimentation, by co-villagers. These findings suggest that the combination of goal setting and public recognition acted to crowd-out diffusion effort. We conclude that social incentive combined with goal setting by established progressive farmers already enjoying a certain degree of public recognition is not sufficient to induce effort in learning and experimentation with agricultural innovations. These results have implications for design of policy and extension services to promote adoption of agricultural technologies with proven food and nutrition security benefits in developing countries.
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spelling CGSpace1312032025-12-08T10:06:44Z Social incentives as nudges for agricultural knowledge diffusion and willingness to pay for certified seeds: Experimental evidence from Uganda Okello, J.J. Shikuku, Kelvin Mashisia Lagerkvist, Carl Johan Rommel, J. Jogo, W. Ojwang, S.O. Namanda, S. Elungat, J. seed sweet potatoes A transition from low-input subsistence farming in Sub-Saharan Africa will require the use of yield-increasing agricultural technologies. However, in developing countries, most farmers continue to rely heavily on pestinfested and disease-infected recycled seed from own or local sources leading to low yields. This study used a field experiment to examine the effect of a social incentive combined with goal setting on the diffusion of agricultural knowledge and uptake of quality certified seed by farmers. We relaxed the seed access and information/knowledge constraints by introducing improved varieties of sweetpotato in the study villages and providing training to carefully selected progressive farmers who were then linked to co-villagers. We find that social incentives combined with goal setting reduced the likelihood of the trained progressive farmers reaching out to co-villagers to share information and discuss farming. Further, social incentive combined with goal setting had no significant effect on knowledge and experimentation by progressive farmers, and on willingness to pay for improved seed – as elicited through auctions, our proxy for experimentation, by co-villagers. These findings suggest that the combination of goal setting and public recognition acted to crowd-out diffusion effort. We conclude that social incentive combined with goal setting by established progressive farmers already enjoying a certain degree of public recognition is not sufficient to induce effort in learning and experimentation with agricultural innovations. These results have implications for design of policy and extension services to promote adoption of agricultural technologies with proven food and nutrition security benefits in developing countries. 2023-10 2023-07-17T23:14:08Z 2023-07-17T23:14:08Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/131203 en Open Access Elsevier Lagerkvist, C.J.; Rommel, J.; Jogo, W.; Ojwang, S.O.; Namanda, S.; Elungat, J. 2023. Social incentives as nudges for agricultural knowledge diffusion and willingness to pay for certified seeds: Experimental evidence from Uganda. Food Policy. ISSN 1873-5657. 120, 102506. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodpol.2023.102506
spellingShingle seed
sweet potatoes
Okello, J.J.
Shikuku, Kelvin Mashisia
Lagerkvist, Carl Johan
Rommel, J.
Jogo, W.
Ojwang, S.O.
Namanda, S.
Elungat, J.
Social incentives as nudges for agricultural knowledge diffusion and willingness to pay for certified seeds: Experimental evidence from Uganda
title Social incentives as nudges for agricultural knowledge diffusion and willingness to pay for certified seeds: Experimental evidence from Uganda
title_full Social incentives as nudges for agricultural knowledge diffusion and willingness to pay for certified seeds: Experimental evidence from Uganda
title_fullStr Social incentives as nudges for agricultural knowledge diffusion and willingness to pay for certified seeds: Experimental evidence from Uganda
title_full_unstemmed Social incentives as nudges for agricultural knowledge diffusion and willingness to pay for certified seeds: Experimental evidence from Uganda
title_short Social incentives as nudges for agricultural knowledge diffusion and willingness to pay for certified seeds: Experimental evidence from Uganda
title_sort social incentives as nudges for agricultural knowledge diffusion and willingness to pay for certified seeds experimental evidence from uganda
topic seed
sweet potatoes
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/131203
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