Determinants and impact of farmers’ participation in social media groups: Evidence from irrigated areas of Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan

The spread of information and communications technology (ICT) in Central Asia has reached a point where most farmers use smartphones with mobile internet access, providing an opportunity for a cost-effective and timely access to agricultural information and extension services. When extension service...

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Autores principales: Tadjiev, Abdusame, Kurbanov, Zafar, Djanibekov, Nodir, Govind, Ajit, Akramkhanov, Akmal
Formato: Internal Document
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Leibniz Institute of Agricultural Development in Transition Economies 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/131641
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author Tadjiev, Abdusame
Kurbanov, Zafar
Djanibekov, Nodir
Govind, Ajit
Akramkhanov, Akmal
author_browse Akramkhanov, Akmal
Djanibekov, Nodir
Govind, Ajit
Kurbanov, Zafar
Tadjiev, Abdusame
author_facet Tadjiev, Abdusame
Kurbanov, Zafar
Djanibekov, Nodir
Govind, Ajit
Akramkhanov, Akmal
author_sort Tadjiev, Abdusame
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The spread of information and communications technology (ICT) in Central Asia has reached a point where most farmers use smartphones with mobile internet access, providing an opportunity for a cost-effective and timely access to agricultural information and extension services. When extension service provision is poor and does not reflect farmers’ immediate needs, farmers often seek other sources of informaton, such as exchanging knowledge with their peers via social media groups in instant messaging applicatons (apps). Using the findings of a farm-level survey conducted in 2022 in irrigated areas of Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, we study behavior and attitudes of farmers in terms of participation in smartphone-based social media groups and its impact of farm performance. We find that in the two country contexts, underlying reasons for participation in social groups differ. In Kazakhstan, participation decisions are made by those who have better access to a mobile internet connection, are younger, have agriculture-related education, have a wider communication circle on phone with more than four individuals, cultivate fewer crops, have lands with low soil quality and poor irrigation water access, as well as located in remote areas. In Uzbekistan participation decisions are made by those who see the relevance of mobile internet for their farm business, have their own agronomic knowledge, are open to new things, care less about the opinion of other farmers, have higher perception about freedom in crop choice, have of-farm work, as well as poor irrigation water access. These fndings suggest farmers' participation in agricultural information-sharing groups (AISG) is influenced less by the type of cultivated crops or farm size, but by their institutional environment. The findings are relevant for developing private strategies and public policies to spread digital technologies among Central Asia’s farmers. When introducing smartphone-based digital advisory services policymakers are recommended to start scaling up with younger and more educated farmers who rely on their own knowledge and are more open to embracing new ways of farming and interaction. Farmers’ decision-making autonomy will be crucial for converting digital transformation in agriculture into farm benefits.
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spelling CGSpace1316412026-01-14T03:07:33Z Determinants and impact of farmers’ participation in social media groups: Evidence from irrigated areas of Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan Tadjiev, Abdusame Kurbanov, Zafar Djanibekov, Nodir Govind, Ajit Akramkhanov, Akmal central asia knowledge exchange goal 3 good health and well-being goal 15 life on land self-help groups goal 4 quality education extension services farmers’ behaviors climate adaptation and mitigation partcipaton determinants The spread of information and communications technology (ICT) in Central Asia has reached a point where most farmers use smartphones with mobile internet access, providing an opportunity for a cost-effective and timely access to agricultural information and extension services. When extension service provision is poor and does not reflect farmers’ immediate needs, farmers often seek other sources of informaton, such as exchanging knowledge with their peers via social media groups in instant messaging applicatons (apps). Using the findings of a farm-level survey conducted in 2022 in irrigated areas of Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, we study behavior and attitudes of farmers in terms of participation in smartphone-based social media groups and its impact of farm performance. We find that in the two country contexts, underlying reasons for participation in social groups differ. In Kazakhstan, participation decisions are made by those who have better access to a mobile internet connection, are younger, have agriculture-related education, have a wider communication circle on phone with more than four individuals, cultivate fewer crops, have lands with low soil quality and poor irrigation water access, as well as located in remote areas. In Uzbekistan participation decisions are made by those who see the relevance of mobile internet for their farm business, have their own agronomic knowledge, are open to new things, care less about the opinion of other farmers, have higher perception about freedom in crop choice, have of-farm work, as well as poor irrigation water access. These fndings suggest farmers' participation in agricultural information-sharing groups (AISG) is influenced less by the type of cultivated crops or farm size, but by their institutional environment. The findings are relevant for developing private strategies and public policies to spread digital technologies among Central Asia’s farmers. When introducing smartphone-based digital advisory services policymakers are recommended to start scaling up with younger and more educated farmers who rely on their own knowledge and are more open to embracing new ways of farming and interaction. Farmers’ decision-making autonomy will be crucial for converting digital transformation in agriculture into farm benefits. 2023-06-05 2023-08-24T16:31:19Z 2023-08-24T16:31:19Z Internal Document https://hdl.handle.net/10568/131641 en Open Access Leibniz Institute of Agricultural Development in Transition Economies Tadjiev, A. Kurbanov, Z. Djanibekov, N. Govind, A. and Akramkhanov, A. 2023. Determinants and impact of farmers’ participation in social media groups: Evidence from irrigated areas of Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan. Halle (Saale), Germany, IAMO Discussion Paper No. 201, Halle (Saale): IAMO.
spellingShingle central asia
knowledge exchange
goal 3 good health and well-being
goal 15 life on land
self-help groups
goal 4 quality education
extension services
farmers’ behaviors
climate adaptation and mitigation
partcipaton determinants
Tadjiev, Abdusame
Kurbanov, Zafar
Djanibekov, Nodir
Govind, Ajit
Akramkhanov, Akmal
Determinants and impact of farmers’ participation in social media groups: Evidence from irrigated areas of Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan
title Determinants and impact of farmers’ participation in social media groups: Evidence from irrigated areas of Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan
title_full Determinants and impact of farmers’ participation in social media groups: Evidence from irrigated areas of Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan
title_fullStr Determinants and impact of farmers’ participation in social media groups: Evidence from irrigated areas of Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan
title_full_unstemmed Determinants and impact of farmers’ participation in social media groups: Evidence from irrigated areas of Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan
title_short Determinants and impact of farmers’ participation in social media groups: Evidence from irrigated areas of Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan
title_sort determinants and impact of farmers participation in social media groups evidence from irrigated areas of kazakhstan and uzbekistan
topic central asia
knowledge exchange
goal 3 good health and well-being
goal 15 life on land
self-help groups
goal 4 quality education
extension services
farmers’ behaviors
climate adaptation and mitigation
partcipaton determinants
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/131641
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