Estimating seed demand in the presence of market frictions: evidence from an auction experiment in Nigeria

This paper measures the effect of seed quality misperceptions on bidding behavior and demand for high-quality seed using an information-provision experiment within an incentive-compatible Vickery Second Price (SPA) auction mechanism that mimics seed purchasing decisions in the presence of seed marke...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wossen, T., Spielman, David J., Alene, A., Abdoulaye, T.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/138264
_version_ 1855513034063085568
author Wossen, T.
Spielman, David J.
Alene, A.
Abdoulaye, T.
author_browse Abdoulaye, T.
Alene, A.
Spielman, David J.
Wossen, T.
author_facet Wossen, T.
Spielman, David J.
Alene, A.
Abdoulaye, T.
author_sort Wossen, T.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This paper measures the effect of seed quality misperceptions on bidding behavior and demand for high-quality seed using an information-provision experiment within an incentive-compatible Vickery Second Price (SPA) auction mechanism that mimics seed purchasing decisions in the presence of seed market frictions. We find that most individuals are prone to quality misperception and revise their bids upwards (downwards) in response to positive (negative) quality signals. In addition, by exploiting random variation in the timing of cash grants, we show that imperfect information influences farmer seed valuation, even in the presence of potentially binding liquidity constraints. We also demonstrate that the provision of quality information does not fully resolve quality misperceptions. We then show that unresolved or persistent misperception is severe enough to distort bidding behavior, and ignoring it could lead to biased willingness-to-pay estimates. Our findings have important implications both for improving inference related to the identification and estimation of willingness to pay for quality seed in the presence of market frictions, and for the design of seed sector polices in developing countries.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace138264
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher Elsevier
publisherStr Elsevier
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1382642025-11-12T04:46:09Z Estimating seed demand in the presence of market frictions: evidence from an auction experiment in Nigeria Wossen, T. Spielman, David J. Alene, A. Abdoulaye, T. auctions seed systems seed certification cassava nigeria This paper measures the effect of seed quality misperceptions on bidding behavior and demand for high-quality seed using an information-provision experiment within an incentive-compatible Vickery Second Price (SPA) auction mechanism that mimics seed purchasing decisions in the presence of seed market frictions. We find that most individuals are prone to quality misperception and revise their bids upwards (downwards) in response to positive (negative) quality signals. In addition, by exploiting random variation in the timing of cash grants, we show that imperfect information influences farmer seed valuation, even in the presence of potentially binding liquidity constraints. We also demonstrate that the provision of quality information does not fully resolve quality misperceptions. We then show that unresolved or persistent misperception is severe enough to distort bidding behavior, and ignoring it could lead to biased willingness-to-pay estimates. Our findings have important implications both for improving inference related to the identification and estimation of willingness to pay for quality seed in the presence of market frictions, and for the design of seed sector polices in developing countries. 2024-03 2024-01-22T14:23:19Z 2024-01-22T14:23:19Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/138264 en https://doi.org/10.2499/p15738coll2.134441 Open Access application/pdf Elsevier Wossen, T., Spielman, D. J., Alene, A. & Abdoulaye, T. (2024). Estimating seed demand in the presence of market frictions: evidence from an auction experiment in Nigeria. Journal of Development Economics, 167:103242, 1-17.
spellingShingle auctions
seed systems
seed certification
cassava
nigeria
Wossen, T.
Spielman, David J.
Alene, A.
Abdoulaye, T.
Estimating seed demand in the presence of market frictions: evidence from an auction experiment in Nigeria
title Estimating seed demand in the presence of market frictions: evidence from an auction experiment in Nigeria
title_full Estimating seed demand in the presence of market frictions: evidence from an auction experiment in Nigeria
title_fullStr Estimating seed demand in the presence of market frictions: evidence from an auction experiment in Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Estimating seed demand in the presence of market frictions: evidence from an auction experiment in Nigeria
title_short Estimating seed demand in the presence of market frictions: evidence from an auction experiment in Nigeria
title_sort estimating seed demand in the presence of market frictions evidence from an auction experiment in nigeria
topic auctions
seed systems
seed certification
cassava
nigeria
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/138264
work_keys_str_mv AT wossent estimatingseeddemandinthepresenceofmarketfrictionsevidencefromanauctionexperimentinnigeria
AT spielmandavidj estimatingseeddemandinthepresenceofmarketfrictionsevidencefromanauctionexperimentinnigeria
AT alenea estimatingseeddemandinthepresenceofmarketfrictionsevidencefromanauctionexperimentinnigeria
AT abdoulayet estimatingseeddemandinthepresenceofmarketfrictionsevidencefromanauctionexperimentinnigeria