Direct and spillover effects of agricultural advisory services: Evidence from the farm science centre in Uttar Pradesh, India

Agricultural advisory services are the most important knowledge-delivery institutions for accelerating the adoption of advanced technologies, and for improving farmers’ learning abilities for their implementation. These technologies have implications for the larger goal of agricultural development a...

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Autores principales: Varshney, Deepak, Joshi, Pramod Kumar, Dubey, Shantanu Kumar
Formato: Artículo preliminar
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Food Policy Research Institute 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/146769
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author Varshney, Deepak
Joshi, Pramod Kumar
Dubey, Shantanu Kumar
author_browse Dubey, Shantanu Kumar
Joshi, Pramod Kumar
Varshney, Deepak
author_facet Varshney, Deepak
Joshi, Pramod Kumar
Dubey, Shantanu Kumar
author_sort Varshney, Deepak
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Agricultural advisory services are the most important knowledge-delivery institutions for accelerating the adoption of advanced technologies, and for improving farmers’ learning abilities for their implementation. These technologies have implications for the larger goal of agricultural development and farmers’ welfare. This study explores the spillover effects of an innovative public-sector program in India that provides agricultural advisory services. At the Farm Science Centre (known locally as Krishi Vigyan Kendra [KVK]), scientists demonstrate modern technologies and develop capacity-building programs. This paper examines the extent of direct and spillover benefits of KVKs. It also evaluates the impact of KVKs on the adoption of improved technologies for primary beneficiaries (those who receive the benefits directly from KVKs), and for those farmers who receive information flow from them. The study is based on a primary survey of 1,496 wheat farmers in Uttar Pradesh, India. Spillover information flows are captured by: a) farmers who visit frontline demonstration (FLD) sites by their own curiosity and are categorized as secondary beneficiary farmers, and b) farmers who obtain information flows from primary and secondary beneficiaries being in their social network and are categorized as network beneficiary. Identification is achieved by exploiting non-universal coverage of KVKs, and through the availability of recall-based panels for pre- and post-intervention years on the adoption of improved technologies. The study applied matched difference-in-difference (MDID) approach to examine the effect of frontline demonstrations (FLDs) and training programs. It also examine pre-intervention trends to provide a check on the validity of our estimates. Findings revealed that 3% of primary beneficiaries of FLDs can generate information spillover to 31% of farmers. For capacity building, the results showed that 3% of primary beneficiaries can generate information spillover to 27% of farmers. The key channel for spillover information flow was the network beneficiary. On a further note, the study establishes evidence of a positive impact on the adoption of a modern wheat variety—namely HD-2967—by primary beneficiaries, as well as secondary and network beneficiaries. Consistent with the information transmission channels, the magnitude of impact estimates are highest for primary followed by secondary and network beneficiaries. From a policy perspective, the study suggests a scaling-up of KVK’s interventions. Establishing evidence on the role of social network channel to diffuse information flows for public-sector programs provides new insights for strengthening the outreach of such programs. Moreover, the evidence of intra-regional spillover effects have an implications for accounting these effects in conducting a cost-benefit analysis of these programs.
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spelling CGSpace1467692025-11-06T06:43:23Z Direct and spillover effects of agricultural advisory services: Evidence from the farm science centre in Uttar Pradesh, India Varshney, Deepak Joshi, Pramod Kumar Dubey, Shantanu Kumar advisory services technology adoption social networks agricultural extension learning technology farmers advisory centres innovation adoption Agricultural advisory services are the most important knowledge-delivery institutions for accelerating the adoption of advanced technologies, and for improving farmers’ learning abilities for their implementation. These technologies have implications for the larger goal of agricultural development and farmers’ welfare. This study explores the spillover effects of an innovative public-sector program in India that provides agricultural advisory services. At the Farm Science Centre (known locally as Krishi Vigyan Kendra [KVK]), scientists demonstrate modern technologies and develop capacity-building programs. This paper examines the extent of direct and spillover benefits of KVKs. It also evaluates the impact of KVKs on the adoption of improved technologies for primary beneficiaries (those who receive the benefits directly from KVKs), and for those farmers who receive information flow from them. The study is based on a primary survey of 1,496 wheat farmers in Uttar Pradesh, India. Spillover information flows are captured by: a) farmers who visit frontline demonstration (FLD) sites by their own curiosity and are categorized as secondary beneficiary farmers, and b) farmers who obtain information flows from primary and secondary beneficiaries being in their social network and are categorized as network beneficiary. Identification is achieved by exploiting non-universal coverage of KVKs, and through the availability of recall-based panels for pre- and post-intervention years on the adoption of improved technologies. The study applied matched difference-in-difference (MDID) approach to examine the effect of frontline demonstrations (FLDs) and training programs. It also examine pre-intervention trends to provide a check on the validity of our estimates. Findings revealed that 3% of primary beneficiaries of FLDs can generate information spillover to 31% of farmers. For capacity building, the results showed that 3% of primary beneficiaries can generate information spillover to 27% of farmers. The key channel for spillover information flow was the network beneficiary. On a further note, the study establishes evidence of a positive impact on the adoption of a modern wheat variety—namely HD-2967—by primary beneficiaries, as well as secondary and network beneficiaries. Consistent with the information transmission channels, the magnitude of impact estimates are highest for primary followed by secondary and network beneficiaries. From a policy perspective, the study suggests a scaling-up of KVK’s interventions. Establishing evidence on the role of social network channel to diffuse information flows for public-sector programs provides new insights for strengthening the outreach of such programs. Moreover, the evidence of intra-regional spillover effects have an implications for accounting these effects in conducting a cost-benefit analysis of these programs. 2019-06-21 2024-06-21T09:08:40Z 2024-06-21T09:08:40Z Working Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/146769 en https://doi.org/10.2499/p15738coll2.133518 https://doi.org/10.2499/p15738coll2.134222 https://www.epw.in/journal/2020/23/special-articles/pm-kisan-and-adoption-modern-agricultural.html Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Varshney, Deepak; Joshi, Pramod Kumar; and Dubey, Shantanu Kumar. 2019. Direct and spillover effects of agricultural advisory services: Evidence from the farm science centre in Uttar Pradesh, India. IFPRI Discussion Paper 1850. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). https://hdl.handle.net/10568/146769
spellingShingle advisory services
technology adoption
social networks
agricultural extension
learning
technology
farmers
advisory centres
innovation adoption
Varshney, Deepak
Joshi, Pramod Kumar
Dubey, Shantanu Kumar
Direct and spillover effects of agricultural advisory services: Evidence from the farm science centre in Uttar Pradesh, India
title Direct and spillover effects of agricultural advisory services: Evidence from the farm science centre in Uttar Pradesh, India
title_full Direct and spillover effects of agricultural advisory services: Evidence from the farm science centre in Uttar Pradesh, India
title_fullStr Direct and spillover effects of agricultural advisory services: Evidence from the farm science centre in Uttar Pradesh, India
title_full_unstemmed Direct and spillover effects of agricultural advisory services: Evidence from the farm science centre in Uttar Pradesh, India
title_short Direct and spillover effects of agricultural advisory services: Evidence from the farm science centre in Uttar Pradesh, India
title_sort direct and spillover effects of agricultural advisory services evidence from the farm science centre in uttar pradesh india
topic advisory services
technology adoption
social networks
agricultural extension
learning
technology
farmers
advisory centres
innovation adoption
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/146769
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