Try before you buy: Experimental evidence on willingness to pay for tailored extension advice in Nigeria

Despite the recent advances in the development of digital decision support tools (DSTs) for agriculture and their potential in the transition of extension systems from general to tailored services, there is limited evidence of their widespread adoption in developing countries. Relatedly, there is gr...

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Main Authors: Oyakhilomen Oyinbo, Chamberlin, Jordan, Maertens, Miet
Format: Informe técnico
Language:Inglés
Published: EiA 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163557
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author Oyakhilomen Oyinbo
Chamberlin, Jordan
Maertens, Miet
author_browse Chamberlin, Jordan
Maertens, Miet
Oyakhilomen Oyinbo
author_facet Oyakhilomen Oyinbo
Chamberlin, Jordan
Maertens, Miet
author_sort Oyakhilomen Oyinbo
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Despite the recent advances in the development of digital decision support tools (DSTs) for agriculture and their potential in the transition of extension systems from general to tailored services, there is limited evidence of their widespread adoption in developing countries. Relatedly, there is growing concern about the long-term sustainability of digital advisory approaches, especially where extension systems face resource constraints. Using a randomized controlled trial and a choice experiment in Nigeria, we examine farmers’ preferences and willingness-to-pay (WTP) for a targeted digital decision support system that includes various tailored advice. We assess whether farmers’ WTP is influenced by a two-year free provision of DST-mediated site-specific nutrient management advice combined with information on investment returns. We find that farmers are willing to pay varying amounts of subscription fees to access different tailored advice, with the largest WTP value for climate advisory services. Results show that two years of exposure to experimentation and learning through DST interventions significantly increase farmers’ WTP for tailored advice, in particular for soil fertility management and market information. Our findings suggest that a fee-based digital extension model is a promising demand-driven approach that can enhance the upscaling of DSTs and support the financial sustainability of extension service providers.
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spelling CGSpace1635572025-05-04T09:21:27Z Try before you buy: Experimental evidence on willingness to pay for tailored extension advice in Nigeria Oyakhilomen Oyinbo Chamberlin, Jordan Maertens, Miet digital extension tools fertilizers trial methods soil fertility sustainable intensification sustainability willingness to pay Despite the recent advances in the development of digital decision support tools (DSTs) for agriculture and their potential in the transition of extension systems from general to tailored services, there is limited evidence of their widespread adoption in developing countries. Relatedly, there is growing concern about the long-term sustainability of digital advisory approaches, especially where extension systems face resource constraints. Using a randomized controlled trial and a choice experiment in Nigeria, we examine farmers’ preferences and willingness-to-pay (WTP) for a targeted digital decision support system that includes various tailored advice. We assess whether farmers’ WTP is influenced by a two-year free provision of DST-mediated site-specific nutrient management advice combined with information on investment returns. We find that farmers are willing to pay varying amounts of subscription fees to access different tailored advice, with the largest WTP value for climate advisory services. Results show that two years of exposure to experimentation and learning through DST interventions significantly increase farmers’ WTP for tailored advice, in particular for soil fertility management and market information. Our findings suggest that a fee-based digital extension model is a promising demand-driven approach that can enhance the upscaling of DSTs and support the financial sustainability of extension service providers. 2024-11 2024-12-16T16:19:11Z 2024-12-16T16:19:11Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163557 en Open Access application/pdf EiA Oyakhilomen Oyinbo, Chamberlin, J., & Maertens, M. (2024). Try before you buy: Experimental evidence on willingness to pay for tailored extension advice in Nigeria. EIA. https://hdl.handle.net/10883/35096
spellingShingle digital extension tools
fertilizers
trial methods
soil fertility
sustainable intensification
sustainability
willingness to pay
Oyakhilomen Oyinbo
Chamberlin, Jordan
Maertens, Miet
Try before you buy: Experimental evidence on willingness to pay for tailored extension advice in Nigeria
title Try before you buy: Experimental evidence on willingness to pay for tailored extension advice in Nigeria
title_full Try before you buy: Experimental evidence on willingness to pay for tailored extension advice in Nigeria
title_fullStr Try before you buy: Experimental evidence on willingness to pay for tailored extension advice in Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Try before you buy: Experimental evidence on willingness to pay for tailored extension advice in Nigeria
title_short Try before you buy: Experimental evidence on willingness to pay for tailored extension advice in Nigeria
title_sort try before you buy experimental evidence on willingness to pay for tailored extension advice in nigeria
topic digital extension tools
fertilizers
trial methods
soil fertility
sustainable intensification
sustainability
willingness to pay
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163557
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AT maertensmiet trybeforeyoubuyexperimentalevidenceonwillingnesstopayfortailoredextensionadviceinnigeria