Does trust in the extension source improve learning outcomes? Experimental evidence from Southern Africa

Does it matter who trains farmers? We use an artefactual field experiment that includes training on conservation agriculture to test whether trust in the source of extension advice enhances learning outcomes in Malawi, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. We measure trust in public, private, and farmer-to-farmer e...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ngoma, Hambulo, Mulungu, Kelvin H., Manyanga, Mark, Simutowe, Esau, Mhlanga, Blessing, Nyagumbo, Isaiah, Chimonyo, Vimbayi G. P., Thierfelder, Christian
Formato: Informe técnico
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: CGIAR 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/169501
_version_ 1855517701918687232
author Ngoma, Hambulo
Mulungu, Kelvin H.
Manyanga, Mark
Simutowe, Esau
Mhlanga, Blessing
Nyagumbo, Isaiah
Chimonyo, Vimbayi G. P.
Thierfelder, Christian
author_browse Chimonyo, Vimbayi G. P.
Manyanga, Mark
Mhlanga, Blessing
Mulungu, Kelvin H.
Ngoma, Hambulo
Nyagumbo, Isaiah
Simutowe, Esau
Thierfelder, Christian
author_facet Ngoma, Hambulo
Mulungu, Kelvin H.
Manyanga, Mark
Simutowe, Esau
Mhlanga, Blessing
Nyagumbo, Isaiah
Chimonyo, Vimbayi G. P.
Thierfelder, Christian
author_sort Ngoma, Hambulo
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Does it matter who trains farmers? We use an artefactual field experiment that includes training on conservation agriculture to test whether trust in the source of extension advice enhances learning outcomes in Malawi, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. We measure trust in public, private, and farmer-to-farmer extension agents using a standard trust game, and link trust to test scores from farmers randomly assigned to participate in training sessions facilitated by each agent. We find higher trust levels in the public extension agents, especially in Zimbabwe. Training increased knowledge outcomes by 7 percentage points (pp), public extension agents increased test scores by 9 pp, and farmer-to-farmer agents reduced scores by 11 pp in the pooled treated sample. At country level, farmer-to-farmer extension agents increased test scores by 19 pp in Zambia and reduced scores by 10 pp in Zimbabwe. Public extension agents increased test scores by 12 pp in Zimbabwe. Trust in the public and farmer-to-farmer extension agents increased test scores by 3 pp. These findings underscore the importance of training and trust in the source of extension in improving knowledge outcomes. Contrary to popular opinion, both public and farmer-to-farmer extensions have a role to play, signifying the need to retool, strengthen, and support both extension systems to enhance service delivery and to build farmer trust. Embracing different information communication technologies (ICTs) and digital advisories could help in this regard.
format Informe técnico
id CGSpace169501
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher CGIAR
publisherStr CGIAR
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1695012025-05-04T09:21:27Z Does trust in the extension source improve learning outcomes? Experimental evidence from Southern Africa Ngoma, Hambulo Mulungu, Kelvin H. Manyanga, Mark Simutowe, Esau Mhlanga, Blessing Nyagumbo, Isaiah Chimonyo, Vimbayi G. P. Thierfelder, Christian conservation agriculture learning extension training Does it matter who trains farmers? We use an artefactual field experiment that includes training on conservation agriculture to test whether trust in the source of extension advice enhances learning outcomes in Malawi, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. We measure trust in public, private, and farmer-to-farmer extension agents using a standard trust game, and link trust to test scores from farmers randomly assigned to participate in training sessions facilitated by each agent. We find higher trust levels in the public extension agents, especially in Zimbabwe. Training increased knowledge outcomes by 7 percentage points (pp), public extension agents increased test scores by 9 pp, and farmer-to-farmer agents reduced scores by 11 pp in the pooled treated sample. At country level, farmer-to-farmer extension agents increased test scores by 19 pp in Zambia and reduced scores by 10 pp in Zimbabwe. Public extension agents increased test scores by 12 pp in Zimbabwe. Trust in the public and farmer-to-farmer extension agents increased test scores by 3 pp. These findings underscore the importance of training and trust in the source of extension in improving knowledge outcomes. Contrary to popular opinion, both public and farmer-to-farmer extensions have a role to play, signifying the need to retool, strengthen, and support both extension systems to enhance service delivery and to build farmer trust. Embracing different information communication technologies (ICTs) and digital advisories could help in this regard. 2024-12 2025-01-20T21:29:09Z 2025-01-20T21:29:09Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/169501 en Open Access application/pdf CGIAR Ngoma, H., Mulungu, K. H., Manyanga, M., Simutowe, E., Mhlanga, B., Nyagumbo, I., Chimonyo, V.G. P. & Thierfelder, C. (2024). Does trust in the extension source improve learning outcomes? Experimental evidence from Southern Africa. CGIAR. https://hdl.handle.net/10883/35325
spellingShingle conservation agriculture
learning
extension
training
Ngoma, Hambulo
Mulungu, Kelvin H.
Manyanga, Mark
Simutowe, Esau
Mhlanga, Blessing
Nyagumbo, Isaiah
Chimonyo, Vimbayi G. P.
Thierfelder, Christian
Does trust in the extension source improve learning outcomes? Experimental evidence from Southern Africa
title Does trust in the extension source improve learning outcomes? Experimental evidence from Southern Africa
title_full Does trust in the extension source improve learning outcomes? Experimental evidence from Southern Africa
title_fullStr Does trust in the extension source improve learning outcomes? Experimental evidence from Southern Africa
title_full_unstemmed Does trust in the extension source improve learning outcomes? Experimental evidence from Southern Africa
title_short Does trust in the extension source improve learning outcomes? Experimental evidence from Southern Africa
title_sort does trust in the extension source improve learning outcomes experimental evidence from southern africa
topic conservation agriculture
learning
extension
training
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/169501
work_keys_str_mv AT ngomahambulo doestrustintheextensionsourceimprovelearningoutcomesexperimentalevidencefromsouthernafrica
AT mulungukelvinh doestrustintheextensionsourceimprovelearningoutcomesexperimentalevidencefromsouthernafrica
AT manyangamark doestrustintheextensionsourceimprovelearningoutcomesexperimentalevidencefromsouthernafrica
AT simutoweesau doestrustintheextensionsourceimprovelearningoutcomesexperimentalevidencefromsouthernafrica
AT mhlangablessing doestrustintheextensionsourceimprovelearningoutcomesexperimentalevidencefromsouthernafrica
AT nyagumboisaiah doestrustintheextensionsourceimprovelearningoutcomesexperimentalevidencefromsouthernafrica
AT chimonyovimbayigp doestrustintheextensionsourceimprovelearningoutcomesexperimentalevidencefromsouthernafrica
AT thierfelderchristian doestrustintheextensionsourceimprovelearningoutcomesexperimentalevidencefromsouthernafrica