Nudging farmers toward disease-free shrimp technology with financial incentives: Experimental evidence from Bangladesh

Price discounts are a common policy tool to promote agricultural technology adoption in low-income settings, yet their effectiveness may be limited when farmers face uncertainty or have access to familiar alternatives. We test this through a randomized controlled trial with shrimp farmers in southwe...

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Main Authors: Bin Khaled, Muhammad Nahian, Maredia, Mywish K., Narayanan, Sudha, Belton, Ben, Kabir, Razin
Format: Artículo preliminar
Language:Inglés
Published: International Food Policy Research Institute 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/178761
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author Bin Khaled, Muhammad Nahian
Maredia, Mywish K.
Narayanan, Sudha
Belton, Ben
Kabir, Razin
author_browse Belton, Ben
Bin Khaled, Muhammad Nahian
Kabir, Razin
Maredia, Mywish K.
Narayanan, Sudha
author_facet Bin Khaled, Muhammad Nahian
Maredia, Mywish K.
Narayanan, Sudha
Belton, Ben
Kabir, Razin
author_sort Bin Khaled, Muhammad Nahian
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Price discounts are a common policy tool to promote agricultural technology adoption in low-income settings, yet their effectiveness may be limited when farmers face uncertainty or have access to familiar alternatives. We test this through a randomized controlled trial with shrimp farmers in southwestern coastal Bangladesh, a region highly exposed to climate shocks. The government promotes Specific Pathogen Free (SPF) post-larvae (PL)—certified as disease-free—to reduce high mortality in shrimp farming. Farmers were randomly offered varying discount levels for two SPF-PL types, differing in size uniformity and market price (proxies for quality), with the highest discount reducing their prices to parity with conventional non-SPF PL. We find no significant effect of discounts on adoption of the lower-priced Mid-grade SPF-PL, characterized by less size uniformity. In contrast, discounts significantly increased adoption of the higher-priced, more uniform Premium-grade SPF-PL, raising uptake by 10–19 percentage points among active shrimp farmers. Larger discounts did not yield higher adoption than smaller ones, indicating diminishing returns to discount generosity. Heterogeneity analyses reveal behavioral and contextual mechanisms: prior exposure to Mid-grade SPF-PL reduced its subsequent adoption but increased responsiveness to Premium-grade, consistent with experience effects and reference dependence. Cyclone exposure dampened treatment responses, suggesting capital constraints, while infrastructure preparedness (e.g., nursing facilities) enhanced uptake. These findings underscore that in high-risk agricultural systems, price incentives alone may not drive adoption unless the promoted input is perceived as effective. Successful promotion strategies must integrate quality assurance with attention to farmer experience, behavioral biases, and vulnerability to shocks.
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spelling CGSpace1787612025-12-12T02:12:06Z Nudging farmers toward disease-free shrimp technology with financial incentives: Experimental evidence from Bangladesh Bin Khaled, Muhammad Nahian Maredia, Mywish K. Narayanan, Sudha Belton, Ben Kabir, Razin farmers shellfish diseases financial policies shrimp culture pond culture supply chains Price discounts are a common policy tool to promote agricultural technology adoption in low-income settings, yet their effectiveness may be limited when farmers face uncertainty or have access to familiar alternatives. We test this through a randomized controlled trial with shrimp farmers in southwestern coastal Bangladesh, a region highly exposed to climate shocks. The government promotes Specific Pathogen Free (SPF) post-larvae (PL)—certified as disease-free—to reduce high mortality in shrimp farming. Farmers were randomly offered varying discount levels for two SPF-PL types, differing in size uniformity and market price (proxies for quality), with the highest discount reducing their prices to parity with conventional non-SPF PL. We find no significant effect of discounts on adoption of the lower-priced Mid-grade SPF-PL, characterized by less size uniformity. In contrast, discounts significantly increased adoption of the higher-priced, more uniform Premium-grade SPF-PL, raising uptake by 10–19 percentage points among active shrimp farmers. Larger discounts did not yield higher adoption than smaller ones, indicating diminishing returns to discount generosity. Heterogeneity analyses reveal behavioral and contextual mechanisms: prior exposure to Mid-grade SPF-PL reduced its subsequent adoption but increased responsiveness to Premium-grade, consistent with experience effects and reference dependence. Cyclone exposure dampened treatment responses, suggesting capital constraints, while infrastructure preparedness (e.g., nursing facilities) enhanced uptake. These findings underscore that in high-risk agricultural systems, price incentives alone may not drive adoption unless the promoted input is perceived as effective. Successful promotion strategies must integrate quality assurance with attention to farmer experience, behavioral biases, and vulnerability to shocks. 2025-12-11 2025-12-11T20:59:20Z 2025-12-11T20:59:20Z Working Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/178761 en https://hdl.handle.net/10568/172964 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/174761 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163630 https://doi.org/10.2499/p15738coll2.136869 Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Bin Khaled, Muhammad Nahian; Maredia, Mywish K.; Narayanan, Sudha; Belton, Ben; and Kabir, Razin. 2025. Nudging farmers toward disease-free shrimp technology with financial incentives: Experimental evidence from Bangladesh. IFPRI Working Paper. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/178761
spellingShingle farmers
shellfish diseases
financial policies
shrimp culture
pond culture
supply chains
Bin Khaled, Muhammad Nahian
Maredia, Mywish K.
Narayanan, Sudha
Belton, Ben
Kabir, Razin
Nudging farmers toward disease-free shrimp technology with financial incentives: Experimental evidence from Bangladesh
title Nudging farmers toward disease-free shrimp technology with financial incentives: Experimental evidence from Bangladesh
title_full Nudging farmers toward disease-free shrimp technology with financial incentives: Experimental evidence from Bangladesh
title_fullStr Nudging farmers toward disease-free shrimp technology with financial incentives: Experimental evidence from Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed Nudging farmers toward disease-free shrimp technology with financial incentives: Experimental evidence from Bangladesh
title_short Nudging farmers toward disease-free shrimp technology with financial incentives: Experimental evidence from Bangladesh
title_sort nudging farmers toward disease free shrimp technology with financial incentives experimental evidence from bangladesh
topic farmers
shellfish diseases
financial policies
shrimp culture
pond culture
supply chains
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/178761
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AT narayanansudha nudgingfarmerstowarddiseasefreeshrimptechnologywithfinancialincentivesexperimentalevidencefrombangladesh
AT beltonben nudgingfarmerstowarddiseasefreeshrimptechnologywithfinancialincentivesexperimentalevidencefrombangladesh
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