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Credit constraint and agricultural technology adoptions: evidence from Ethiopia

Megersa Endashaw Lemecha

2023Agricultural Finance Review17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Purpose This paper investigates constraints to yield enhancing technology adoptions, highlighting credit using data pooled from the first three waves of the Ethiopian socio-economic surveys. Design/methodology/approach Direct elicitation methodology is used to identify household's non-price credit rationing status. The panel selection model specified to examine causal effects of credit constraint on adoption variables allows us to tackle self-selection into adoptions and potential endogeneity of credit constraint while controlling for unobserved heterogeneity in both the selection and main equations. Findings Results show that about 54% of sample households face credit rationing, predominantly demand-side risk rationing. There is a negative association between measures of credit constraint status and adoption variables. The effect is stronger when the demand-side credit rationing is accounted for and when within household variation in credit constraint status overtime is considered as opposed to across constrained and unconstrained households. Practical implications Expanding physical access to institutional credit alone may not necessarily spur increased uptake of credit and instant investment by farm households. For a majority of them to take advantage of available credit and improved technology, interventions should also aim at minimizing downside risks. Originality/value This paper incorporates the role of downside risk in influencing farmer's decisions to uptake credits and subsequently his/her adoption behaviors. The researcher approached the topic by state-of-the-art method which allows obtaining more reliable results and hence more specific contributions to research and practice.

Topics & Concepts

Credit rationingConstraint (computer-aided design)EndogeneityEconomicsInvestment (military)Downside riskCredit historySample (material)MicroeconomicsActuarial scienceEconometricsFinanceInterest ratePolitical scienceChemistryEngineeringPoliticsPortfolioMechanical engineeringLawChromatographyAgricultural Innovations and PracticesMicrofinance and Financial InclusionPoverty, Education, and Child Welfare
Credit constraint and agricultural technology adoptions: evidence from Ethiopia | Litcius