Litcius/Paper detail

Effect of agricultural extension services in the post-reform era since the mid-2000s on pesticide use in China: evidence from rice production

Yang Lin, Ruifa Hu, Chao Zhang, Kevin Chen

2022International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability17 citationsDOI

Abstract

Pesticide overuse has resulted in serious ecological problems. Agricultural extension services play a key role in influencing farmers’ pesticide use. China has the world's largest public agricultural extension system, which has experienced a twisting path of reforms over the past four decades. However, there is little empirical evidence regarding the effects of agricultural extension services in the post-reform era since the mid-2000s. This study examines the effect of agricultural extension services in the post-reform era on pesticide use in China, using survey data of 1963 rice farmers in 2016 and 2018. Our results indicate that only 22.5% of surveyed farmers adopted agricultural extension services. After addressing the self-selectivity issue, the treatment effects model revealed that agricultural extension services in the post-reform era resulted in a 3.01 kg/ha reduction in total pesticide use, a 0.86 kg/ha reduction in application rate of active ingredients, and a 250 CNY/ha reduction in pesticide expenditure related to rice production. Our findings provide sound evidence that agricultural extension services in the post-reform era can result in a reduction in pesticide use for rice production. More effective efforts should be made to reinforce the provision of agricultural extension services and encourage farmers to adopt these services.

Topics & Concepts

Agricultural extensionChinaAgricultureProduction (economics)Agricultural productivityAgricultural economicsBusinessPesticideEcosystem servicesEconomicsGeographyAgronomyEcologyEcosystemBiologyMacroeconomicsArchaeologyInsect and Pesticide ResearchPesticide and Herbicide Environmental StudiesInsect Resistance and Genetics