Estimating the impact of inorganic fertilizer adoption on sesame productivity: evidence from Humera, Tigray, Ethiopia

The major challenge in low-income countries is poor soil fertility that influences land productivity which results in food insecurity and poverty. To revert this inorganic fertilizer has been introduced in these countries to improve land productivity. However, how impactful is the application of thi...

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Main Authors: Haileslasie Gereziher Hailu, Gidey kidu Mezegebo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2021-01-01
Series:Cogent Food & Agriculture
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311932.2021.1933798
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spelling doaj-0b8a191b5ec74d388c4e5cc55587e0e72021-06-21T13:17:41ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Food & Agriculture2331-19322021-01-017110.1080/23311932.2021.19337981933798Estimating the impact of inorganic fertilizer adoption on sesame productivity: evidence from Humera, Tigray, EthiopiaHaileslasie Gereziher Hailu0Gidey kidu Mezegebo1Mekelle UniversityMekelle UniversityThe major challenge in low-income countries is poor soil fertility that influences land productivity which results in food insecurity and poverty. To revert this inorganic fertilizer has been introduced in these countries to improve land productivity. However, how impactful is the application of this inorganic fertilizer towards improving sesame productivity dependents on socio-economic, crop types, institutional, and environmental factors. Thus, this study aims at analyzing the impacts of inorganic fertilizer adoption on sesame productivity in the Humera district. A household survey was administered to collect micro-level evidence from randomly selected 393 households using face-to-face interviews. Endogenous switching regression and propensity score matching models were employed to estimate the impact of inorganic fertilizer adoption on sesame productivity. Adoption of inorganic fertilizer is significantly influenced by years of farming experience, total farm size, educational status, household size, land ownership, an area under sesame cultivation, the practice of land fallow as soil management methods, and access to the off-farm activity. Adoption of inorganic fertilizer improved the probability of Sesame productivity by 15% for adopters and 26.1% for non-adopters had households decided to adopt.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311932.2021.1933798inorganic fertilizersesame productivityadoption impactendogenous switching regressionethiopia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Haileslasie Gereziher Hailu
Gidey kidu Mezegebo
spellingShingle Haileslasie Gereziher Hailu
Gidey kidu Mezegebo
Estimating the impact of inorganic fertilizer adoption on sesame productivity: evidence from Humera, Tigray, Ethiopia
Cogent Food & Agriculture
inorganic fertilizer
sesame productivity
adoption impact
endogenous switching regression
ethiopia
author_facet Haileslasie Gereziher Hailu
Gidey kidu Mezegebo
author_sort Haileslasie Gereziher Hailu
title Estimating the impact of inorganic fertilizer adoption on sesame productivity: evidence from Humera, Tigray, Ethiopia
title_short Estimating the impact of inorganic fertilizer adoption on sesame productivity: evidence from Humera, Tigray, Ethiopia
title_full Estimating the impact of inorganic fertilizer adoption on sesame productivity: evidence from Humera, Tigray, Ethiopia
title_fullStr Estimating the impact of inorganic fertilizer adoption on sesame productivity: evidence from Humera, Tigray, Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Estimating the impact of inorganic fertilizer adoption on sesame productivity: evidence from Humera, Tigray, Ethiopia
title_sort estimating the impact of inorganic fertilizer adoption on sesame productivity: evidence from humera, tigray, ethiopia
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Food & Agriculture
issn 2331-1932
publishDate 2021-01-01
description The major challenge in low-income countries is poor soil fertility that influences land productivity which results in food insecurity and poverty. To revert this inorganic fertilizer has been introduced in these countries to improve land productivity. However, how impactful is the application of this inorganic fertilizer towards improving sesame productivity dependents on socio-economic, crop types, institutional, and environmental factors. Thus, this study aims at analyzing the impacts of inorganic fertilizer adoption on sesame productivity in the Humera district. A household survey was administered to collect micro-level evidence from randomly selected 393 households using face-to-face interviews. Endogenous switching regression and propensity score matching models were employed to estimate the impact of inorganic fertilizer adoption on sesame productivity. Adoption of inorganic fertilizer is significantly influenced by years of farming experience, total farm size, educational status, household size, land ownership, an area under sesame cultivation, the practice of land fallow as soil management methods, and access to the off-farm activity. Adoption of inorganic fertilizer improved the probability of Sesame productivity by 15% for adopters and 26.1% for non-adopters had households decided to adopt.
topic inorganic fertilizer
sesame productivity
adoption impact
endogenous switching regression
ethiopia
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311932.2021.1933798
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