Abstract
This study investigates the factors that affect farmers’ access to agricultural credit and its role in adopting improved agricultural technologies in the rain-fed zone of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP), Pakistan. Using logistic models, we assess and compare the relative role of farmers’ socioeconomic attributes in their access to credit and adoption strategies. The results indicate a moderate positive association between farmers’ access to agricultural credit and their adoption of improved agricultural technologies. The binary logit model’s results indicate that farmers with a large-sized farm, high farm income, better access to information, and large physical asset ownership showed a positive influence on credit access. However, farming experience showed a negative effect on farmers’ access to agricultural credit. Regarding farmers’ credit sources, this study found that asset-rich farmers with more farming experience and better access to information relied more on banks than on input providers and informal credit sources. Similarly, older farmers with more education, larger farm sizes and high farm income were more likely to have borrowed from input providers than banks. We conclude that the role of the effective provision of information on credit and agricultural technology is imperative and requires separate policies that are specifically aimed at different groups of farmers with different socioeconomic and farm-related characteristics.
Highlights
The agricultural sector is considered the most crucial sector in developing countries for generating output and employment [1]
We explore quantitatively the effect of different socioeconomic, technical and institutional factors on farmers’ access to credit, adoption of improved technology and choice of credit institutional factors on farmers’ access to credit, adoption of improved technology and choice of sources in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP)’s rain-fed zone
The binary logit model’s results indicate that farm size, farming experience, farm income, access to information, and farmers’ asset status are significantly related to farmers’ access to agricultural credit (Table 3)
Summary
The agricultural sector is considered the most crucial sector in developing countries for generating output and employment [1]. Several studies [12,20] have reported that because of farmers’ poor access to formal credit, most of them rely heavily on informal credit sources, which results in comparatively low investments in farm inputs. The present study attempts to estimate the impacts of farmers’ socioeconomic characteristics in shaping farmers’ access to and choice of credit sources, as well as its correlation with technology adoption in rain-fed farming in Pakistan. We explore quantitatively the effect of different socioeconomic, technical and institutional factors on farmers’ access to credit, adoption of improved technology and choice of credit institutional factors on farmers’ access to credit, adoption of improved technology and choice of sources in the KP’s rain-fed zone.
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