Abstract

Frequent droughts in sub-Saharan Africa imply water stress for rainfed agriculture and, ultimately, food insecurity, underlining the region’s vulnerability to climate change. Yet, in the maize-growing areas, farmers have been given new drought-coping options following the release and availability of drought-tolerant maize varieties (DTMVs). These varieties are being disseminated through the National Agricultural Research and Extension Systems in collaboration with seed companies; however, their adoption still appears somewhat modest, and empirical studies on their adoption potential and associated drivers are scarce. We use empirical data from Uganda to estimate the actual and potential adoption rates and the adoption determinants of DTMVs under information and seed access constraints. Adoption rates for DTMVs could have been up to 22% in 2015 instead of the observed sample adoption rate of 14% if the whole population had been exposed to them. The adoption rate could increase to 30% if seed were availed to the farming population and to 47% if seed were sold at a more affordable price to farmers. The observed adoption rate of 14% implies gaps in the potential adoption rates of 8%, 16%, and 33% because of a lack of awareness, a lack of seed access, and high seed prices, respectively. The findings underscore the role of both market and non-market-based approaches and the potential to further scale the cultivation of DTMVs in Uganda.

Highlights

  • Agricultural production in Sub-Saharan Africa is weather sensitive and vulnerable to climate change (Mendelsohn 2008), with frequent droughts and floods contributing to food insecurity, water scarcity, and famine (Ngingi 2009)

  • We extend the average treatment effect (ATE) adoption framework proposed by Diagne and Demont (2007) to estimate three types of potential adoption rates; (i) the awareness–unrestricted; (ii) the awareness–access–unrestricted; and (iii) the awareness–access–affordability–unrestricted Drought-tolerant maize varieties (DTMV) potential adoption rates and the associated adoption gaps in Uganda, as well as the determinants of DTMV awareness, access, affordability, and adoption

  • Feder et al (1985) describes technology adoption as a multistage process the decision-maker undergoes from the time they get exposed to the technology through to the time they decide to start using the DTMVs

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Summary

Introduction

Agricultural production in Sub-Saharan Africa is weather sensitive and vulnerable to climate change (Mendelsohn 2008), with frequent droughts and floods contributing to food insecurity, water scarcity, and famine (Ngingi 2009). We further extend the estimation and provide a microperspective of DTMV adoption rates and their determinants in Uganda under heterogeneous seed price affordability, seed availability/access, and information exposure.

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