Abstract

Smallholder farmers in the mid-hills of Nepal are facing an acute labor shortage due to out-migration which, in general, has affected the capacity to achieve timely crop establishment, harvest, and inter-cultural operations. These effects are more visible in the case of labor-intensive crops such as rice and promoting higher levels of rural mechanization has emerged as the primary policy response option. Nevertheless, quantitative evidence for the ability of mechanization to offset the adverse effects of shortages increasing labor prices in these systems is largely absent. This study investigates the impacts associated with adoption of mini-tillers (5 to 9 horsepower) for land preparation on smallholder rice productivity in the mid-hills of Nepal. We use an endogenous switching regression that accounts for both observed and unobserved sources of heterogeneity between mini-tiller adopters and non-adopters. Findings demonstrate that rising on-farm rural wage rates and an emerging decline in draft animal availability are driving adoption of the mini-tiller. Among users, the mini-tiller increased rice productivity by 1,110 kg/ha (27%). Further, regression results suggest that mini-tiller non-adopters would be able to increase their rice productivity by 1,250 kg/ha (26%) if they adopt. Moreover, our analysis revealed that very small farms (≤0.25 ha) that adopt mini-tillers are benefited the most in terms of gains in rice productivity. These findings support policies that favor the expansion of small-scale mechanization in the hill production ecologies of South Asia and highlight the need to foster the emergence of an associated service economy that will permit smallholders access to capital-intensive machinery such as the mini-tiller.

Highlights

  • The benefits of farm mechanization in the agriculture sector are well known (Kienzle et al, 2013; Pingali, 2007)

  • The sampling frame encompassed six districts across the mid-hills of Nepal.2. These districts were selected based on the highest number of mini-tillers sold by private sector machinery traders from data provided by the Nepal Agricultural Machinery Entrepreneurs Association (NAMEA)

  • The results show that the adoption of the mini-tiller has a significant and positive impact on rice productivity (ATT = 1110 kg/ha)

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Summary

Introduction

The benefits of farm mechanization in the agriculture sector are well known (Kienzle et al, 2013; Pingali, 2007). Despite persistent low-crop productivity and high food insecurity, the agricultural area remaining fallow due to rising labor prices in Nepal is increasing (Khanal, 2018; Khanal et al, 2015; Maharjan et al, 2013b; Prabakar et al, 2011). In this context, policy makers in Nepal have identified scale-appropriate mechanization as a vital component of agricultural sector growth as well as jobs creation. The adoption of scale-appropriate farm mechanization can support farmers to prepare their fields on time and increase rice productivity and food security

Farm mechanization in Nepal
Materials and methods
Empirical framework
Descriptive analysis
Determinants of mini-tiller adoption
Does mini-tiller adoption improve rice productivity?
Robustness check using matching methods
Conclusion and policy implications
Full Text
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