Abstract

This paper summarizes the results of a study sponsored by the World Bank, The impact of agricultural extension : a case study of the training and visit system in Haryana, India. As a review of the rationale for public sector involvement in the dissemination of technological information to farmers, the paper concludes that free markets do not fully satisfy farmers' information needs. Government support is justified. Agricultural extension is a principal way that governments can disseminate information. One specific approach to extension adopted in many Bank extension projects is the Training and Visit (T&V) system. Data from a World Bank sponsored survey in northwest India and monitoring and evaluation reports issued by several Indian states are used in this article to evaluate T&V extension operations and their impact. Extension agents' interaction with farmers is found to be more intensive and more significant as a source of information in areas covered by T&V extension than in areas with a different extension system. The yield levels of farmers whose main source of information was the T&V extension agent are also shown to be higher. In one case study, the incremental investment in T&V extension is shown to be likely to generate at least a 15 to 20 percent rate of return.

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