Factors affecting adoption of improved sorghum varieties in Tanzania under information and capital constraints
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Aloyce Kaliba, Mazvimavi Kizito, Theresia Gregory, Frida Mgonja, Mary Mgonja. (1/12/2018). Factors affecting adoption of improved sorghum varieties in Tanzania under information and capital constraints. Agricultural and Food Economics, 6: 18.
Abstract
Low adoption of agricultural technology is among the main reasons for low farm
productivity and high incidence of poverty and food insecurity in sub-Saharan
countries including Tanzania. In this study, we examine the factors affecting adoption
of improved sorghum varieties using data from 822 randomly selected sample
households in northern and central Tanzania. We employ a multiple-hurdle Tobit
model to assess the factors affecting adoption after controlling for both capital and
information constraints. We also use t-distributed stochastic neighbor embedding to
cluster farmers into homogeneous groups. The method allows to reduce the
dimensionality while preserving the topology of the dataset, which increases the
clustering accuracy. It also superiors for visualization of the clustering results. Results
show that radio and other mass media outlets that create awareness will increase
adoption among farmers who do not face capital constraint. Some farmers lack basic
resources such as land and capital, and subsidies could have a high impact on these
farmers. Other farmers simply need assurance on the performance of improved
sorghum varieties. Field days, on-farm trials, and demonstration plots could be useful
in supporting these farmers. A tailored support system, however, needs a sustained
investment in both quantity and quality of services. There is therefore a need to
develop a pluralistic research and extension systems that encourage the use of
information technologies and community-based organizations to reach specific
groups of farmers.