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Adoption Spells of Improved Potato Varieties by Smallholder Farmers in Eastern Ethiopia: The Duration Approach
Author(s) -
Sisay Diriba Lemessa,
Molla Alemayehu,
Megersa Debela Daksa,
Nigussie Dechassa
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
zeszyty naukowe sggw w warszawie - problemy rolnictwa światowego
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2544-0659
pISSN - 2081-6960
DOI - 10.22630/prs.2019.19.2.27
Subject(s) - duration (music) , agricultural science , agriculture , irrigation , manure , productivity , geography , agronomy , economics , environmental science , biology , art , literature , macroeconomics , archaeology
Potato is mainly tagged as a food security crop in Ethiopia. However, its productivity remains low due to low adoption of improved technologies by smallholder farmers. Duration models, namely, Parametric (Weibull) and Non-parametric (Kaplan Meier) were used to analyze the data gathered from 365 sample farmers. The Non-parametric result revealed that the average duration that potato growers should wait before adopting a new variety is about 3.5 years. The Weibull regression indicated that timely availability of seed, access to labor and irrigation water, land size, and adaptation strategy by farmers are found to be factors curtailing the timeframe to adopt improved potato varieties. The regression analysis revealed that costs of inputs such as manure and compost, environmental and market factors such as drought, pest and disease outbreaks, price variability of potato seed, and quality of potato seed were found to be factors influencing adoption decisions of improved potato varieties by smallholder farmers.

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