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Resource saving and productivity enhancing impacts of crop management innovation packages in Ethiopia
Author(s) -
Jaleta Moti,
Kassie Menale,
Tesfaye Kindie,
Teklewold Tilaye,
Jena Pradyot Ranjan,
Marenya Paswel,
Erenstein Olaf
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
agricultural economics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.29
H-Index - 82
eISSN - 1574-0862
pISSN - 0169-5150
DOI - 10.1111/agec.12251
Subject(s) - productivity , tillage , agricultural science , agricultural economics , production (economics) , crop management , crop , agriculture , business , economics , geography , environmental science , agronomy , forestry , economic growth , biology , archaeology , macroeconomics
Crop management innovations are often not discrete fixed stand‐alone options—and their adoption may imply various combinations and adaptations. This potentially confounds their impact assessment. This article assesses the resource saving and productivity enhancing impacts of a crop management package revolving around minimum tillage in maize‐based farming systems in northwest Ethiopia. An endogenous switching regression model was applied to plot‐ and household‐level survey data collected from 290 rural households operating 590 maize plots during the 2012 production year. Controlling for variations in plot and household characteristics, the average effect of minimum tillage package (minimum tillage package) on maize productivity is 0.44 t/ha. Compared to conventional practice (CP), adoption of the MTP decreased the average male and female labor use in maize production by 14.4 and 8.2 person‐days per ha, respectively. Similarly, MTP adoption decreased draft power use for land preparation by 13.2 pair of oxen‐days per ha. Compared to CP, in general, there is a considerable short‐run maize productivity gain and reduction in labor and draft power use under MTP.