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Fields Changed

Registration

Field Before After
Trial Status on_going completed
Last Published October 19, 2019 08:58 AM December 18, 2023 07:38 AM
Study Withdrawn No
Data Collection Complete Yes
Is there a restricted access data set available on request? Yes
Is data available for public use? No
Keyword(s) Agriculture Agriculture
Pi as first author No Yes
Building on Existing Work No
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Papers

Field Before After
Paper Abstract The role of information in agricultural technology adoption in developing countries has been widely documented in the literature, but much less is known about the importance of the identity of the communicator of the information. We conduct a randomized experiment to assess the effects of information delivered through two approaches wherein either a peer farmer or a market actor supports the extension worker in communicating the standardized information regarding product-quality-enhancing practices and high-value market participation. Results show that farmers in the peer-farmer treatment arm improve the quality of their produce, whereas farmers in the market actor treatment participate in high-value markets to a larger extent than the extension-worker-only treatment farmers. We document positive but marginal treatment effects on coffee revenues. This study contributes to the literature by testing whether incorporating non-traditional communicators, such as private sector actors, into the extension programs is effective in removing the informational barriers to agricultural technology adoption.
Paper Citation Arslan, C., M. Wollni, J. Oduol, and K. Hughes. 2022. “Who Communicates the Information Matters for Technology Adoption.” World Development 158: 106015.
Paper URL https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0305750X22002054?via%3Dihub
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