Competition or Cooperation? : Using Team and Tournament Incentives for Learning among Female Farmers in Rural Uganda

This study explores the behavioral learning characteristics of smallholder female farmers in Uganda by quantifying the amount of information learned under different incentive schemes. The paper shows how competitive versus team incentives compare in motivating Ugandan farmers to learn and share information relevant to adopting a new agricultural technology. We find that tournament-based incentives provide greater outcomes in terms of total information learned than threshold-based team incentives. Furthermore the order of the incentive – whether the tournament precedes or follows the team incentive scheme – does not affect the volume of information learned. New information introduced between rounds was learned by more individuals under team incentives than under tournament incentives. The study provides direct practical policy recommendations for improving learning in the context of agriculture in Uganda.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Vasilaky, Kathryn N., Islam, Asif M.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Published: Elsevier 2018-03
Subjects:AGRICULTURAL TRAINING, LEARNING, COMPETITION, FEMALE FARMERS, TEAM INCENTIVES, EXTENSION TRAINING, GROUP LEARNING,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/29323
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spelling dig-okr-10986293232021-05-25T10:54:44Z Competition or Cooperation? : Using Team and Tournament Incentives for Learning among Female Farmers in Rural Uganda Vasilaky, Kathryn N. Islam, Asif M. AGRICULTURAL TRAINING LEARNING COMPETITION FEMALE FARMERS TEAM INCENTIVES EXTENSION TRAINING GROUP LEARNING This study explores the behavioral learning characteristics of smallholder female farmers in Uganda by quantifying the amount of information learned under different incentive schemes. The paper shows how competitive versus team incentives compare in motivating Ugandan farmers to learn and share information relevant to adopting a new agricultural technology. We find that tournament-based incentives provide greater outcomes in terms of total information learned than threshold-based team incentives. Furthermore the order of the incentive – whether the tournament precedes or follows the team incentive scheme – does not affect the volume of information learned. New information introduced between rounds was learned by more individuals under team incentives than under tournament incentives. The study provides direct practical policy recommendations for improving learning in the context of agriculture in Uganda. 2018-02-06T19:23:51Z 2018-02-06T19:23:51Z 2018-03 Journal Article World Development 0305-750X http://hdl.handle.net/10986/29323 CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo World Bank Elsevier Publications & Research :: Journal Article Publications & Research Africa Uganda
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
topic AGRICULTURAL TRAINING
LEARNING
COMPETITION
FEMALE FARMERS
TEAM INCENTIVES
EXTENSION TRAINING
GROUP LEARNING
AGRICULTURAL TRAINING
LEARNING
COMPETITION
FEMALE FARMERS
TEAM INCENTIVES
EXTENSION TRAINING
GROUP LEARNING
spellingShingle AGRICULTURAL TRAINING
LEARNING
COMPETITION
FEMALE FARMERS
TEAM INCENTIVES
EXTENSION TRAINING
GROUP LEARNING
AGRICULTURAL TRAINING
LEARNING
COMPETITION
FEMALE FARMERS
TEAM INCENTIVES
EXTENSION TRAINING
GROUP LEARNING
Vasilaky, Kathryn N.
Islam, Asif M.
Competition or Cooperation? : Using Team and Tournament Incentives for Learning among Female Farmers in Rural Uganda
description This study explores the behavioral learning characteristics of smallholder female farmers in Uganda by quantifying the amount of information learned under different incentive schemes. The paper shows how competitive versus team incentives compare in motivating Ugandan farmers to learn and share information relevant to adopting a new agricultural technology. We find that tournament-based incentives provide greater outcomes in terms of total information learned than threshold-based team incentives. Furthermore the order of the incentive – whether the tournament precedes or follows the team incentive scheme – does not affect the volume of information learned. New information introduced between rounds was learned by more individuals under team incentives than under tournament incentives. The study provides direct practical policy recommendations for improving learning in the context of agriculture in Uganda.
format Journal Article
topic_facet AGRICULTURAL TRAINING
LEARNING
COMPETITION
FEMALE FARMERS
TEAM INCENTIVES
EXTENSION TRAINING
GROUP LEARNING
author Vasilaky, Kathryn N.
Islam, Asif M.
author_facet Vasilaky, Kathryn N.
Islam, Asif M.
author_sort Vasilaky, Kathryn N.
title Competition or Cooperation? : Using Team and Tournament Incentives for Learning among Female Farmers in Rural Uganda
title_short Competition or Cooperation? : Using Team and Tournament Incentives for Learning among Female Farmers in Rural Uganda
title_full Competition or Cooperation? : Using Team and Tournament Incentives for Learning among Female Farmers in Rural Uganda
title_fullStr Competition or Cooperation? : Using Team and Tournament Incentives for Learning among Female Farmers in Rural Uganda
title_full_unstemmed Competition or Cooperation? : Using Team and Tournament Incentives for Learning among Female Farmers in Rural Uganda
title_sort competition or cooperation? : using team and tournament incentives for learning among female farmers in rural uganda
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2018-03
url http://hdl.handle.net/10986/29323
work_keys_str_mv AT vasilakykathrynn competitionorcooperationusingteamandtournamentincentivesforlearningamongfemalefarmersinruraluganda
AT islamasifm competitionorcooperationusingteamandtournamentincentivesforlearningamongfemalefarmersinruraluganda
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