Gains from highyielding varieties with and without complementary technologies: the case of improved cowpea in northern Nigeria

This paper examines the adoption and impact of selective and whole package adoption of improved cowpea involving new variety, insect control, fertilizer, and best bet cropping pattern in northern Nigeria. A farm income model that explicitly accounts for endogenous technology adoption was used to assess the impacts. Results show that adoption of the whole package, rather than adoption of selected components, had a significant impact on productivity and incomes, which was in turn due largely to the recommended cropping pattern. Education, credit, extension contact, access to improved seeds, and participation in on-farm technology evaluations are significantly related to the intensification of improved cowpea production. The paper concludes with implications for policy to enhance productivity and household incomes.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Alene, Arega D., Manyong, Victor M.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2007
Subjects:adoption, cropping pattern, cowpeas, farmer-to-farmer, cereal-legume systems, technology packages,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/91338
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-913382023-02-15T07:08:25Z Gains from highyielding varieties with and without complementary technologies: the case of improved cowpea in northern Nigeria Alene, Arega D. Manyong, Victor M. adoption cropping pattern cowpeas farmer-to-farmer cereal-legume systems technology packages This paper examines the adoption and impact of selective and whole package adoption of improved cowpea involving new variety, insect control, fertilizer, and best bet cropping pattern in northern Nigeria. A farm income model that explicitly accounts for endogenous technology adoption was used to assess the impacts. Results show that adoption of the whole package, rather than adoption of selected components, had a significant impact on productivity and incomes, which was in turn due largely to the recommended cropping pattern. Education, credit, extension contact, access to improved seeds, and participation in on-farm technology evaluations are significantly related to the intensification of improved cowpea production. The paper concludes with implications for policy to enhance productivity and household incomes. 2007 2018-03-07T11:25:38Z 2018-03-07T11:25:38Z Journal Article Alene, A. & Manyong, V. (2007). Gains from high-yielding varieties with and without complementary technologies: the case of improved cowpea in northern Nigeria. Journal of Agricultural and Food Economics, 2(1), 1-14. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/91338 en Limited Access
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic adoption
cropping pattern
cowpeas
farmer-to-farmer
cereal-legume systems
technology packages
adoption
cropping pattern
cowpeas
farmer-to-farmer
cereal-legume systems
technology packages
spellingShingle adoption
cropping pattern
cowpeas
farmer-to-farmer
cereal-legume systems
technology packages
adoption
cropping pattern
cowpeas
farmer-to-farmer
cereal-legume systems
technology packages
Alene, Arega D.
Manyong, Victor M.
Gains from highyielding varieties with and without complementary technologies: the case of improved cowpea in northern Nigeria
description This paper examines the adoption and impact of selective and whole package adoption of improved cowpea involving new variety, insect control, fertilizer, and best bet cropping pattern in northern Nigeria. A farm income model that explicitly accounts for endogenous technology adoption was used to assess the impacts. Results show that adoption of the whole package, rather than adoption of selected components, had a significant impact on productivity and incomes, which was in turn due largely to the recommended cropping pattern. Education, credit, extension contact, access to improved seeds, and participation in on-farm technology evaluations are significantly related to the intensification of improved cowpea production. The paper concludes with implications for policy to enhance productivity and household incomes.
format Journal Article
topic_facet adoption
cropping pattern
cowpeas
farmer-to-farmer
cereal-legume systems
technology packages
author Alene, Arega D.
Manyong, Victor M.
author_facet Alene, Arega D.
Manyong, Victor M.
author_sort Alene, Arega D.
title Gains from highyielding varieties with and without complementary technologies: the case of improved cowpea in northern Nigeria
title_short Gains from highyielding varieties with and without complementary technologies: the case of improved cowpea in northern Nigeria
title_full Gains from highyielding varieties with and without complementary technologies: the case of improved cowpea in northern Nigeria
title_fullStr Gains from highyielding varieties with and without complementary technologies: the case of improved cowpea in northern Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Gains from highyielding varieties with and without complementary technologies: the case of improved cowpea in northern Nigeria
title_sort gains from highyielding varieties with and without complementary technologies: the case of improved cowpea in northern nigeria
publishDate 2007
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/91338
work_keys_str_mv AT alenearegad gainsfromhighyieldingvarietieswithandwithoutcomplementarytechnologiesthecaseofimprovedcowpeainnorthernnigeria
AT manyongvictorm gainsfromhighyieldingvarietieswithandwithoutcomplementarytechnologiesthecaseofimprovedcowpeainnorthernnigeria
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