cover image: Modeling Preference and Willingness to Pay for Drought Tolerance in Maize in Rural Zimbabwe

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Modeling Preference and Willingness to Pay for Drought Tolerance in Maize in Rural Zimbabwe

1 Jun 2017

Maize plays a leading role in the food security of millions in southern Africa, yet it is highly vulnerable to the moisture stress brought about by the erratic rainfall patterns that characterize weather systems in the area. Developing and making drought-tolerant maize varieties available to farmers in the region has thus long been a key goal on the regional development agenda. Farm-level adoption of these varieties, however, depends on local perceptions of the value they add, along with willingness to pay (WTP) for it. Focusing on Zimbabwe, this research aimed at estimating the implicit prices farmers are willing to pay for drought tolerance in maize compared to other preferred traits. Using a choice experiment framework, we generated 12,600 observations from a random sample of 1,400 households in communal areas within 14 districts of Zimbabwe. Taste parameters and heterogeneities were estimated using the generalized multinomial logit model (G-MNL). The results reveal drought tolerance, grain yield, covered cob tip, cob size, and semi-flint texture to be the most preferred traits by farm households in Zimbabwe. The WTP estimates show that farmers are willing to pay a premium for drought tolerance equal to 2.56, 7, 3.2, and 5 times higher than for an additional ton of yield per acre, bigger cob size, larger grain size, and covered cob tip, respectively. We suggest designing and implementing innovative ways of promoting DT maize along with awareness-raising activities to enhance contextual understandings of drought and drought risk to speed adoption of new DT maize varieties by risk-prone farming communities. Given the high level of rural literacy and the high rate of adoption of improved maize, trait-based promotion and marketing of varieties constitutes the right strategy.
food security drought rainfed agriculture agriculture :: agricultural sector economics water resources :: drought management agriculture :: food security agriculture :: crops & crop management systems choice experiment drought-tolerant maize

Authors

Kassie, Girma T., Abdulai, Awudu, Greene, William H., Shiferaw, Bekele, Abate, Tsedeke, Tarekegne, Amsal, Sutcliffe, Chloe

Associated content
Journal website (version of record)
Collection(s)
C. Journal articles published externally
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.worlddev.2017.02.008
Published in
United States of America
Rights
CC BY 4.0
Rights Holder
World Bank
Rights URI
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/29322
citation
Cited 20 times in Scopus (view citations)

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