Rice Varietal Seed Technology Adoption on Improving Productivity and Household Welfare, Northern Region, Ghana

dc.contributor.authorEssilfie, F.L.
dc.date.accessioned2025-11-25T12:18:11Z
dc.date.issued2022
dc.descriptionPhD. Applied Agricultural Economics and Policy
dc.description.abstractThe transition from traditional to improved rice varieties signifies a critical technological shift aimed at enhancing farm productivity and household incomes in rural smallholder rice production systems. This technological advancement is expected to address key agricultural challenges and foster rural development. However, empirical findings on the benefits of this transition have been inconsistent, with studies presenting mixed results regarding the extent to which rural farm households realize the expected gains. These outcomes vary across different contexts and highlight the complexities involved in technological adoption in agriculture. This thesis assessed the impact of adopting improved rice varietal seed technologies on farm productivity and household welfare in Northern Region, Ghana. The study employed a robust methodological approach that extends the doubly robust Average Treatment Effect (ATE) and Treatment on the Treated (TT) estimators from the binary treatment framework to a multivalued treatment context under the Conditional Independence Assumption (CIA). Using survey data from 600 rice-farming households across the Kumbungu, Tolon, and Savelugu districts of the northern region, collected after the 2020 rice production season, the analysis models the adoption of rice varietal seed technologies as a nominal multivalued treatment variable. In contrast to conventional studies that primarily model adoption as a binary choice, this study posits that capturing the multivalued nature of varietal seed adoption provides critical insights into its nuanced impacts on key outcome variables, including farm productivity, household income, and food security. To estimate the impact of the adoption decision, a Generalized Propensity Scores (GPS) model was employed, using a multinomial logistic regression to account for the multivalued nature of the treatment, structured into four distinct treatment arms. Marginal probabilities of adoption factors were generated, and potential outcome means for each treatment level were calculated. Pairwise contrasts across the four adoption categories were performed to derive treatment effect estimates, with p-values adjusted using the Bonferroni adjustment technique to account for multiple comparisons. The findings reveal that household-specific characteristics, including gender, household size, farming experience, and formal education, significantly influence the likelihood of adopting improved rice varietal seed technologies. Additionally, farm-specific and institutional factors, such as access to credit, membership in Farmer-Based Organizations (FBOs), extension services, farm size, fertilizer use, and access to farm machinery, play pivotal roles in adoption decisions. Varietal characteristics, particularly early maturation and high-yielding traits, were also found to be critical determinants of adoption. The empirical results underscore the transformative potential of rice varietal seed technology. Specifically, the adoption of Alliance for the Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA), Jasmine-85, and Digang varieties led to significant productivity gains, increasing rice productivity by 580.60 kg/ha, 277.63 kg/ha, and 254.66 kg/ha, respectively, compared to non-adopters. In terms of household welfare, AGRA, Jasmine-85, and Digang adopters experienced an annual household income increase of GHS 699.68, GHS 414.60, and GHS 357.69, respectively, relative to the non-adopters. On food security, AGRA and Jasmine-85 varieties improved household food availability by 3.0% and 4.3%, respectively, while AGRA, Jasmine-85, and Digang varieties enhanced household food accessibility by 14.6%, 10.9%, and 9.2%, respectively. Adoption of the AGRA and Jasmine-85 varieties further improved Household Dietary Diversity (HDD) by 4.0% and 4.3%, respectively, whereas the Digang variety was linked to a 6.5% increase in Women Dietary Diversity (WDD). The Child Dietary Diversity (CDD) of Jasmine-85 and Digang adopters also rose by 5.3% and 5.8%, respectively. The study identifies several key constraints that inhibit the adoption of improved rice varietal seed technologies, notably high input costs, limited access to credit, insufficient government policy incentives, inadequate market infrastructure for local rice, poor access to extension services, and limited availability of farm machinery. The findings of this study demonstrate that the adoption of varietal seed technology plays a pivotal role in enhancing rice productivity and subsequently improving household welfare in the Northern Region of Ghana. The study underscores the critical importance of varietal seed innovation as a transformative factor in agricultural practices, offering substantial benefits to emerging economies by not only increasing productivity but also fostering socioeconomic advancement among farming households. In light of the empirical evidence presented in this study, it is recommended that targeted policy interventions be implemented to mitigate the barriers to varietal seed technology adoption among rice farming households. Specifically, enhancing safety net policies is essential to alleviate the financial burdens associated with accessing critical agricultural inputs. Such measures will not only facilitate increased uptake of improved seed varieties but also create a supportive environment that fosters sustainable agricultural transformation and enhances rural livelihoods. By prioritizing these policy initiatives, stakeholders can significantly contribute to the advancement of rice productivity and the overall welfare of farming communities in the Northern Region of Ghana.
dc.identifier.urihttps://ugspace.ug.edu.gh/handle/123456789/44184
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherUniversity of Ghana
dc.subjectfarm productivity
dc.subjecthousehold incomes
dc.subjecttechnological advancement
dc.subjectGhana
dc.titleRice Varietal Seed Technology Adoption on Improving Productivity and Household Welfare, Northern Region, Ghana
dc.typeThesis

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