Information and Communication Technologies and Agricultural Production: New Evidence from Africa
Loading...
Date
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Applied Science
Abstract
While information and communication technologies (ICT) have proven to be useful in
boosting agricultural production and productivity, regardless of the geographical location, much of
the discussion on ICT and their impact focus on the global north, with deficient literature on the global
south. The limited account of the global south shows mixed conclusions on the impact of information
and communication technologies on agricultural production, with most studies focusing on crop
production, as a proxy for agricultural production, leaving out livestock production. Animated by
this concern, this article explores the impact of ICTs on agricultural production (crop and livestock) in
Africa using panel data from 32 African countries and the panel autoregressive distributed lag model
as the estimation technique. We find that individuals using internet significantly increased crop
production in the long run. Specifically, a percentage increase in internet patronage increases crop
production by 0.071% but significantly decreases the livestock production index, both in the short and
long run. Mobile phone subscriptions had a significant negative impact on crop production in the
long run but had a significant positive impact on livestock production in the long run. Fixed phone
subscriptions significantly increased crop production in the long run but significantly decreased
livestock production index in the long run. The findings show bidirectional causality between
crop production and internet patronage, livestock production and individuals using internet, crop
production and mobile cellular subscription, crop production and net national income, and rural
population and both crop and livestock production. We recommend that governments in Africa
increase funding investment in digital technologies to foster increased agricultural production while
addressing structural challenges that constrain increased access to digital agricultural technologies.
It might be useful if governments in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) incentivize the telecommunication
companies to extend digital coverage to rural areas through tax rebates and holidays to encourage
rural inclusion in the digital space to bridge the digital divide.
Description
Research Article
Citation
Citation: Onyeneke, R.U.; Ankrah, D.A.; Atta-Ankomah, R.; Agyarko, F.F.; Onyeneke, C.J.; Nejad, J.G. Information and Communication Technologies and Agricultural Production: New Evidence from Africa. Appl. Sci. 2023, 13, 3918. https://doi.org/10.3390/app13063918