Gendered Distributional Impacts Of Ownership Of Mobile Money Account On Farm Input Expenditures: A Micro Perspective From Rural Maize Farmers In Ghana.
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Review of Development Economics
Abstract
This article investigates the distributional impact of
mobile money account ownership on farm input expenditures among maize farmers in southern Ghana. Using
cross-sectional data from 1044 farm households, we
employed an instrumental variable quantile regression
to account for endogeneity and selection bias. We find
that socioeconomic, spatial location, and institutional
factors significantly influence male and female-headed
household decisions to own mobile money accounts.
The empirics show that male-headed households spend
more on fertilizer and pesticide relative to female-headed households. Mobile money account ownership
increases fertilizer expenditure in male-headed households more than female-headed households. Male-headed families with mobile money accounts spend
13.9% and 6.5% more on fertilizer at the 40th and
60th quantiles. High 80th quantile female-headed households spend 4.3% more on fertilizer. For male-headed households, farming experience and education
positively influence mobile money account ownership
on fertilizer expenditure, while off-farm activity at
the 40th quantile positively influences female-headed
households. Our results distill useful policy implica tions that call for concerted efforts targeted at digital
financial inclusion with an eye to bridging differential
gender gaps.
Description
Research Article
Citation
Asante, B. O., Ankrah, D. A., Agyei-Holmes, A., & Prah, S. (2025). Gendered distributional impacts of ownership of mobile money account on farm input expenditures: A micro perspective from rural maize farmers in Ghana. Review of Development Economics, 29(2), 1080–1110.
