Selection and Comparative Advantage in Technology Adoption
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Abstract
This paper investigates an empirical puzzle in technology adoption for developing countries: the low adoption rates of technologies like hybrid maize that increase average farm profits dramatically. I offer a simple explanation for this: benefits and costs of technologies are heterogeneous, so that farmers with low net returns do not adopt the technology. I examine this hypothesis by estimating a correlated random coefficient model of yields and the corresponding distribution of returns to hybrid maize. This distribution indicates that the group of farmers with the highest estimated gross returns does not use hybrid, but their returns are correlated with high costs of acquiring the technology (due to poor…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 84.14
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 65
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Economics
- Returns to scale
- Econometrics
- Distribution (mathematics)
- Sample (material)
- Selection (genetic algorithm)
- Business
- Microeconomics
- Industry, innovation and infrastructure