2003
DOI: 10.1111/1467-8276.00125
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Fertilizer Use, Risk, and Off‐Farm Labor Markets in the Semi‐Arid Tropics of India

Abstract: A two-period model is developed in which a risk-averse farmer uses off-farm labor to smooth consumption, leading to greater use of fertilizer. Fertilizer demand is shown to increase with the depth of the off-farm labor market. Controlling for exogenous weather risk, farmers use more fertilizer the lower the unemployment rate and the higher the share of nonagricultural work in total off-farm labor. The results suggest that off-farm labor markets and own-farm production may be complementary in risky production e… Show more

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Cited by 104 publications
(82 citation statements)
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References 18 publications
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“…Hence, all other things being equal, households whose incomes fall below the poverty line would be less willing to take risk than those whose incomes are higher. The study result is consistent with the findings that poorer farmers are more risk averse than wealthy ones and as such avoid prospects in which the probability of failure looms large (Mosley and Verschoor, 2003;and Lamb 2003). …”
Section: Effect Of Socio-economic Variables On Farmer Risk Attitudesupporting
confidence: 90%
“…Hence, all other things being equal, households whose incomes fall below the poverty line would be less willing to take risk than those whose incomes are higher. The study result is consistent with the findings that poorer farmers are more risk averse than wealthy ones and as such avoid prospects in which the probability of failure looms large (Mosley and Verschoor, 2003;and Lamb 2003). …”
Section: Effect Of Socio-economic Variables On Farmer Risk Attitudesupporting
confidence: 90%
“…Higher off-farm incomes may indicate a greater risk bearing capacity and represents a form of diversification that would have an impact on farmers' risk attitude [39]. The result is in agreement with findings of Mosley and Verschoor [32] and Lamb [25] who reported that farmers with lower incomes are more risk averse and avoid situations where the probability of failure is high. Similarly, tenant farmers are found to be more risk averse in nature compared to owners.…”
Section: Factors Affecting Risk Attitude and Risk Perceptionssupporting
confidence: 90%
“…Majority of the people in the province live in rural areas and depend mainly on agriculture for their livelihoods. Agricultural sector engages 48 percent of the total labor force and contributes 40 percent to the GDP of the province [25]. KP province is a risk prone area for various weather related risks including floods, heavy rains and cyclone etc.…”
Section: Study Area and Samplingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Off-farm income can also enhance agricultural production by relaxing liquidity and credit constraints to purchase productivity enhancing agricultural technologies such as improved seed, fertilizer, machineries, and hiring labor (Ruben 2001;Lamb 2003;Matshe and Young 2004;Kilic et al 2009;Oseni and Winter 2009;Anriquez and Daidone 2010). This is particularly true in developing countries where farmers are facing credit constraints (Stampini and Davis 2009).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%