Title
Time to Change What to Sow: Risk Preferences and Technology Adoption Decisions of Cotton Farmers in China
Author(s)
Elaine M. Liu Elaine Liu (Princeton University)
Abstract
The slow diffusion of new technology in the agricultural sector of developing countries has long puzzled development economists. While most of the current empirical research on technology adoption focuses on credit constraints and learning spillovers, this paper examines the role of individual risk attitudes in the decision to adopt a new form of agricultural biotechnology in China. I conducted a survey and a field experiment to elicit the risk preferences of 320 Chinese farmers, who faced the decision of whether to adopt genetically modified Bt cotton a decade ago. Bt cotton is more effective in pest prevention and thus requires less pesticides than traditional cotton. In my analysis, I expand the measurement of risk preferences beyond expected utility theory to incorporate prospect theory parameters such as loss aversion and nonlinear probability weighting. Using the parameters elicited from the experiment, I find that farmers who are more risk averse or more loss averse adopt Bt cotton later. Farmers who overweight small probabilities adopt Bt cotton earlier.
Creation Date
2008-05
Section URL ID
IRS
Paper Number
526
URL
https://dataspace.princeton.edu/bitstream/88435/dsp01vh53wv73p/1/526.pdf
File Function
Jel
O14, O33
Keyword(s)
technology adoption, risk preferences, prospect theory
Suppress
false
Series
1