Soil and water conservation decision behavior of subsistence farmers in the Eastern Highlands of Ethiopia: a case study of the Hunde-Lafto area

Abstract This paper presents a plot-level analysis of factors influencing the adoption of soil and water conservation structures in the Hunde-Lafto area of the Eastern Ethiopian Highlands. The analysis is based on a survey of 145 farm households managing a total of 265 farm plots. The multinomial logit analysis of the survey data shows that plot-level adoption of conservation measures is positively related to access to information, support programs for initial investment, slope, and area of the plot. Land holding per economically active person of the family is found to have a negative influence on conservation decision. Participation of women in fieldwork activities, farmer's age group, use duration of a plot, credit for fertilizer and food, livestock holding, type of crop grown, and plot soil type did not influence plot-level conservation decisions by farmers in the study area. These results suggest the need for designing and implementing appropriate policies and programs that will influence farmers’ behavior towards the introduction of soil and water conservation measures in their agricultural practices.

[1]  S. Batie,et al.  Virginia Farmers' Soil Conservation Decisions: An Application of Tobit Analysis , 1987, Journal of Agricultural and Applied Economics.

[2]  Robin Mearns,et al.  The Lie of the Land: Challenging Received Wisdom on the African Environment , 1998 .

[3]  P. Blaikie,et al.  The political economy of soil erosion in developing countries , 1985 .

[4]  H. Hurni, DEGRADATION AND CONSERVATION OF THE RESOURCES IN THE ETHIOPIAN HIGHLANDS , 1988 .

[5]  Jock R. Anderson,et al.  Soil conservation in developing countries : project and policy intervention , 1990 .

[6]  N. Milham An Analysis of Farmers' Incentives to Conserve or Degrade the Land , 1994 .

[7]  B. Shiferaw,et al.  Resource degradation and adoption of land conservation technologies in the Ethiopian Highlands: A case study in Andit Tid, North Shewa , 1998 .

[8]  David E. Ervin,et al.  Factors Affecting the Use of Soil Conservation Practices: Hypotheses, Evidence, and Policy Implications , 1982 .

[9]  Yeraswork Admassie Twenty Years to Nowhere: Property Rights, Land Management and Conservation in Ethiopia , 2000 .

[10]  H. Hurni, Land degradation, famine, and land resource scenarios in Ethiopia. , 1993 .

[11]  William G. Moseley African evidence on the relation of poverty, time preference and the environment , 2001 .

[12]  L. Zepeda Adoption of Captial Versus Management Intensive Technologies , 2008 .

[13]  J. Dorfman Modeling Multiple Adoption Decisions in a Joint Framework , 1996 .

[14]  J. Pender,et al.  Determinants of farmers' indigenous soil and water conservation investments in semi-arid India , 1998 .

[15]  G. Sterk,et al.  Farmers' participation in soil and water conservation activities in the Chemoga Watershed, Blue Nile basin, Ethiopia , 2002 .

[16]  Harold Brookfield,et al.  Land degradation and society , 1988 .

[17]  I. Scoones,et al.  Sustaining the soil: Indigenous soil and water conservation in Africa , 1998 .

[18]  William J. Baumol,et al.  Economics, Environmental Policy, and the Quality of Life , 1979 .

[19]  S. Lumley,et al.  The environment and the ethics of discounting: An empirical analysis , 1997 .

[20]  J. Pender,et al.  Impacts of land redistribution on land management and productivity in the Ethiopian highlands , 2001 .

[21]  G. Huylenbroeck,et al.  Countryside stewardship : farmers, policies, and markets , 1999 .

[22]  S. Pandey,et al.  Adoption of soil conservation: the case of the Philippine uplands , 1999 .

[23]  A. Hoben The cultural construction of environmental policy paradigms and politics in Ethiopia , 1997 .