Sustainability of impact: Dimensions of decline and persistence in adopting a biofortified crop in Uganda

Author(s)
McNiven, S., O'Gilligan, D. and Hotz, C.
Publication language
English
Pages
62pp
Date published
01 Feb 2016
Type
Impact evaluation
Keywords
Humanitarian-development-peace nexus, Livelihoods, Agriculture
Countries
Uganda

This study by McNiven, S, Gilligan, DO and Hotz, C, studied the sustainability of impact of an agricultural intervention that promoted the adoption and consumption of biofortified orange sweet potato by farming households over two periods -- during the project and over four seasons after the project ended. Researchers found that the high adoption rate in the first season declined steadily and even accelerated after the project ended. There was substantial heterogenity in the adoption pattern among initial adopters that was followed by a period of learning about profitability and consumption preference for the crop. The authors also explore the mechanisms that predict decline and persistence in adoption behaviour among various types of farmers and consider implications for the cost-effectiveness of the intervention.