project paper

Do credit constraints affect agricultural technology adoption? Evidence from Nigeria

by Bedru Balana,
Motunrayo Oyeyemi and
Todd Benson
Open Access | CC BY-4.0
Citation
Balana, Bedru; Oyeyemi, Motunrayo; and Benson, Todd. 2020. Do credit constraints affect agricultural technology adoption? Evidence from Nigeria. NSSP Policy Note 53. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). https://doi.org/10.2499/p15738coll2.134000

The agricultural sector in Nigeria is characterized by low productivity that is driven in part by low use of modern agricultural technologies. Poor access to credit is seen by many observers to be one of the key barriers to adoption of these technologies. Literature suggests that credit constraints impede individuals from investing in productivity enhancing agricultural technologies and, thus, poor farmers are unable to engage in high-return agricultural activities. Much policy discourse and research literature associates agricultural credit constraints with supply-side factors, such as farmers not having access to credit sources or high costs of borrowing, and, thus, recommend that such supply-side constraints be addressed to improve smallholders’ access to credit. However, demand-side factors, such as borrower’s risk-averse behavior, financial illiteracy, collateral requirements, or perceived high transactions costs, can also play important roles in credit-rationing for smallholder farmers.