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Externality Effects of Education: Dynamics of the Adoption and Diffusion of an Innovation in Rural Ethiopia.

Abstract:
This article investigates the role of schooling at the household and community levels in the adoption and diffusion of agricultural innovations in rural Ethiopia. We find that household-level education is important to the timing of adoption but less crucial to the question of whether a household has ever adopted fertilizer (since those without schooling may eventually copy the educated). Community-level education substitutes for low levels of household education, encouraging uneducated farmers to adopt sooner than would be predicted in the absence of educated neighbors. Moreover, community-level education is complementary to household education in determining which farmers will eventually adopt. Thus, evidence is presented to suggest that there are two externality effects: educated farmers are early innovators, providing an example that may be copied by less-educated farmers; and educated farmers are better able to copy those who innovate first, enhancing diffusion of the new technology more widely within the site.

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Publisher copy:
10.1086/423254

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Publisher:
University of Chicago Press
Journal:
Economic Development and Cultural Change More from this journal
Volume:
53
Issue:
1
Pages:
93 - 113
Publication date:
2004-01-01
DOI:
ISSN:
0013-0079


Language:
English
UUID:
uuid:37eec8d6-a8df-4f7a-971d-ea3df25250f7
Local pid:
oai:economics.ouls.ox.ac.uk:10483
Deposit date:
2011-08-16

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