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Abstract
Researchers generally assume spatial homogeneity when assessing the factors that influence
farmers to adopt improved agricultural technologies. However, the potential for spatial
heterogeneity is high due to, for example, neighborhood effects such as farmers sharing
information about new technology. Ignoring spatial heterogeneity can result in biased or
inefficient regression estimates and make inferences based on t and F statistics misleading.
Using data collected from 300 randomly selected farmers in three districts of Mozambique
during the 2003/04 crop season, a spatial Tobit model was specified to estimate which factors
determined the adoption of improved maize varieties, after an initial diagnostic test rejected
the null hypothesis of spatial homogeneity. On the basis of the empirical evidence, the paper
makes policy recommendations to increase Mozambican farmers’ adoption of improved
maize varieties and concludes by emphasizing the need to test and correct for spatial
heterogeneity in technology adoption modeling to improve the efficiency of the estimated
results.