@article{icrisat11568, month = {June}, title = {Irrigators? willingness to pay for the adoption of soil moisture monitoring tools in South-Eastern Africa}, publisher = {Routledge}, author = {F Abebe and A Zuo and S Ann Wheeler and H Bjornlund and A van Rooyen and J Pittock and M Mdemu and M Chilundo}, pages = {1--22}, year = {2020}, note = {The Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research financed this research through the Transforming Irrigation in Southern Africa (TISA) projects FSC/2013/006 and LWR/2016/137. We also thank all TISA project team members from Australia, Tanzania, Zimbabwe and Mozambique for collecting the survey data and other contributions. Constructive comments from two anonymous reviewers are also gratefully acknowledged.}, journal = {International Journal of Water Resources Development (TSI)}, keywords = {Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Irrigation, Contingent, Valuation method; hypothetical bias}, url = {http://oar.icrisat.org/11568/}, abstract = {Contingent valuation is used to elicit irrigators? willingness to pay for soil moisture tools in irrigation schemes in Africa, with various econometric methods employed to mitigate potential bias. Key results include that there is a neighbourhood effect influencing adoption, and that being located downstream and spending more on irrigation water positively and statistically significantly influenced willingness to pay for tools. The result suggests that although focusing on economic incentives and promoting farmer learning by those using the tools may promote greater adoption, there is likely to still be a need for co-investment by other bodies.} }