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Foreword


ue to its importance in agricultural and rural development, agricultural extension will continue to play a significant role in stimulating economic growth, reducing poverty, and improving food and nutrition security in Africa. Therefore, African governments must work to increase efforts to provide agricultural advisory services to farmers. But policymakers need to know the impacts of and returns to spending on agricultural extension so that they can make informed decisions on how to increase their efforts. The authors of this monograph contribute to the growing literature and knowledge on the topic by assessing the impact of Uganda’s National Agricultural Advisory Services (NAADS) program on several outcome indicators, including the changes between 2004 and 2007 in (1) the adoption of new crop and livestock enterprises and technologies, (2) crop and livestock productivity, (3) share of marketed agricultural outputs, (4) agricultural income, and (5) food nutrition security. They use a combined matching and panel regression approach, data from two rounds of household surveys, and different estimators and model speci- fications to address and test the implications of different assumptions underlying different evaluation methods.


D


The authors find that the NAADS program has helped to strengthen farmers’ capacity to potentially demand and manage the delivery of agricultural advisory services that are likely to meet their local production and market conditions. How- ever, the results were mixed on whether participation in the program adequately induced participants to establish new enterprises or to adopt technologies and im- proved practices leading to increased productivity and commercialization of agri- culture or better food and nutrition security outcomes than their nonparticipating counterparts. The authors discuss different programmatic and methodological reasons for the mixed findings, with a paramount factor being their inability to capture in their estimations the separate effects of access to other or non-NAADS extension services.


Although methods of evaluating agricultural extension have been widely stud- ied, the new techniques discussed in this research monograph have generated inter- est in studying the topic further. Future research will have to account for general equilibrium effects of extension programs and consider costs versus benefits.


Shenggen Fan Director General, International Food Policy Research Institute xiii


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