Understanding Fertilizer Effectiveness and Adoption on Maize in Zambia

Type Journal Article - MSU International Development Working Paper
Title Understanding Fertilizer Effectiveness and Adoption on Maize in Zambia
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2016
URL http://www.fsg.afre.msu.edu/papers/idwp147.pdf
Abstract
As populations continue to rise and land becomes scarcer in Africa’s rural areas, there is
increasing urgency for farmers to adopt land management practices that sustainably raise land
and labor productivity. Considerable effort has focused on promoting inorganic fertilizers,
but it is increasingly recognized that smallholder farmers’ demand for fertilizer can be
depressed by soil conditions that reduce crop response to and the profitability of fertilizer use.
This article quantifies the impacts of soil characteristics on maize response to fertilizer in
Zambia using a nationally representative sample of 1,453 fields. In addition to economic and
farm management surveys, composite soil samples were collected and analyzed for several
characteristics at the Zambia Agricultural Research Institute. Soil’s role in agricultural
production and fertilizer efficiency is more nuanced than most economic literature has
acknowledged. We believe ours is the first model in economic literature that simultaneously
allows for the effects of multiple soil characteristics. We estimate critical threshold effects on
yield response to fertilizer to be between pH levels of 5.4 and 5.6, soil organic matter levels
of 1.2-1.4%, and find significant soil texture―and cation exchange―related thresholds.
Depending on these soil characteristics, average maize yield response estimates range from
insignificant (0) to 5.7 maize kg per fertilizer kg. We estimate fertilizer use on maize is not
profitable at commercial prices for the majority of Zambian farmers (under current practices).
Even ignoring transfer costs, about 80% of fertilized maize fields still have an estimated
average value-cost-ratio for fertilizer less than one at commercial prices. To the best of our
knowledge, the flexibility of our model and data with this scope of geography and content are
novel contributions to the literature.

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