Economics of Selected Water Control Technologies and their Successful Use: The Case of Ethiopia

Using a production function, marginal productivity of farm inputs and benefit-cost analysis, we explore the economics of selected water control technologies. From the production function, all farm inputs, including irrigation water is found to have a significant and positive effect on yield. Marginal value products of farm inputs are found to be positive but their magnitudes differ by type of control structures, crop type, agro-ecology and regions. The net present values of all water control structures are positive. There is a favorable precondition for sustainable adoption of these controls technologies and institutionalizing some sort of cost recovery schemes. The level of education, the ratio of irrigated land allocated to irrigated annuals and perennials, access to markets and off-farm income are found to have significant effect on successful use of these control structures. Recommendations and policy implications are drawn accordingly.

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Author Hagos Fitsum, Bekele Seleshi, Erkossa Teklu and Aster Denekew
Maintainer EIAR
Last Updated December 30, 2023, 20:27 (UTC)
Created March 18, 2023, 12:50 (UTC)
contributor Getachew, Meron
creator Hagos Fitsum, Bekele Seleshi, Erkossa Teklu and Aster Denekew
date 2023-01-04T00:00:00
harvest_object_id 5aaec853-fec1-48e0-aad5-e35aa877bcdb
harvest_source_id b7467cdf-8775-49cd-b162-b68283e0d13b
harvest_source_title EIAR Open Research Data
identifier https://doi.org/10.20372/eiar-rdm/HWTFM4
metadata_modified 2023-01-05T07:00:00