The Impact of Different Uses of the Internet on Farmers′ Adoption of Soil Testing and Formulated Fertilization Technology in Rural China
Junxia Zeng,
Dengwang Li,
Cuiping Ma,
Bin Wang and
Liangliang Gao ()
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Junxia Zeng: Institute of Rural Development at Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Beijing 100732, China
Dengwang Li: Institute of Rural Development at Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Beijing 100732, China
Cuiping Ma: Institute of Rural Development at Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Beijing 100732, China
Bin Wang: Institute of Rural Development at Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Beijing 100732, China
Liangliang Gao: Institute of Rural Development at Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Beijing 100732, China
IJERPH, 2022, vol. 20, issue 1, 1-14
Abstract:
Soil testing and formulated fertilization technology can effectively solve the problem of the excessive and inefficient use of chemical fertilizers. Previous studies have found that the use of the Internet can increase the adoption of soil testing and formulated fertilization technology among farmers. However, they do not distinguish between the effects of the different uses of the Internet (with or without productive use) on the adoption of soil testing and formulated fertilization technology. This study investigates the Internet use of 5341 professional farmers in rural China in 2019, finding that 18.97% of them still use the Internet for only communication and entertainment and do not use any agricultural productive services on the Internet. The adoption rate of soil testing and fertilization technology among these farmers is only 23.77%, which is approximately 10 percentage points lower than that of farmers who use the Internet for productive purposes. The double robust model shows that the probability of the adoption of soil testing and formulated fertilization technology by farmers with productive use of the Internet increases by six percentage points, which is both statistically and economically significant. In the future, China should train more farmers to use the Internet for productive purposes; this will help more farmers, particularly those with low skills and low educational attainment, to use the Internet and play a positive role in promoting the Internet for green agricultural production techniques.
Keywords: green agriculture; Internet use; soil testing; formulated fertilization; China (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: I I1 I3 Q Q5 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2022
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