“…In developing countries, farm mechanization plays a significant role in augmenting the scale of farm operations, decreasing the cost of production, reducing drudgery, improving the timeliness of operations, enhancing crop productivity, and contributing to increases in household income [[1], [2], [3], [4]]. Farm mechanization has the potential to enhance crop productivity and improve food security and rural livelihoods in the developing world where small farms, low crop productivity, high food insecurity, and poverty are common [2,[5], [6], [7]]. Nevertheless, farm mechanization among smallholders is challenged by small and fragmented land holdings, lack of financial resources among smallholder farmers to invest in the technology, low risk-bearing capacity, and low levels of market integration [[8], [9], [10], [11], [12], [13]].…”