1995
DOI: 10.1086/601447
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Learning by Doing and Learning from Others: Human Capital and Technical Change in Agriculture

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Cited by 1,553 publications
(1,065 citation statements)
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References 8 publications
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“…Farmers who know many adopters might, out of strategic considerations, delay their adoption to learn from the experiences of the other farmers in their network. Foster & Rosenzweig (1995) also find that farmers have the tendency to free ride on the acquired knowledge of other farmers. We test the free-riding hypothesis by entering the square term of the number of farmers known into the regression.…”
Section: Hybrid Wheat Impact and The Adoption Decisionmentioning
confidence: 86%
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“…Farmers who know many adopters might, out of strategic considerations, delay their adoption to learn from the experiences of the other farmers in their network. Foster & Rosenzweig (1995) also find that farmers have the tendency to free ride on the acquired knowledge of other farmers. We test the free-riding hypothesis by entering the square term of the number of farmers known into the regression.…”
Section: Hybrid Wheat Impact and The Adoption Decisionmentioning
confidence: 86%
“…Foster & Rosenzweig, 1995;Pomp & Burger, 1995). However, more recent adoption studies stress that farmers do not learn from all farmers in the village.…”
Section: Hybrid Wheat Impact and The Adoption Decisionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At least in theory, this phenomenon could contribute to the energy-efficiency gap. 30 Empirical research in other domains emphasizes the prevalence of social learning and peer effects (Case and Katz 1991;Ammermueller and Pischke 2009;Duflo and Saez 2002;Foster andRosenzweig 1995, 1205-6;Emerick 2014;Conley and Udry 2010, 37-38), but there is limited evidence regarding how information spillovers affect energy-efficient technology, and-if positive spillovers exist-whether consumers respond by free-riding. The bulk of the evidence on information spillovers comes from the introduction of hybrid vehicles, drawing on both stated preference (Mau et al 2008) and revealed preference studies (Axsen, Mountain, and Jaccard 30 These spillovers are related to the effects of demand spillovers on innovation by firms, discussed above, in that they also affect product offerings.…”
Section: Do Learning-by-using Spillovers Inhibit More Energy-efficienmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although more research should be done on these problems, it is probably naive to expect it to provide clear guidance in the near future on 7 Uneducated farmers may follow the innovations adopted by their educated neighbours. For evidence of copying in agriculture, see Foster and Rosenzweig (1995); Burger, Collier and Gunning (1993). Appleton and Balihuta (1996) find a correlation between farm productivity and the education of neighbouring farmers.…”
Section: B0x1 Failures In the Market For Educationmentioning
confidence: 99%