Abdulai, AwuduBinder, Claudia R.2017-03-122017-03-12200610.1017/S1355770X05002779https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/135280This study uses an endogenous switching-regression model to examine the impact of slash-and-burn cultivation practice on the application of commercial fertilizer and pesticides, as well as yields and net returns. The empirical evidence of the study indicates that cross-section analysis of the impact of technology adoption on input demand and output supply should take into consideration sample selection, and also examine the impact separately for adopters and non-adopters. The results show that education, access to credit, land rights, and visits by extension agents reduce the probability of farmers adopting slash-and-burn farm practices. Environmental variables, such as soil quality and plot slope, do not impact on the adoption decision, but affect output supply of both adopters and non-adopters of slash-and-burn technology.Slash-and-burn cultivation practice and agricultural input demand and output supplytext::journal::journal article::research article