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Knowledge for policy
Supporting policy with scientific evidence

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  • Publication | 2025
Small policy changes can accelerate the adoption of improved on-farm storage among smallholder farmers

Highlights:

  • Though key to food security, improved storage is rarely adopted by smallholders facing high post-harvest losses.
  • A small subsidy—reflecting the current fiscal burden—increased purchasrates sixfold.
  • Free trial bags didn’t affect purchase rates later-on but improved household food security quickly.
  • Removing the fiscal burden, similar to other agricultural products, accelerates adoption.

Abstract:

Reducing food losses is a significant and often overlooked opportunity to bolster global food security and enhancing the resilience and sustainability of global food systems. Food losses are highest in low-income countries where millions of smallholder farming households remain particularly vulnerable. As yet, smallholders’ adoption of loss-minimizing storage technologies, such as hermetic storage bags, remains low. Here, we study the effects of two types of policy options on the adoption of improved on-farm storage in the case of Ethiopia. Using a randomized controlled trial, we show that a small partial subsidy, which mirrors the current fiscal burden on these technologies, can lead to a sixfold increase in the adoption of hermetic storage bags (from 11% to 67% adoption). While providing a free trial bag did not increase purchase rates later-on, it did rapidly improve household food security. These findings underscore the need for policymakers in low-income countries to consider reducing fiscal barriers on post-harvest technologies, as is common for other agricultural technologies, to contribute to enhanced food security and more resilient food systems.