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Abstract
Increasing agricultural productivity among smallholders in developing countries remains essential
to improving food security, and one potential avenue for this increase is through stimulating
technology adoption. In this paper we combine rainfall data with household survey and field
experimental data to assess households’ use and potential demand for a risky agricultural input in
Tigray, Ethiopia. More specifically, we explore how average rainfall, rainfall variability, lagged
rainfall shocks and risk aversion relate to inorganic fertiliser use at the farm plot level. Further, we
analyse how these variables and exogenous price variation affect the demand for inorganic fertiliser
at the household level. The findings are potentially important for the design of policies to promote
agricultural production in semi-arid rain-fed agricultural areas with vulnerable populations facing
rainfall risk and shocks.