Frontiers in Environmental Science (Mar 2023)
Disentangling the heterogeneous effects of different support policies on livestock and poultry farmers’ willingness to utilize manure resources: Evidence from central China
Abstract
China’s livestock and poultry industries have undergone massive transformations, with far-reaching implications for resource consumption and environmental issues. Utilizing waste resources from livestock and poultry, which requires increased farmer participation, is critical for China to meet its goal of lowering carbon emissions while also advancing high-quality animal husbandry. To this end, this study develops a model based on stimulus-organism-response (SOR) theory to explore the impact of different policy instruments on farmers’ willingness to utilize resources, as well as the mediating effect of farmers’ perception and the moderating effect of farmers’ attitude toward risk. Using OLS and Bootstrap estimation on survey data from 607 farmers from 11 counties in China’s Hunan province, this study reaches the following main results. First, incentive policies have a significant positive effect on farmers’ willingness to utilize resources. The service policy has the greatest positive impact among the various incentive policies considered, followed by the subsidy policy, while the impact of the propaganda policy is insignificant. Second, farmers’ perceptions mediate the effect of incentive policies on their willingness to utilize resources. Finally, risk attitude negatively impacts farmers’ willingness to utilize resources, indicating that the more conservative a farmer’s risk preference, the greater the impact of farmers’ perception on willingness to utilize resources, and vice versa. To achieve sustainable livestock production, policymakers should prioritize measures that can improve and strengthen regulatory control, encourage education and technology adoption related to resource utilization, and offer subsidies for manure treatment and utilization.
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