This study assesses improved maize variety (IMV) adoption, as well as yield effects among smallholder farmers in Benue State, Nigeria, having implications for sustainable crop management and resource-use efficiency. Benue state is commonly known as the “Food Basket of the Nation,” but the average maize yield remains less than 2 t/ha, compared to 7–10 t/ha when achieved under improved technologies, and it shows a key sustainability challenge for food security and land-use efficiency. With primary cross-sectional survey data from 205 smallholder farmers with 107 adopters and 98 non-adopters, selected across Local Government Area (LGAs) in Benue State, this study adopts Propensity Score Matching (PSM) for controlling selection bias and estimating the Average Treatment Effect on the Treated (ATET). Nearest Neighbour Matching acts as a primary estimator through robustness checks while using Radius and Kernel Matching. However, the logit model shows that IMV is greatly determined by gender, use of fertilizer, formal education, cooperative membership, access to irrigation, and extension contact, highlighting the crucial parts of human capital, complementary inputs, and institutional support in promoting sustainable adoption of technology. Following the control for observable differences across matching, a 0.399 log-unit yield gain was achieved by adopters, which is equivalent to approximately 49% higher output per hectare compared to non-adopters, an effect that is robust throughout alternative matching algorithms, and it surpasses the 38.7% national-level yield increase, indicating a regional sustainability premium in Benue State. The gains in productivity can promote land-use efficiency, decrease pressure for agricultural intensification on vulnerable lands, and enhance the case for integrated crop management. But adoption remains limited by access to quality seeds, complementary inputs, credit, and sustained gender barriers. Improving input supply chains, extension services, and institutional support is therefore crucial for developing productivity, resource-use efficiency, and food security across smallholder farming systems.
Jonah et al. (Mon,) studied this question.