We employ propensity score matching (PSM) framework to examine the impact of sweet potatobased
feed technology adoption on household-based pig production in Sichuan, China. An ex post
survey in six villages was conducted in 2009, of which five villages were in project intervention sites
(exposed area) and one village in the same township but not exposed to project intervention (nonexposed
area). We randomly selected 111 households in the exposed areas from the list of
households previously interviewed in a baseline survey and 53 households from non-exposed area.
Matching estimators such as nearest neighbor matching (NNM), radius matching (RM) and kernel
matching (KM) were used to estimate average treatment effects. Results indicate positive net
benefit from adoption of sweet potato-based feeding technology, i.e., gross margin estimates of
silage adopters are on average higher by 2-4 RMB per kg liveweight of output than non-adopters of
similar characteristics. Silage adopters are also likely to produce 3-7 more slaughter pigs per year
than non-adopters having similar characteristics, on average. Analysis of factors driving adoption
indicates that sweet potato-based feed technology is not suitable in all smallholder context in
Sichuan. Where this is suitable is in systems where sweet potato is an important crop, where there
is limited access to input markets such as in upland or mountainous areas, where corn is not an
important crop, and where households raise no more than 10 pigs given available household labor
for pig raising in rural areas (generally either old people who are no longer active in the labor force,
or young children who are still in school). Overall, the results show that sweet potato-based feed
technology plays an important role in helping household-based pig producers become resilient, by
having options in feeding strategies that help them cope with volatility in output prices (e.g., prices
of live pigs as a function of retail prices of pork) and input prices (e.g., price of corn vis-à-vis price of
pork, price of industrial feed). Exposure to the technology and its benefits through actual
demonstration also appears to be more effective in engendering uptake and sustaining adoption