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Article
Peer-Review Record

Can Cooperative Supports and Adoption of Improved Technologies Help Increase Agricultural Income? Evidence from a Recent Study

by Nawab Khan 1, Ram L. Ray 2, Hazem S. Kassem 3, Muhammad Ihtisham 4, Badar Naseem Siddiqui 5 and Shemei Zhang 1,*
Reviewer 1: Anonymous
Reviewer 2: Anonymous
Submission received: 30 January 2022 / Revised: 25 February 2022 / Accepted: 26 February 2022 / Published: 1 March 2022
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Agricultural Land Use, Economics and Climate Change)

Round 1

Reviewer 1 Report

This study aimed to evaluate the influence of cooperative supports (CS) and technology adoption (TA) on wheat productivity in Pakistan. Overall, the article was well structured and the methodologies were scientifically sound.

However, major revisions should be made before the acceptance. The authors used almost three pages to introduce the study and describe the background. I suggest that Section 1 (Introduction) to Section 2 (Literature Review) should be combined and polished, as most of the context is repeated, making it not easy to follow.

Section 3 (Conceptual Framework of the Study) should be merged into Section 4 (Research Methodology) or even removed. Furthermore, there were not sufficient discussions in this article and the conclusions were not concise. Please expand your discussions in Section 5 and shorten Section 6 (Conclusion Policy Recommendations and Limitations).

In addition, what were your criteria to distinguish CS vs. non-CS and TA vs. non-TA in this study? I am afraid that I missed them in the article.

Author Response

We are very grateful for your valuable time, constructive comments, and suggestions to help improve the quality of the manuscript.

Author Response File: Author Response.pdf

Reviewer 2 Report

Some careless use of words rather spoils the work, such as taking income and revenue as synonyms, and referring often to productivity but never using it in its usual technical sense. Some illustrations of this carelessness are listed below. The Conclusion does admit to some weaknesses but not the crudity of the “technology adoption” measure used with partial definition as “use of modern cultivars and fertilizer” but never really fully explained in the paper.

 

Line        comment

3              insert “a” after “from”

19           omit “the variance in”

24           omit “productivity”

31-33     omit final sentence as unwarranted commentary

69-70     first sentence is repetitive

73-75     this sentence is strange

77-81     omit the repetitive text

107         “new” is hardly true

118-41   less than profound  observations

145         “essential” is an overstatement

150-60   this is a quite inadequate history of agricultural cooperatives

179         “essential” is untrue

184         further overuse of “essential” when it is the wrong word

202         this repetition is quite unnecessary

210         Figure 1 is by no means an informative conceptual “framework”

231         “seedlings” is incorrect

231-33   omit as irrelevant

235        “were” not “was”

256         “technology adoption” is mentioned but precisely how it is assessed as a 0 or 1 variable is never disclosed in this paper

274         this statement is literally untrue

279         OLS is never defined

280-315                all the Greek-heavy equations leave this reader with the impression that the authors perhaps are not aware of the realism of the many distributional assumptions being introduced in a seemingly “statistical package” approach to analysis

325         it makes no apparent sense for an income to be a %

334         there is no explanation of the use of logarithmic transformations used for several variables or what is done for cases where the underlying value is zero (as in cases of no loans)

337         the claim of no multicollinearity seems  unrealistic

360         yet another inappropriate use of “essential”

365         one of several misuses of “optimistic”

373         the scheme adopted for naming the variables makes reading Tables 4 & 5 a sort of puzzle

382         here and in most mentions (e.g., also 385, 471 & 476) “productivity” is being misused and should better not be included

415         a sentence obscure in meaning

423         Table 6 features many non-significant digits

465         ”Holding”??

476         “reliable”??

482         “outcomes” seems the wrong word for what are, at best, predictions of averaged partial effects

492         “is not credible”?? sense unclear

500         “gratified”??

520         “the probability”??

521         “by controlling the heterogeneous selection bias of farmers” would seem best omitted

525         “expand agricultural productivity” is actually not examined in this paper so should not appear in the Conclusion

534         The use here of “productivity” is, again, not appropriate as it was not examined per se

536         This expressed opinion seems quite unsubstantiated

543         “the strengthen”??

538-52   the various “policy recommendations” (from Pakistan to UN) are not really derived from the paper per se so hardly justify being in a Conclusion

557         ”deliberate”??

566         you say the study “only absorbed agricultural productivity”; absorbed is clearly the wrong word but as noted above, the work did not explicitly deal with productivity at all!

References. Many are acceptable and of conventional style but for some the strange form (of indicating the journal by means of abbreviations, conflated with the initials of the last-mentioned author) is not acceptable.

 

Author Response

We are very grateful for your valuable time, constructive comments, and suggestions to help improve the quality of the manuscript.

Author Response File: Author Response.pdf

Round 2

Reviewer 1 Report

I recommend this revised manuscript to be published in Land.

Author Response

We sincerely thank the reviewer for taking the time to review and making excellent suggestions.

Thank you.

Reviewer 2 Report

The attached Word document includes comments and a marked up Abstract

Comments for author File: Comments.pdf

Author Response

We sincerely thank the reviewer for taking the time to review and making excellent suggestions.

Author Response File: Author Response.pdf

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