The present work assesses the attitudes towards importance and need for providing agricultural development instruments other than traditional grant aid mechanisms in rural areas. Assistance in marketing farm produce, provision of extension services on new agricultural technology, agricultural training and provision of quality standards are four of the instruments examined. The importance and need for providing these instruments depends upon producers' human capital accumulation and farm characteristics. The analysis indicates that different instruments may apply to different parts of the rural population and thus flexible, multi-instrument and selective rural development policy may be required.