Determinants of technical, allocative and economic efficiencies among onion producing farmers in Kobo District, Amhara Region, Ethiopia
2015
E11087
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Title
Determinants of technical, allocative and economic efficiencies among onion producing farmers in Kobo District, Amhara Region, Ethiopia
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Publication Date
2015
Call Number
E11087
Summary
This study investigated the determinants of technical, allocative and economic efficiencies among small-scale onion producing farmers in North wollo zone of Amhara National Regional State, Ethiopia. Structured questionnaires were used to collect data from 200 respondents randomly selected from designated locations in the study area. A stochastic production frontier function was fitted to the sample households. The findings revealed that land related factors such as land distance, ownership, and fragmentation explain much of the technical inefficiencies in addition to other socio-economic characteristics of farm households. (age, market access, training access, years of experience in onion production, farm income, responsibility and field visit) were found to be significant at different levels of significance for technical efficiency. The result also revealed variables that contribute for allocative efficiency were plot distance, market access, sources of irrigation water, extension visit, farm income and field visit. Major determinants for economic efficiency were age of the household, plot distance, fertility, source of irrigation water, extension visit, experience in onion production, land fragmentation and farm income. Implications of results suggest that any development intervention through irrigation should consider the aforementioned socioeconomic characteristics and determinants of efficiency for success. Tenure insecurity play significant role for farmers to adopt the available technologies and maximize production on irrigated farms. Likewise, land fragmentation has showed positive effect on production inefficiency, calling for the need to think about land consolidation at least within farms. More specifically the finding imply that improving institutional services ( extension, market, training, attitude change on credit utilization ), soil management options and increased investment in irrigation services could jointly contribute to an improvement in efficiency of onion farmers in the study area.
Journal Citation
6(3):8-18, JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
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