Do Common Yield Measures Misrepresent Productivity Among Smallholder Farmers?: a Plot-level Analysis of Rice Yields in Tanzania

Type Book
Title Do Common Yield Measures Misrepresent Productivity Among Smallholder Farmers?: a Plot-level Analysis of Rice Yields in Tanzania
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2013
Publisher Evans School of Public Affairs, University of Washington
URL https://evans.uw.edu/sites/default/files/public/EPAR_UW_Request_252_TZNPS_Productivity_Measurment_Ri​ce_010814_2.pdf
Abstract
Crop yield is one of the most common proxies for agricultural
productivity, with yield generally estimated as the harvested
weight divided by harvested area. New estimates using data
from the 2008 Tanzania National Panel Survey Living
Standards Measurement Study – Integrated Surveys on
Agriculture (LSMS-ISA) reveal that on almost a quarter of rice
plots surveyed, farmers harvested less area than they
planted. We find that common measures of yield that omit
this “null production area” may significantly overestimate
land productivity, particularly for poorer farmers and those
with smaller plots.

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