Assessing technical efficiency of wheat farmers in Pakistan: A comparison to prior productivity analyses of Pakistani agriculture

Type Thesis or Dissertation - Masters of Science
Title Assessing technical efficiency of wheat farmers in Pakistan: A comparison to prior productivity analyses of Pakistani agriculture
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2015
URL http://search.proquest.com/openview/df6c49da2a786b75eeeb38200dff963d/1?pq-origsite=gscholar&cbl=1875​0&diss=y
Abstract
Agricultural production in Pakistan doubled during the green revolution, averting food crises and
spurring an era of agricultural and economic growth. However, agricultural sector growth has
decelerated to just 3.1 percent per annum during the past 10 years. There is a significant yield gap
between progressive and average farmers in Pakistan, furthermore the national average yield of
important crops such as wheat, cotton, rice, and sugarcane also lag behind both regionally and globally.
Attention needs to be paid to issues pertaining to the prioritization of public investments and the
design of public policies best suited to simultaneously accelerate productivity growth and reduce
poverty. The paper specially evaluates wheat efficiency using a stochastic production frontier
approach, since it is the staple diet and is grown extensively throughout the country. The results
indicate that there is significant technical inefficiency with mean score of 78 percent. However, the
major factors affecting the efficiency of farmers are no longer years of schooling, visits by extension
agents, and land size as most prior studies have suggested. I find that land degradation and weather
shocks are major sources of inefficiency. These findings suggest that effort is needed to improve the
extension system so that farmers are better informed about alternate technologies, cropping systems,
and sustainable practices.

Related studies

»