The Microeconomics of Agricultural Development: Risk, Institutions, and Agricultural Policy
James Roumasset
No 202403, Working Papers from University of Hawaii at Manoa, Department of Economics
Abstract:
Assertions of pervasive inefficiency in the behavior and organization of developing agriculture are found to be based on unsound methodologies. Models apparently based on expected utility theory are theoretically flawed and use highly restrictive assumptions that make them largely irrelevant for explaining actual decisions. When a more appropriate model is applied to the case of the green revolution in the Philippines, the hypothesis that loss aversion impedes adoption of new technology is rejected. Common assertions about the inefficiency of agricultural institutions are also found wanting. The risk-bearing theory share- tenancy, which is thought to imply high agency costs associated with effort shirking, cannot explain observed tenant shares. Once the disadvantages of fixed-lease contracts are recognized, sharing is plausibly second-best efficient. The purported inefficiency implied by the inverse relationship between farm size and yield per hectare also dissipates once the endogeneity of farm size is accounted for. In as much as efficiency can explain the stylized facts of behavior and organization in developing agriculture, policy recommendations based on misplaced exogeneity should be viewed with considerable skepticism.
Keywords: Loss-aversion; uncertainty; share tenancy; developing agriculture; nature of the firm (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: D01 G22 J43 O12 Q12 Q15 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2024-07
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-agr, nep-sea and nep-upt
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http://www.economics.hawaii.edu/research/workingpapers/WP_24-03.pdf First version, 2024 (application/pdf)
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Journal Article: The Microeconomics of Agricultural Development: Risk, Institutions, and Agricultural Policy (2024) 
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