Farm advisory services and total factor productivity growth in the Irish dairy sector
Farm advisory services and total factor productivity growth in the Irish dairy sector
This paper investigates the impact of the engagement of individual farmers with Farm Advisory Services (FAS) on total factor productivity (TFP) growth, as a relevant indicator of competitiveness under the vision of sustainable intensification. Using farm-level data from the Irish dairy sector between 2008 and 2017, we estimate a random-coefficients stochastic frontier model and construct a TFP growth index, extending Orea (2002) such that the contribution of FAS becomes an additional component of the index. The results indicate that the main driver of TFP growth was technical change and efficiency gains; a negative scale effect slowed down TFP growth, but this impact was counteracted by the positive contribution of FAS to productivity growth.
655–682
Parikoglou, Iordanis
97fd04d9-9272-42f7-be55-058eb723e305
Emvalomatis, Grigorios
1b715bde-cf74-44bc-850c-d382f2cf6539
Thorne, Fiona
501d59e1-3199-4f34-82f5-e22f56a16796
Wallace, Michael
7234ceaa-c998-4f83-ad8c-ca29ad9addfc
Parikoglou, Iordanis
97fd04d9-9272-42f7-be55-058eb723e305
Emvalomatis, Grigorios
1b715bde-cf74-44bc-850c-d382f2cf6539
Thorne, Fiona
501d59e1-3199-4f34-82f5-e22f56a16796
Wallace, Michael
7234ceaa-c998-4f83-ad8c-ca29ad9addfc
Parikoglou, Iordanis, Emvalomatis, Grigorios, Thorne, Fiona and Wallace, Michael
(2022)
Farm advisory services and total factor productivity growth in the Irish dairy sector.
European Review of Agricultural Economics, 50 (2), .
(doi:10.1093/erae/jbac024).
Abstract
This paper investigates the impact of the engagement of individual farmers with Farm Advisory Services (FAS) on total factor productivity (TFP) growth, as a relevant indicator of competitiveness under the vision of sustainable intensification. Using farm-level data from the Irish dairy sector between 2008 and 2017, we estimate a random-coefficients stochastic frontier model and construct a TFP growth index, extending Orea (2002) such that the contribution of FAS becomes an additional component of the index. The results indicate that the main driver of TFP growth was technical change and efficiency gains; a negative scale effect slowed down TFP growth, but this impact was counteracted by the positive contribution of FAS to productivity growth.
Text
Revised Manuscript 20 August 2022
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 16 September 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 13 October 2022
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 469699
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/469699
ISSN: 1464-3618
PURE UUID: 34aacff9-0806-4dc4-a0aa-31df87ef6ab2
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Date deposited: 22 Sep 2022 16:40
Last modified: 13 Oct 2024 04:01
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Contributors
Author:
Iordanis Parikoglou
Author:
Grigorios Emvalomatis
Author:
Fiona Thorne
Author:
Michael Wallace
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