Publication | Open Access
A Nonparametric Analysis of Efficiency for a Sample of Kansas Beef Cow Farms
102
Citations
13
References
1997
Year
Resource EfficiencyApplied EconomicsEngineeringLivestock ProductionAgricultural EconomicsProductivityCalf PricesEconomic AnalysisAnimal ProductionStatisticsEconomicsAgricultural ImpactAnimal Health EconomicsNonparametric AnalysisAgricultural SystemAnimal AgricultureAnimal ScienceFarm ManagementBusinessEconometricsEnterprise ProfitabilityCow-calf Sector
Abstract Competitive pressures in the cow-calf sector increased in 1995 because of a decline of 27% in calf prices. Technical, allocative, and scale efficiency measures were used to examine the competitiveness of a sample of Kansas beef cow farms. On average, the farms were 78% technically efficient, 81% allocatively efficient, and 95% scale efficient. Enterprise profitability was correlated positively with the efficiency measures. Inefficiency was related to herd size and degree of specialization. Producers should focus on using capital, feed, and labor more efficiently rather than increasing their size. Increased concentration of the cow-calf sector will not result in large cost savings given the current technology.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1