Estimating the supply response of cotton and cereal crops in smallholder production systems: recent evidence from Mali

Estimating the supply response of cotton and cereal crops in smallholder production systems: recent evidence from Mali

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Article ID: iaor200970893
Country: Netherlands
Volume: 40
Issue: 5
Start Page Number: 519
End Page Number: 533
Publication Date: Sep 2009
Journal: Agricultural Economics
Authors: , ,
Keywords: developing countries, economics
Abstract:

Cotton is one of the most important crops in West Africa and is a major catalyst of economic development in rural areas, but the sector has suffered from a decline in the world cotton price after 1999. This article exploits an unusual data set following 82 farmers over 14 years, from 1994 through 2007, to estimate a Nerlovian supply response model for cotton, maize, sorghum, and millet in long-term rotation. The resulting system of equations is estimated with two-stage least squares (2SLS), showing that this sample of Malian cotton producers have responded to prices in a relatively inelastic manner, with supply elasticities only about one-half of those estimated for producers in developed countries. Policy reforms could help producers respond more easily to prices changes, as well as to raise average productivity levels.

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