Litcius/Paper detail

Long-term economic impacts of no-till adoption

Yuyuan Che, Roderick M. Rejesus, Michel A. Cavigelli, Kathryn E. White, Serkan Aglasan, Lynn G. Knight, Curt Dell, David Y. Hollinger, Erin Lane

2023Soil Security20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

No-till has long been considered a sustainable agricultural practice because of its potential to provide on-farm productivity benefits as well as off-site environmental benefits. However, “economic concerns” have been identified as one of the largest barriers to adopting no-till (i.e., costs associated with adoption possibly being greater than the returns in the short term). This study evaluates the long-term economic impact of no-till adoption using rich plot-level data from a long-term field experiment over the period 1996–2019. Linear fixed-effect models and partial budgeting techniques are used in the empirical analysis. Estimation results reveal that there are generally no statistically significant differences between long-term yields from no-till relative to the conventional tillage practice when considering corn, soybean, and wheat. Nonetheless, the partial budgeting analysis using the long-term data suggests that net returns (or profits) per acre tend to be greater for no-till compared to conventional tillage for all three crops. This is primarily due to the statistically lower farm operation costs associated with no-till. Moreover, our analysis also suggests that relative profitability of no-till increases as the practice is used longer over time. This insight supports suggestions from previous studies that long-term adoption of continuous no-till is important to best realize the benefits from the practice.

Topics & Concepts

TillageTerm (time)ProductivityProfitability indexNo-till farmingEconomicsAgricultureEconomic analysisAgricultural economicsNatural resource economicsBusinessEnvironmental scienceAgronomySoil fertilityGeographySoil waterQuantum mechanicsSoil sciencePhysicsBiologyArchaeologyFinanceMacroeconomicsAgricultural Economics and PolicyAgricultural Innovations and PracticesClimate change impacts on agriculture