Heterogeneity, Measurement Error, and Misallocation: Evidence from African Agriculture
Douglas Gollin, Christopher Udry
Abstract
Standard measures of productivity display enormous dispersion across farms in Africa. Crop yields and input intensities appear to vary greatly, seemingly in conflict with a model of efficient allocation across farms. In this paper, we present a theoretical framework for distinguishing between measurement error, unobserved heterogeneity, and potential misallocation. Using rich panel data from farms in Tanzania and Uganda, we estimate our model using a flexible specification in which we allow for several kinds of measurement error and heterogeneity. We find that measurement error and heterogeneity together account for a large fraction of the dispersion in measured productivity.
Topics & Concepts
Observational errorDispersion (optics)EconometricsProductivityTanzaniaEconomicsAgricultureReplicateStandard errorStatisticsMathematicsGeographyMacroeconomicsSocioeconomicsPhysicsArchaeologyOpticsAgricultural Innovations and PracticesEconomics of Agriculture and Food MarketsAgricultural risk and resilience