Litcius/Paper detail

Does neighborhood matter? Spatial proximity and farmers’ technical efficiency

Wondmagegn Tafesse Tirkaso, Atakelty Hailu

2022Agricultural Economics28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract This article examines the effects of neighborhood on the farmer's technical efficiency (TE) level, adopting a stochastic frontier and spatial Durbin regression models. Our study exploits a three‐wave household‐level panel data from the Ethiopian Rural Socioeconomic Survey (ERSS) collected between 2011 and 2015. We find that farmers have an average TE score of 53%, implying a substantial potential for improvement in the production level. We further find that there is a positive and statistically significant spatial interdependence in TE levels between farms in neighboring communities. Input use, education, and other demographic characteristics are found to have significant positive direct and indirect effects. The findings suggest that policies and programs targeting productivity improvements in agriculture need to consider spatial spillover effects.

Topics & Concepts

Spillover effectProductivityPanel dataProduction (economics)Spatial econometricsEconomicsAgricultural productivityAgricultureEconometricsAgricultural economicsExploitProduction–possibility frontierSocioeconomic statusFrontierPeer effectsSpatial dependenceAgribusinessDemographic economicsGeographyEconomic growthStatisticsMathematicsComputer scienceMicroeconomicsDemographyPsychologyComputer securitySocial psychologyPopulationSociologyArchaeologyAgricultural Innovations and PracticesEconomic and Environmental ValuationEnergy and Environment Impacts
Does neighborhood matter? Spatial proximity and farmers’ technical efficiency | Litcius