The oft-observed inverse relationship between farm size and productivity is generally explained by labor market imperfections. Although other explanations exist (e.g., size-sensitive cropping patterns and variable soil quality), the literature ignores uncertainty as an explanation. Using a simple two-period model of an agricultural household that both produces and consumes under price uncertainty at the time labor allocation decisions are made, this paper demonstrates analytically that an inverse relationship may exist, even absent any of the more common explanations. A simple data exercise suggests the plausibility of temporal price risk as an explanation for this phenomenon
We show analytically and empirically that non-classical measurement errors in the two key variables ...
Using longitudinal panel farm-level data, this study finds that income variability may be materiall...
1I would like to thank Marc Nerlove and Je¤Dorfmann for helpful comments on earlier versions of this...
The oft-observed inverse relationship between farm size and productivity is generally explained by l...
This paper examines the effects of price uncertainty on agricultural productivity. Appelbaum(1991) p...
The inverse relationship between land productivity and farm size is an old and puzzling empirical re...
To understand whether and how inverse relationship between farm size and productivity changes when l...
SUMMARY: This study focuses on the analysis of the production behavior and risk preferences in the p...
In a framework developed by P.J. Dawson, the effects of output price risk on the family labour suppl...
This paper verifies the existence of the inverse productivity relationship in the ICRISAT data and e...
The well-known inverse relationship between farm-size and productivity is usually explained in terms...
This paper studies soil depletion incentives in a dynamic economic model under two different sources...
PRIFPRI3; ISI; CRP2; DCA; 3 Building Inclusive and Efficient Markets, Trade Systems, and Food Indust...
We show analytically and empirically that non-classical measurement errors in the two key variables ...
Farm-level Census data and county-level income shock data reveal that past unexpected income shocks ...
We show analytically and empirically that non-classical measurement errors in the two key variables ...
Using longitudinal panel farm-level data, this study finds that income variability may be materiall...
1I would like to thank Marc Nerlove and Je¤Dorfmann for helpful comments on earlier versions of this...
The oft-observed inverse relationship between farm size and productivity is generally explained by l...
This paper examines the effects of price uncertainty on agricultural productivity. Appelbaum(1991) p...
The inverse relationship between land productivity and farm size is an old and puzzling empirical re...
To understand whether and how inverse relationship between farm size and productivity changes when l...
SUMMARY: This study focuses on the analysis of the production behavior and risk preferences in the p...
In a framework developed by P.J. Dawson, the effects of output price risk on the family labour suppl...
This paper verifies the existence of the inverse productivity relationship in the ICRISAT data and e...
The well-known inverse relationship between farm-size and productivity is usually explained in terms...
This paper studies soil depletion incentives in a dynamic economic model under two different sources...
PRIFPRI3; ISI; CRP2; DCA; 3 Building Inclusive and Efficient Markets, Trade Systems, and Food Indust...
We show analytically and empirically that non-classical measurement errors in the two key variables ...
Farm-level Census data and county-level income shock data reveal that past unexpected income shocks ...
We show analytically and empirically that non-classical measurement errors in the two key variables ...
Using longitudinal panel farm-level data, this study finds that income variability may be materiall...
1I would like to thank Marc Nerlove and Je¤Dorfmann for helpful comments on earlier versions of this...