A simple utility-based model of risky wool production is presented. Evaluation of the model indicates the effect on optimal stocking rate of changes in the degree of risk aversion, farm area, variable cost, fixed cost, wool cut, wool price, variance of wool price, climatic variability and tax rate. It is shown that the utility hypothesis implies a lower optimal stocking rate than does expected profit maximization and hence implies a discrepancy between private and public optimal resource use which it is suggested, might be mitigated by a progressive bounty on wool production
On the Ground • We develop a simple bio-economic model to reflect the stocking rate decision for a p...
Australian wool producers have been slow to adopt price risk management strategies to stabilise the ...
Wool tenderness is a significant problem in Australia, especially in areas where sheep graze under h...
A simple utility-based model of risky wool production is presented. Evaluation of the model indicate...
It has often been suggested that more stable wool prices would lead to an outward shift in the long-...
Wool tenderness is a significant problem in Australia, especially in areas where sheep graze under h...
The object of this study is an econometric evaluation of the factors determining the price of raw wo...
Production instability has been rightly regarded as one of the key problems of Australian agricultur...
In this paper, some aspects of the application of optimal-control techniques to wool industry price ...
Decisions by New England wool producers were modelled with a technique combining personal construct ...
The effects of a range of farm management strategies on the characteristics of the wool produced by ...
The process by which producers form expectations has implications for model building and policy anal...
Lesotho is a very small producer of wool (1 thousand tonnes per year) and therefore has no influence...
Australian wool traders and researchers have little knowledge of the incomplete adoption of the pric...
Using the contingent valuation method farmers in the high rainfall region of Western Australia were ...
On the Ground • We develop a simple bio-economic model to reflect the stocking rate decision for a p...
Australian wool producers have been slow to adopt price risk management strategies to stabilise the ...
Wool tenderness is a significant problem in Australia, especially in areas where sheep graze under h...
A simple utility-based model of risky wool production is presented. Evaluation of the model indicate...
It has often been suggested that more stable wool prices would lead to an outward shift in the long-...
Wool tenderness is a significant problem in Australia, especially in areas where sheep graze under h...
The object of this study is an econometric evaluation of the factors determining the price of raw wo...
Production instability has been rightly regarded as one of the key problems of Australian agricultur...
In this paper, some aspects of the application of optimal-control techniques to wool industry price ...
Decisions by New England wool producers were modelled with a technique combining personal construct ...
The effects of a range of farm management strategies on the characteristics of the wool produced by ...
The process by which producers form expectations has implications for model building and policy anal...
Lesotho is a very small producer of wool (1 thousand tonnes per year) and therefore has no influence...
Australian wool traders and researchers have little knowledge of the incomplete adoption of the pric...
Using the contingent valuation method farmers in the high rainfall region of Western Australia were ...
On the Ground • We develop a simple bio-economic model to reflect the stocking rate decision for a p...
Australian wool producers have been slow to adopt price risk management strategies to stabilise the ...
Wool tenderness is a significant problem in Australia, especially in areas where sheep graze under h...