Technical Efficiency of Soybean Farmers in the Northern Region of Ghana.

This paper assesses the technical efficiency of soybean farmers in the Northern Region of Ghana. The maximum likelihood estimation technique was used for the estimations in a one-step approach through the translog production function. A sample size of 168 soybean farmers was used for the study. Far...

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Main Authors: Abdul Rashid S. Mohammed, Seidu Al-hassan, D. P. K. Amegashie
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Africa Development and Resources Research Institute (ADRRI) 2016-08-01
Series:Journal of Agriculture and Food Sciences
Online Access:https://journals.adrri.org/index.php/adrrijafs/article/view/248
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spelling doaj-c78c6b9992d642fe9a45f03596ec1f1a2021-08-03T10:03:39ZengAfrica Development and Resources Research Institute (ADRRI)Journal of Agriculture and Food Sciences2026-52042016-08-01211Technical Efficiency of Soybean Farmers in the Northern Region of Ghana.Abdul Rashid S. MohammedSeidu Al-hassanD. P. K. Amegashie This paper assesses the technical efficiency of soybean farmers in the Northern Region of Ghana. The maximum likelihood estimation technique was used for the estimations in a one-step approach through the translog production function. A sample size of 168 soybean farmers was used for the study. Farmers were selected by using systematic random sampling procedure and interviewed with questionnaires. The overall return to scale in production in the region was found to be 0.79. This is a decreasing returns to scale and means that a percentage increase in variable inputs leads to a less than percentage (proportionate) increase in the overall output of soybean. The mean technical efficiency in soybean production was 0.61. This implies that an average soybean farmer is able to obtain 61% of the frontier output given the input used under existing technology. Farmer groups and farm size are the significant determinants of inefficiency in the area. Finally, inadequate farm credit, inadequate rainfall and lack of improved planting materials are the most serious constraints hindering soybean production. The paper recommends among others that soybean farmers should be given more technical training on best agronomic practices. Policies geared towards encouraging farmers to apply more fertilizer and other chemicals (herbicide and pesticide) should be formulated and enforced by the government and other actors in agricultural development. https://journals.adrri.org/index.php/adrrijafs/article/view/248
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Abdul Rashid S. Mohammed
Seidu Al-hassan
D. P. K. Amegashie
spellingShingle Abdul Rashid S. Mohammed
Seidu Al-hassan
D. P. K. Amegashie
Technical Efficiency of Soybean Farmers in the Northern Region of Ghana.
Journal of Agriculture and Food Sciences
author_facet Abdul Rashid S. Mohammed
Seidu Al-hassan
D. P. K. Amegashie
author_sort Abdul Rashid S. Mohammed
title Technical Efficiency of Soybean Farmers in the Northern Region of Ghana.
title_short Technical Efficiency of Soybean Farmers in the Northern Region of Ghana.
title_full Technical Efficiency of Soybean Farmers in the Northern Region of Ghana.
title_fullStr Technical Efficiency of Soybean Farmers in the Northern Region of Ghana.
title_full_unstemmed Technical Efficiency of Soybean Farmers in the Northern Region of Ghana.
title_sort technical efficiency of soybean farmers in the northern region of ghana.
publisher Africa Development and Resources Research Institute (ADRRI)
series Journal of Agriculture and Food Sciences
issn 2026-5204
publishDate 2016-08-01
description This paper assesses the technical efficiency of soybean farmers in the Northern Region of Ghana. The maximum likelihood estimation technique was used for the estimations in a one-step approach through the translog production function. A sample size of 168 soybean farmers was used for the study. Farmers were selected by using systematic random sampling procedure and interviewed with questionnaires. The overall return to scale in production in the region was found to be 0.79. This is a decreasing returns to scale and means that a percentage increase in variable inputs leads to a less than percentage (proportionate) increase in the overall output of soybean. The mean technical efficiency in soybean production was 0.61. This implies that an average soybean farmer is able to obtain 61% of the frontier output given the input used under existing technology. Farmer groups and farm size are the significant determinants of inefficiency in the area. Finally, inadequate farm credit, inadequate rainfall and lack of improved planting materials are the most serious constraints hindering soybean production. The paper recommends among others that soybean farmers should be given more technical training on best agronomic practices. Policies geared towards encouraging farmers to apply more fertilizer and other chemicals (herbicide and pesticide) should be formulated and enforced by the government and other actors in agricultural development.
url https://journals.adrri.org/index.php/adrrijafs/article/view/248
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