How U.S. Agriculture Adjusts to Energy Price Changes

The primary objective of this research is to measure the impacts of rising energy prices on U.S. agriculture and to analyze the capability of U.S. agricultural producers to adjust for energy price volatility. This study compares four different models of producer adjustment: the static model, the sim...

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Main Author: Gong, Jian
Format: Others
Published: North Dakota State University 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10365/29849
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spelling ndltd-ndsu.edu-oai-library.ndsu.edu-10365-298492021-09-28T17:10:55Z How U.S. Agriculture Adjusts to Energy Price Changes Gong, Jian Agriculture and energy -- United States. Agriculture -- Economic aspects -- United States. Agriculture -- Energy consumption -- United States -- Costs. The primary objective of this research is to measure the impacts of rising energy prices on U.S. agriculture and to analyze the capability of U.S. agricultural producers to adjust for energy price volatility. This study compares four different models of producer adjustment: the static model, the simple error correction model, the partial adjustment model, and the fully dynamic model. The first three models are nested within the fully dynamic model using ]948-2002 U.S. agriculture data. Morishima elasticities of substitution and price elasticities are estimated to investigate whether U.S. agriculture's responses to energy prices have changed over time. The elasticity estimates indicate that there are substitutions among production factors in U.S. agricultural production, and the substitution elasticities have increased over the 1948-2002 period. This finding suggests an increasing possibility for farmers to substitute other production inputs for energy to mitigate the effects of changing energy prices. Upper Great Plains Transportation Institute 2019-06-19T14:23:34Z 2019-06-19T14:23:34Z 2007 text/thesis https://hdl.handle.net/10365/29849 NDSU policy 190.6.2 https://www.ndsu.edu/fileadmin/policy/190.pdf application/pdf North Dakota State University
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Agriculture and energy -- United States.
Agriculture -- Economic aspects -- United States.
Agriculture -- Energy consumption -- United States -- Costs.
spellingShingle Agriculture and energy -- United States.
Agriculture -- Economic aspects -- United States.
Agriculture -- Energy consumption -- United States -- Costs.
Gong, Jian
How U.S. Agriculture Adjusts to Energy Price Changes
description The primary objective of this research is to measure the impacts of rising energy prices on U.S. agriculture and to analyze the capability of U.S. agricultural producers to adjust for energy price volatility. This study compares four different models of producer adjustment: the static model, the simple error correction model, the partial adjustment model, and the fully dynamic model. The first three models are nested within the fully dynamic model using ]948-2002 U.S. agriculture data. Morishima elasticities of substitution and price elasticities are estimated to investigate whether U.S. agriculture's responses to energy prices have changed over time. The elasticity estimates indicate that there are substitutions among production factors in U.S. agricultural production, and the substitution elasticities have increased over the 1948-2002 period. This finding suggests an increasing possibility for farmers to substitute other production inputs for energy to mitigate the effects of changing energy prices. === Upper Great Plains Transportation Institute
author Gong, Jian
author_facet Gong, Jian
author_sort Gong, Jian
title How U.S. Agriculture Adjusts to Energy Price Changes
title_short How U.S. Agriculture Adjusts to Energy Price Changes
title_full How U.S. Agriculture Adjusts to Energy Price Changes
title_fullStr How U.S. Agriculture Adjusts to Energy Price Changes
title_full_unstemmed How U.S. Agriculture Adjusts to Energy Price Changes
title_sort how u.s. agriculture adjusts to energy price changes
publisher North Dakota State University
publishDate 2019
url https://hdl.handle.net/10365/29849
work_keys_str_mv AT gongjian howusagricultureadjuststoenergypricechanges
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