13 research outputs found
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Growth and diversification in U.S. agriculture Farm level analysis of cost structure under risk and uncertainty
Initially, we analyze growth and diversification of U.S. dairy, corn, wheat, apple, and beef, farms by examining longitudinal changes in ten size cohorts through three successive censuses. In dairy, we reject Gibrat's law and the mean reversion hypothesis of growth. Growth rates appear bimodal where the smallest and largest farm cohorts grow fastest. All cohorts diversify but the largest farms do not diversify as rapidly as medium-sized farms. These data suggest that scale economies persist even for the largest cohort of US dairy farms and scale economies dominate scope economies for large farms. For the other industries, we fail to reject Gibrat's law in apple and wheat industries and the mean reversion hypothesis in beef and corn industries. Apple and wheat farms diversify over time. Findings suggest that scale economies diminish for large farms across all four industries and scope economies dominate scale economies for large apple and wheat farms. Then, we examine scope economies and risk aversion, two forces that simultaneously determine diversification. We jointly estimate scope economies and determine risk preferences under price uncertainty. We reject risk neutrality in favor of IARA and IRRA. Scope economies are significant but diminish with farm size. Increasing returns to scale exist in the production of multiple enterprises and diminish with size. Large farms operate under decreasing returns to scale. Ignoring risk preferences, a common practice in empirical work, results in an underestimate of the effect of scope economies for large farms. Finally, we examine the impact of marketing contracts on farm cost structure and implied scale and scope economies for samples of dairy corn and wheat industries. We use the Modern Portfolio Theory to explain the increase in returns from diversifying marketing schemes. Assuming risk preferences and price uncertainty, we estimate the contract adoption decision, risk preferences, and structural parameters simultaneously. We derive measures of economies for both contracting and non-contracting farms. We find that marketing contracts improved the returns for corn and wheat farms, but not for dairy farm. Finally, having diversified marketing schemes is found to benefit only corn farms
What Does Initial Farm Size Imply About Growth and Diversification?
Recent consolidation in agriculture has shifted production toward fewer but larger farms, reshaping business relationships between farmers, processors, input suppliers, and local communities. We analyze growth and diversification of U.S. corn, wheat, apple, and beef farms by examining longitudinal changes in 10 size cohorts through three successive censuses. We fail to reject Gibratâs law in apple and wheat industries and the mean reversion hypothesis in beef and corn industries. Apple and wheat farms diversify over time. The findings suggest that scale economies diminish for large farms across all four industries and scope economies dominate scale economies for large apple and wheat farms.diversification, firm growth, Gibratâs law, longitudinal data, scale economies, scope economies, Agribusiness, Farm Management, Production Economics, Q12,
Do the Largest Firms Grow the Fastest? The Case of U.S. Dairies
Replaced with revised version of paper 06/29/07.Livestock Production/Industries, Productivity Analysis,
Do the Largest Firms Grow and Diversify the Fastest? The Case of U.S. Dairies
We analyze growth and diversification of U.S. dairy farms by examining changes in ten size cohorts and new entrants through three successive censuses. We reject Gibratâs law and the mean reversion hypothesis of growth. Growth rates appear bimodal where the smallest and largest farm cohorts grow fastest. All cohorts diversify but the largest farms do not diversify as rapidly as medium-sized farms. New entrants are generally large, and they diversify more rapidly than comparably-sized incumbents. These data suggest that scale economies persist even for the largest cohort of U.S. dairy farms and scale economies dominate scope economies for large farms.: census, dairy, diversification, growth, scale, scope
What does Initial Farm Size Imply About Growth and Diversification?
Recent consolidation in agriculture has shifted production toward fewer but larger farms, reshaping business relationships between farmers, processors, input suppliers, and local communities. We analyze growth and diversification of U.S. corn, wheat, apple, and beef, farms by examining longitudinal changes in ten size cohorts through three successive censuses. We fail to reject Gibratâs law in apple and wheat industries and the mean reversion hypothesis in beef and corn industries. Apple and wheat farms diversify over time. Findings suggest that scale economies diminish for large farms across all four industries and scope economies dominate scale economies for large apple and wheat farms.firm growth, diversification, scale economies, scope economies, Gibratâs law, longitudinal data
Farm Growth, Consolidation, and Diversification: Washington Dairy Industry
Farm Management, Q12,
Enterprise diversification in US dairy: impact of risk preferences on scale and scope economies
Enterprise diversification has recently become a prominent feature of US dairy farms. Scope economies and risk aversion are two forces that simultaneously determine diversification. We jointly estimate scope economies and determine risk preferences under price uncertainty. We reject risk neutrality in favour of Increasing Absolute Risk Aversion (IARA) and Increasing Relative Risk Aversion (IRRA). Scope economies are significant, but diminish with farm size. Increasing returns to scale exist in the production of multiple enterprises and diminish with size. Large farms operate under decreasing returns to scale. Ignoring risk preferences, a common practice in empirical work, results in an underestimate of the effect of scope economies for large farms.
Do the Largest Firms Grow the Fastest? The Case of U.S. Dairies
We analyze growth and diversification of U.S. dairy farms by examining longitudinal changes in ten size cohorts and new entrants through three successive censuses. Gibrat's law (random walk) and mean reversion hypotheses of growth are tested and rejected. Growth rates are bimodal with the largest farm cohort growing the fastest. All cohorts become more diversified over time, and smaller farms diversify most rapidly. New entrants are generally large, and they diversify more rapidly than incumbents. These data suggest that scale economies persist even for the largest cohort of dairy farms and that scale economies dominate scope economies for large farms
What Does Initial Farm Size Imply About Growth and Diversification?
Recent consolidation in agriculture has shifted production toward fewer but larger farms,
reshaping business relationships between farmers, processors, input suppliers, and local
communities. We analyze growth and diversification of U.S. corn, wheat, apple, and beef
farms by examining longitudinal changes in 10 size cohorts through three successive censuses.
We fail to reject Gibratâs law in apple and wheat industries and the mean reversion
hypothesis in beef and corn industries. Apple and wheat farms diversify over time. The
findings suggest that scale economies diminish for large farms across all four industries and
scope economies dominate scale economies for large apple and wheat farms