北海道農業経済研究 = Hokkaido Jounal of Agricultural Economics;第5巻 第2号

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個別経営間の生産性格差とその要因 : 北海道酪農の粗飼料生産における技術効率分析

山本, 康貴

Permalink : http://hdl.handle.net/2115/63096

Abstract

The purpose of this paper is to analyze the impacts of congestion and returns to scale on technical efficiency of roughage production in Hokkaido's dairy farms using a nonparametric programming approach. The overall technical efficiency measure (the ratio of actual output to maximum output given constant returns to scale (CRS) and strong disposability (SDI) technology) is decomposed into three components: (1) the pure technical efficiency measure (the ratio of actual output to maximum output given variable returns to scale (VRS) and weak disposability (WDI) technology); (2) the congestion efficiency measure (which was designed to measure output slack due to deviation from the economic region of the technology where SDI is satisfied); (3) the scale efficiency measure (which was designed to measure output slack due to deviation from optimal scale, i.e., from CRS and SDI technology). This approach has the advantage that no a priori assumption on the analytic form of the frontier production function is required. Linear programming techniques are derived and used in calculating these efficiency measures for roughage production in Hokkaido's dairy farms during the period 1987. The empirical results in this study can be summarized as follows. First, the sample mean of overall technical efficiency is 0.84. The major sources of the sample mean of overall technical inefficiency are due to congestion inefficiency and scale inefficiency. Second, the statistical tests indicate that every efficiency measure except the scale efficiency measure does not vary by farm size. Half of the farms in the sample exhibit IRS. The farms exhibiting CRS exist from small farm size to large farm size. Third, conventional input ranks first, labor input ranks second, land input ranks third, and capital input ranks fourth with respect to frequencies appeared in the set of minimal congesting subsets of inputs. The frequencies appeared in the set of minimal congesting subsets of inputs and farm size are independent. Fourth, the farms exhibiting CRS have relatively larger output-conventional input ratios, larger output-land input ratios, larger output-labor input ratios, and lower conventional input-land input ratios than the farms exhibiting IRS or DRS. The farms exhibiting CRS and DRS or IRS are not different in capital input-land input ratios, labor input-land input ratios, and farm size. These findings indicate that there is large room for the improvements in technical inefficiency of roughage production in Hokkadio's dairy farms.

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