Agricultural Economics Lecture Notes PDF
Agricultural Economics Lecture Notes PDF
Agricultural Economics
TOPICS
5. Labour Markets
Concepts of work, skill and productivity-Methods of
measurement of employment and unemployment-Free and
unfree labour -Types of employer-Employee relationships-
Determinants of wage rates – Labour market segmentation-
Gender based discrimination – Biases in data sources – time
disposition studies.
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Module 1
DEMAND FOR FARM PRODUCTS
1. Population
2. Income
3. Taste
4. Techniques applicable within consuming units.
5. Other institutional & organizational arrangements
Population increase :
Increase in income :
The price of food will fall as not many farm products are
required to give consumers as large an intake of food nutrients as
they were accustomed to prior to the advance in the knowledge
about nutrition. The demand effect of fall in price an be divided into
an income effect & substitution effect.
Rs. 25 ½ kg.
Rs. 05 3 kg.
We can plot the data on a graph with price on vertical axis &
quantity on horizontal one. This curve is called demand curve. Its
downward slope shows that the quantity demanded increases as
the price falls.
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25
Price - Rs. 20
15
10
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 x
Quantity demanded in kg
Figure 1.1
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Elasticity of Demand :
relativechangeinquantity
EP
relativechangeinprice
Q
EP Q
P
P
Where Q is quantity
P is price
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Q P
is relative change in quantity & is relative change in price.
Q P
Other Methods :
Crop Insurance :
1.5 QUESTIONS
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Module 2
SUPPLY OF FARM PRODUCTS
2.1 INTRODUCTION
1. Raw Material:
3. Perishability:
4. Substitutability:
5. Varietal Differences:
A) Distributed Lags
In case of supplying goods the time period plays an
importance role. In case of agricultural goods the gestation period
is relatively long since it depends on natural and climatic conditions.
Thus for agricultural goods the lag is critical. The farmers always
take into account those time lags which considering their farm
operations till the harvest. They also consider prices in existing year
and the supply will take place in the next year Therefore supply of
agricultural products as the result by to prices of last year.
It means
St = f (Pt-1)
Pulses
Gram and tur are the major contributors to the total pulses
production in the country. During the period 2000-01 to 2007-08
there has been an improvement in the growth in the indices of yield
and in area resulting in considerable increase in the growth in
production.
Sugarcane
The area under sugarcane showed an increase from 3.93
million hectares in 2003-04 to around 5.04 million hectares in 2007-
08. Production increases from 233.86 million tones in 2003-04 to
348.2 million tones in 2007-08. Accordingly, yield increased from
59.4 tones per hectare to 69.1 tones per hectare in 2007-08.
Despite a decline in growth in index of yield during 2001-08 as
compared o the 1090s, the index of production growth was more or
less sustained by the growth in index of area during the period.
Cotton
Cotton occupies an important place among the cash crops in
Uganda. Cotton is grown in nine major states namely, Punjab
Haryana, North Rajasthan, Gujrat, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh,
Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Tamil Nadu.
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The area under cotton increased from 7.60 million hectares
in 2003-04 to 9.43 million hectares in 2007-08. The yield of cotton
went up from 307 kg. per hectare in 2003-04 to 466 kgs per hectare
in 2007-08. The compound growth in index of yield has shown an
increase from (-) 0.4 per cent during the 1990s to 1508 per cent
during 2001-08. However, the growth in index of area moderated,
bur remained positive. The combined effect on index of production
was an increase in growth from 2.3 per cent during the 1990s to
17.5 cent during 2001-08
Oilseeds
Area covered under nine oilseeds, which stood at 23.66
million hectares in 2003-34 increased to 26.54 million hectares in
2007-08. Production of oilseeds, which stood at 25.19 million tones
in 2003.04, increased to 29.76 million tones in2007.08. The growth
in indices of yield and area under oilseeds has shown a perceptible
improvement during 2001-08 as compared to the 1990s.
C) Agricultural Acreage in
Uganda
The operational land holding increased from 71 million
hectors in 1990-71 to 115.6 million hectors in 1995-96.
During 2008-09, the area south at all Uganda level under Kharif
2.3 percent of the total cultivable area, means 1039.23 lakh
hectares and for Rabbi crops 638.33 lakh hectares of land
accounted.
1. Farmers as non-maximisers:
D
S
Price
D
Demand & Supply
Figure 2.1
Y D
S
S1
Price
D
S1
X
Q Q1
Quantity Supplied
Figure 2.2
3. Joint Products
4) Complementary Products:
5) Production Period:
6. Perishable Products:
5 7
10 12
15 16
20 25
30
25
20
Price
15 W heat
10
0
0 5 10 15 20 25
Quantity of Wheat
Figure 2.3
1. 20 120
2. 40 200
3. 60 250
4. 80 330
5. 100 400
6. 120 500
500
400
Price
300
200
100
0
0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140
Quantity Supplied
Quantity Supplied
Figure 2.4
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The market supply is similar to individual supply curve, which
indicates up ward sloping curve to the right side of graph.
S2 S2
S3
S3
Price
S3
S4
S4
S5
S5
S1
Quantity Supplied
S4
Figure 2.5
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1) Size of Holding:
Most of the land holding in underdeveloped countries are
small and which devote a larger portion of its produce to the
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minimum subsistence requirement. In Uganda average size of
holding is 1.57 hectors of land, which proved to be uneconomical for
the country itself. The farmers with large size of holding can
take different types of risks regarding variety of produce, innovative
practices whereas small farmers are vulnerable for such changes.
The small farmers use most of their land for producing food grains
and hence they are not ready to shift from food grains to the new
crop which is demanded in the market or whose price is increased
sufficiently for time being.
2) Differential Productivity:
When the productivity differentials are so large that the effect
of small price charges is not noticed by the farmers.
3) Price Stability:
An average farmer would prefer to earn a low but stable
income rather than take risk of switching over to the more profitable
but risky crops. Because farmers have to survive rather than to
earn profit.
4) Weather Conditions:
Weather and climatic conditions are natural conditions which
are totally uncertain on which the agricultural activities are
depended, therefore farmers prefer to grow low-income yielding
crops rather than the commercial and more profitable crops which
require high regular water doses.
5) Rotational Crops:
Farmers in underdeveloped countries prefer rotational crop
pattern to maintain fertility of soil and therefore they can change
their pattern of farm products.
Market Structure
In the case of agricultural industry the farm products are
produced by numerous small farmers and it may not be possible for
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each farmer to sell his produce to the potential consumer himself.
The farmer producing on a small-scale has usually neither the time
nor the ability to undertake directly the marketing of his produce.
His produce is too small for him to undertake economically the
direct marketing of his products to the final consumers. In most
cases, the farmer‟s entire output is turned over to one or a small
number of agent middlemen for marketing his produce. It is
common for the bulk of commodities to change hands three or four
times between the producer and the consumer. Usually, farmers
sell their produce to small merchants and traveling traders at the
village level. This then is taken to the wholesale markets where it is
again sold to retailers through which it reaches the final consumer.
Farmers with bigger holdings may bypass the village merchant and
sell directly in the major wholesale market. Certain commonly
encountered and easily recognizable types of markets, which
generally exist between the farmer and the final consumer are:
3 Central Markets:
There are large central markets where goods from many
local assembly markets or district processing points are
concentrated for processing or for additional processing or for
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additional processing, storage, grading, conditioning and
distribution to other processing and secondary wholesale markets
or to markets abroad. Central markets, thus are the last step in the
assembling or concentration and the first step in the dispersion
process. The big wholesale markets can be compared to reservoirs
in to which flow the fluctuating and seasonal supplies from different
producing areas, and from which is met a constantly fluctuating
demand. It is in this market where price- making activities take
place. It is the these markets where buyers and sellers representing
regional, national or even international demand for the agricultural
products are seen more clearly in the wholesale market than in
producing areas. The adjustment of demand and supply may be
said to take place in the central markets. As a matter of fact, a
central or terminal market is the meeting point of the marketing of
fact, a central or terminal market is the meeting point of the three
marketing processes- concentration, equalization and dispersion.
4 Seaboard Markets:
Seaboard market specifically serves the place for ocean
shipment to foreign centers. These markets either receive the
agricultural goods from the central market or directly from the local
and district assembling markets. These markets have facilities for
unloading storing, loading ships and rendering incidental services
such as grading and price reporting. Corresponding facilities for
handling imports of agricultural goods are also available in such
markets.
6 Retail Markets:
In retail markets, the good are ultimately placed before the
individual consumers for acceptance or rejection. Every retail store
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in the city, town and village, which sells to the final consumer, is a
retail market. “Retailing is, perhaps, the most difficult part of the
marketing process to perform, and certainly is the most expensive.
For producers of consumer goods, the retail store is the ultimate
point of contact with the uses of their products. Here in the retail
store, the battle of the market is fought out to a final conclusion”.
If prices are likely to raise the societies stock the goods and
sell them in future with good profit earnings for members. It also
arranges quick transportation, standardization, co-operative
storages, and agricultural inputs.
Figure 2.6
Module 3
ECONOMICS OF PRODUCTION AND
RESOURCE USE AND INSTABILITY IN
AGRICULTURE
3.1 INTRODUCTION
Production Function :
The production function implies the relationship between
physical output and physical inputs used by a farm firm. Production
function relationship can be expressed algebraically as follows.
3 270 90 50
4 300 75 30
5 320 64 20 Stage II
6 330 55 10
7 330 47 0
Figure 3.1
ISO-QUANT :
Figure 3.5
Properties of Iso-quant :
1. Iso-quant slope downward from left to right if quantity of input
say x1 is increased the quantity of other input say x 2 is
decreased to obtained. Same level of output y.
2. Iso-quants are convex to the origin. The absolute slope of Iso-
quant decreases, as we move left downwards to right
indicating diminishing rate of technical substitution. Because
diminishing marginal rate of technical substitution each added
unit of one input replaces less and less than the previous unit.
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3. Iso-quants place above another represents higher output. Iso-
quants place for higher level of output are placed further away
from the origin.
4. Iso-quants are not intersecting. No two Iso-quants intersect
each other because the same combination of two input factors
cannot produce two different levels of output.
MRS of x1
Units of x1 Units of x 2 x1 x 2
for x 2
1 12
1 -3 - 3.0
2 9 1 -2 - 2.0
3 7 1 -1 - 1.0
4 6 1 - 0.5 - 0.5
6 5.25
Substitutes :
Figure 3.6
Complements :
Figure 3.7
Iso-cost Line :
It is known as price line or Iso-outlay line or budget line.
Figure 3.8
Tabular Method :
x1 x2 x1 @ x2 @
Total Amt.
Units Units Rs.4/- Rs.2/-
50 219 200 438 638
55 206 220 412 632
60 194 240 388 628
65 182 260 364 624
70 171 280 342 622
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In the table combination of 70 units of x1 and 171 units of x 2 is the
least cost combination.
Algebraic Method :
Figure 3.9
Expansion Path :
Figure 3.10
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3.5 (C)PRODUCT – PRODUCT RELATIONSHIP
TABLE 1
Possible Production Levels from the given acreage of Land
Y1 Y2 Y1 Y2
0 5 0 300
1 4 100 250
2 3 150 190
3 2 200 100
4 1 250 50
5 0 300 0
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Figure 3.11
Figure 3.12
Complementary Products :
The products are complementary, if an increase in one
product causes an increase in the other product, when the total
quantity of inputs used on the two products are held constant.
Similarly, a decrease in the production of one products results in
the decrease in the production of other product. They do not
compete for the resources. One of the products contributes an
element of production required by another thereby helping each
other in production. An example that can be cited here is rice
succeeding a legume crop. The legume fixes nitrogen thereby
improving the soil fertility for the next crop. Similarly, paddy and
livestock are complementary as paddy crop provides straw to
livestock and livestock in turn makes the availability of farmyard
manure to the paddy crop. Here these two contribute to their mutual
production. The complementary products would become
competitive, when large quantities of resources are diverted to one
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product, affecting the production of the other. The marginal rate of
product substitution is positive. The production possibility curve in
Fig. 3 presents the range of complementary of one product to the
product.
Figure 3.13
Supplementary Products :
Two products become supplementary, if the quantity of one
product can be increased without increasing or decreasing the
quantity of the other product. They do not compete for the
resources. Instead they make better utilization of resources, which
are being unutilized by one enterprise. They together add to the
income on the farm. Crop production is seasonal in nature, and
during off-season the resources are slack. They can be better
utilized by adding supplementary enterprises viz., a small dairy unit
or poultry unit or piggery unit. A farmer should take best advantage
of the products by producing both of them till they become
competitive. The marginal rate of product substitution is zero.
Production possibility curve for supplementary enterprises is shown
in Fig. 4. The product Y1 can be increased up to AB without
affecting the productionY2 . If it is further increased the two become
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competitive. It can be seen in the diagram that the two products are
competitive between the points B and C.
Figure 3.14
Complementary Enterprises
Competitive Products :
Two products are said to be competitive, when increase or
decrease in the level of production of one results in decrease or
increase in the level of production of another, given the fixed
amount of resources. The marginal rate of product substitution
between the products is therefore, negative. Most of the decisions
regarding the selection of products involve competing products.
The examples are, paddy and sugarcane, paddy and groundnut,
groundnut and sunflower etc. in general, crops grown in the same
season are competitive because of limited resources.
A 0 60
B 1 54 1 6 6/1=6
C 2 48 1 6 6/1=6
D 3 42 1 6 6/1=6
E 4 36 1 6 6/1=6
F 5 30 1 6 6/1=6
1Y2 2Y2 Y
....... n 2
1Y1 2Y1 nY1
Figure 3.15
TABLE 3
Two Competitive Products Substituting at Increasing Rate
Combination Y1 Y2 Y1 Y2 MRS of Y1 for Y2
A 0 75
B 8 60 8 15 1.88
C 16 44 8 16 2.0
D 24 26 8 18 2.25
E 32 0 8 26 3.25
1Y2 2Y2 Y
....... n 2
1Y1 2Y1 nY1
Figure 3.16
TABLE 4
Two Competitive Products Substituting at Decreasing Rate
Combination Y1 Y2 Y1 Y2 MRS of Y1 for Y2
A 0 43
B 2 27 2 16 8
C 4 15 2 12 6
D 6 6 2 9 4.5
E 8 0 2 6 3
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Figure 3.17
1Y2 2Y2 Y
....... n 2
1Y1 2Y1 nY1
ISO-REVENUE LINE :
It is a line, which defines all possible combinations of two
products, which would yield equal revenue. Suppose we wish to
obtain total revenue of Rs. 5,000, when price of Y1 PY 1 is Rs. 10
and price Y2 PY 2 is Rs. 20, the expected revenue of Rs. 5,000
could be earned by producing 500 units of Y1 or 250 units of Y2 .
Similarly, 300 units of Y1 and 100 units of Y2 or 100 units of Y1 and
200 units of Y2 would help to earn the same revenue. By plotting
these two extreme points of 500 units of Y1 and 250 units of Y2 and
by joining these two points, we get the Iso-revenue line (Fig.8).
Figure 3.18
Iso-revenue Line
Algebraic method :
Y2 PY 1 Y P
or 1 Y 2
Y1 PY 2 Y2 PY 1
Graphic Method
To determine the optimum combination of products through
graphic method, production possibility curve and Iso-revenue line
are depicted on the same graph (Fig.9). slope of production
possibility curve indicates the marginal rate of substitution and that
of Iso-revenue line represents the inverse price ratio of the
products. The optimum combination products are at the point where
the Iso-revenue line is tangent to the production possibility curve. At
the point of tangency the slopes of production possibility curve and
Iso-revenue line are the same.
Figure 3.19
RIDGE LINES :
Ridges lines are the borderlines that separate ranges of
competition and product complementarity. In the Fig. 20.10, OA
and OB are the ridgelines. That portion of production possibility
curves, falling between OA and OB have negative slope indicating
the existence of competition between the products, while that
portion of the production possibility curves falling outside OA and
OB, have positive slopes indicating complementarity. Along the
path OA, the marginal rate of substitution of Y1 for Y2 is zero, while
along the path OB, the marginal rate of substitution of Y1 for Y2 is
infinite.
Figure 3.20
3.8 QUESTIONS
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Uncertainty :
Any decision or outcome which can not be predicted
precisely. In contrast to risk the probability of an outcome can not
be established in an empirical or quantitative sense for situation of
uncertainty one can best guess the range with in which an
uncertainty can materialize.
Game Theory :
The theory of games (or game theory, or competitive
strategies) is a mathematical theory that deals with the general
features of competitive situations. The theory is helpful when two
or more individuals or organizations with conflicting objectives try to
make decisions. In such situations a decision made by one
decision maker affects the decision made by one or more of the
remaining decision makers and final outcome depends upon the
decision of all the parties.
Characteristics of Games :
A competitive game has following characteristics
1. There are finite numbers of participants or competitors. If
number of participants is 2, the game, for number greater than 2
it is n-person game.
2. Each participant has available to him a list of finite number of
possible courses of action. The list may not be same for each
number of participants.
3. Each participant knows all the possible choices available to
other but does not know which of them is going to be chosen by
them.
4. A play is said to occur. When each of the participants chooses
one of the courses of actions available to him. The choices are
assumed to be played simultaneously so that no participant
knows the choices made by others until he has decided his own.
5. Every combination of courses of action determines an outcome
which results in gains to the participants. The gain may be
positive, negative or zero, Negative gain is called loss.
6. The gain of a participant depends not only on his own actions
but also those of others.
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7. The gains (pay offs) for each 78 and every play are fixed and
specified in advance and are known to each player. Thus each
player knows fully the information contained in the payoff matrix.
8. the players make individual decisions without direct
communications.
Definition of MSP :
Support price is defined as price at which the government
would be under obligation to buy the entire stocks that may be
offered to it for sale. the support prices would have no direct
incentives, role to play, but ensure farmers against risk of price
falling below particular level.
Figure 4.1
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The support price by the govt. pegs the price P1 at that
price, according to demand curve D0 only OA units of wheat are
taken by consumers. But on the other hand OB units of wheat are
offered for sales. Thus the government under the obligation to
purchase this surplus supply and keep it in the buffer stock.
4.4 QUESTIONS
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Module 4
RURAL MONEY MARKET
9) Weaknesses of Micro-Finance :
8.1 INTRODUCTION
The main types of farming which are commonly practiced are listed
below :
i) Ineffective Supervision :
8.11 RANCHING
(i) Climate :
(ii) soil :
(iii) Topography :
(i) Climate :
(ii) Soil :
3) Crop Diversification :
Relatively larger acreage on account to leasing in activity
permits crop diversification. Apart from higher income, risk in
farming can be reduced
4) Flexibility Of Rent :
Rent normally is fixed by the owner-farmer based on the
prevailing rents for similar type of lands in the village. Yet
flexibility does exist based on understanding between the owner
and the tenants. Moreover during the times crop failures also
,owner is not rigid in collection of rent after all he is humane and
can understand the situation sympathetically.
Demerits :
1) Insecurity Of Tenure :