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Urban Influence on Costs of Production in the Corn Belt
Authors:Richard  Nehring   Charles  Barnard   David  Banker   Vince  Breneman
Affiliation:Richard Nehring, Charles Barnard, and David Banker are Agricultural Economists, Resource Economics Division, Economic Research Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Washington DC;. Vince Breneman is Geographic Information Systems analyst, Information Systems Division, Economic Research Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Washington DC.
Abstract:
This article determines the relative technical efficiency of rural- and urban-influenced crop/livestock enterprises in the Corn Belt. Farmers in urban-influenced locations are less technically efficient than farmers in rural locations. During 1998–2000, stochastic production frontier procedures indicate that a 10% increase in urban influence leads to a close to 4% decrease in technical efficiency. The most successful urban-influenced farms have controlled costs as effectively as rural farms. They have tended to de-emphasize that nondairy livestock activities—particularly beef and hogs—do not rely extensively on off-farm income, and have relatively large, less residential/lifestyle operations compared to less successful urban-influenced farmers. However, our statistical analysis clearly bears out the refrain in popular literature that urban proximity raises the cost for, and decreases the viability of, traditional farms.
Keywords:input distance function    scale efficiency    stochastic production frontier    technical efficiency    urban influence
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