1. Institute of Economics, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, Budaorsi ut 45, H‐1112, Hungary;2. Corvinus University of Budapest, Budapest, F?vám tér 8, H‐1093, Hungary
Abstract:
The article investigates the validity of Gibrat's Law for Hungarian family farms using FADN data collected between 2001 and 2007. Gibrat's Law states that the growth rate of firms will be independent of their initial size. Regression results allow us to reject Gibrat's Law for all quantiles. Evidence suggests that smaller farms tend to grow faster than larger ones. Results do not support the hypothesis of “disappearing middle” in Hungarian agriculture. We study a number of socio‐economic factors that can help to explain farm growth. We find that total subsidies received by a farm and the farm operator's age are the most significant factors correlated with farm growth.