Author:
RANA RAJESH K,ANWER MD. EJAZ
Abstract
India is second largest producer of potatoes in the world after China. India showed tremendous growth in potato production during last one and half decade, however, this growth is led more by the area expansion than the yield enhancement. For further analysis on nature of productivity growth in Indian potato sector the computation of Total Factor Productivity (TFP) was done with the help of Malmquist Productivity Index (MPI). Year 2005 being the inflection point in the growth in Indian agriculture was used as period break year for this study and two periods, viz. pre-period (1997 to 2004) and post period (2005 to 2013) were considered for all analysis and descriptions. Bihar, West Bengal and Uttar Pradesh states constitute about 74% of Indian potato production hence, these states were assumed to represent Indian potato scenario. Except mild decline in potato productivity growth in Uttar Pradesh, area, production and productivity growth of potato showed acceleration in post-period compared to the pre-period in all the states. TFP improved in all the three states in post period however, in West Bengal the growth was negative (-2.3) even in the post period. Except Bihar where efficiency change was positive (1%) in pre-period, and further improved in post-period (2.1%), the efficiency change stagnated in all other cases. The TFP improvement in all the cases was either solely or mainly led by the technical change.
Publisher
Indian Council of Agricultural Research, Directorate of Knowledge Management in Agriculture
Subject
Agronomy and Crop Science
Reference41 articles.
1. Acharya S S. 2009. Food security and Indian agriculture: Policies, production performance and environment. Agricultural Economics Research Review 22: 1–19.
2. Bhavani V B, Anuradha G, Gopinath R and Velan A S. 2010. Report of the State of the Food Insecurity in Rural India. M S Swaminathan Research Foundation and World Food Programme, FAO, MSSRF Report-27, pp 39–42.
3. Birthal P S, Joshi P K, Negi D S and Agarwal S. 2013. Changing sources of growth in Indian agriculture: Implications for regional priorities for accelerating agricultural growth. IFPRI Discussion Paper, New Delhi, pp 21–2.
4. Boyce James K. 1986. Practitioners’ Corner- Kinked Exponential models for growth rate estimation. Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics 48(4): 385–91.
5. Caves D W, Christensen L R and Diewert W E. 1982. The economic theory of index numbers and the measurement of input, output, and productivity. Econometrica 50(6): 1393–414.
Cited by
8 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献