Effect of sustainable agricultural intensification practices on cost efficiency of smallholder crop farmers in southeastern Nigeria

Auteur/ices

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15112911

Mots-clés :

Cost function, Farmers, Smallholder, Sustainable intensification, Technology adoption

Résumé

This study investigated the effect of sustainable agricultural intensification practices on the cost efficiency of smallholder crop farmers in southeastern Nigeria. A multi-stage random sampling technique was employed in selecting 360 respondents for the study. Simple descriptive tools (mean, frequencies, and percentages) as well as inferential statistics (stochastic frontier cost function) were employed in achieving the objectives. The maximum likelihood estimates of the stochastic cost function revealed that the explanatory variables; farm size, labor costs, fertilizer expenses, and capital investments were significantly and positively related to cost efficiency in the study area, while farming experience (p<0.05), years of education (p<0.05), age (p<0.01), distance to market (p<0.01), and adoption index (p<0.01) were significant and positively related to cost inefficiency. The cost efficiency distribution ranges from 0.10 – 0.77 with a mean of 0.136. This implies that farmers spent about 36% above the minimum cost of producing a unit of their output. The study concludes that multiple adoption of sustainable intensification practices increased the cost of production in the study area. The study thus recommends that farmers should be encouraged to leverage the cost-saving benefits of package adoption by training them on how to efficiently combine their inputs.

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Publiée

2025-03-31

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Articles

Comment citer

Effect of sustainable agricultural intensification practices on cost efficiency of smallholder crop farmers in southeastern Nigeria. (2025). Agriculture, Food, and Natural Resources Journal, 4(1), 126-131. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15112911