Contract Farming Resource Centre

Agricultural extension and imperfect supervision in contract farming: evidence from Madagascar

Organization Sanford School of Public Policy, Duke University, Durham, USA
Year 2010

This article tests whether agricultural extension and imperfect supervision - conflated here into the number of visits by a technical assistant - increase productivity in a sample of contract farming arrangements between a processing firm and small agricultural producers in Madagascar. Production functions are estimated which treat the number of visits by a technical assistant as an input and which exploit the variation in the number of visits between the contracted crops grown on a given plot by a specific grower, thereby accounting for district-, grower-, and plot-level unobserved heterogeneity. Results indicate that the elasticity of yield with respect to the number of visits lies between 1.3 and 1.7.