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The economics of forage utilization in dairy production in the province of Quebec.Daly, Denis. January 1966 (has links)
Over the last twenty years or so, dairying has become the largest agricultural enterprise in Quebec. It has also become the most profitable, supplanting other less profitable farm enterprises. Dairying in Quebec has grown to the point where Quebec is now Canada's leading dairy province. [...]
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Sustainability as an inherently contextual concept : some lessons from agricultural developmentDuBose, Jennifer Robin 08 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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Farm income effects of regional crop specilization in RwandaHitayezu, Felix January 1993 (has links)
In consideration of the chronic poverty of farmers in Rwanda as well as in other developing countries where self-sufficient agriculture is practiced, this study examines what the well studied theory of specialization and trade, if implemented, could bring to Rwandan farmers in terms of production and profits. / To attain this objective, a spatial optimization model with linear programming was built and used to maximize the potential production and net returns which were compared to those from the traditional system. The model was built in a way that it also shows the pattern of trade and quantities traded. / The results show that a regional specialization system would allow, on the national level, more production, higher net returns, and more trade than the traditional system (self-sufficient agriculture) as expected according to the theory of specialization and trade. Nevertheless, the net return in some regions decreases in the new system, which necessitates a compensation plan for those regions. / However, it has to be noted that despite these gains, the adoption of the new plans requires a consideration of many other factors that are not covered in this study. Of those factors, the most obvious are the need to improve the transportation and marketing infrastructure, changing farmers' attitudes and objectives towards commercial agriculture, and securing equity, security, and sustainability in the system.
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Economic efficiency in agriculture : an intercountry analysis for the developing countriesDupuis, Raymond, 1957- January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
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User benefits of urban agriculture in Havana, Cuba : an application of the contingent valuation methodHenn, Patrick. January 2000 (has links)
In Cuba, the act of growing flood in the city has become a way of life. Since the beginning of the "Special Period in Time of Peace", brought about by the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1989, Cubans have engaged in many forms of urban agriculture (UA) to cope with the food crisis affecting the Island. In Havana, the popular garden movement occupies 8% of total urban land in agriculture (3.4% of urban land) and is practiced by 18,000 gardeners who produce vegetables and fruit, and raise small livestock to increase food security and generate income. The purpose of this study was to provide estimates of the user benefits of UA, as well as qualitative and quantitative information related do this activity. The contingent valuation method (CVM) was used to elicit users' willingness to pay (WTP) for the land they use, that is currently provided at no charge by the stale. The average WTP was estimated at 23.5 pesos/1000 m2/month under current conditions and 34.4 pesos/1000 m2/month with improvements in water and anti-theft services. These amounts represent about 11% and 14% of monthly household income, respectively. Aggregate WTP for popular gardens in the city of Havana was estimated to be 6.88 million pesos/year (344,000 $US) and 10.07 million pesos/year (503,500 $US) with the proposed improvements. The study has produced important results that give an indication of the use and non-use value of UA for gardeners of Havana. Results also suggest that CVM is a non-market valuation technique that can be successfully applied in Cuba, and can provide information to be integrated in cast-benefit analysis frameworks that assess the importance of UA.
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A production function analysis of water resource productivity in Pacific Northwest agricultureHolloway, Milton L. 09 June 1971 (has links)
The competition or rivalry for the use of water resources
among economic sectors of the Pacific Northwest and among geographical
regions of the western United States has intensified in recent
years. This rivalry and the long run prospects for water shortages
have increased the demand for research concerning the productivity
of this resource in alternative uses. This demand exists because the
distribution and use of water resources require investment which
typically comes from both public and private sources. Private and
public planning groups seek answers to questions regarding future
water resource development alternatives.
Agriculture has historically been a major user of water in the
Pacific Northwest. A substantial portion of total investment in water
resource development has also been, in agriculture. As a result water
use planners and decision making bodies are necessarily interested in water use in agriculture. The success of water resource planning
requires answers to questions regarding the value of the productivity
of water in all its major uses, including various aspects of water use
in agriculture.
Different aspects of water use in agriculture which are important
to decision makers include (1) the value productivity of various
kinds or types of water resource investments, (2) the value productivity
of water in various kinds of agricultural production in different
geographical areas, and (3) the returns to private and public investment
in agricultural water resources. This study was directed to
providing answers to these questions. Pacific Northwest agriculture
was studied from this viewpoint.
Agricultural water resources were classified as irrigation,
drainage, and water related Agricultural Conservation Program (ACP)
practices. These are the major classifications of water resources
in which investments are made in the Pacific Northwest.
Production function analysis was selected as a method of investigation.
Production functions were estimated for five areas or
subregions in the Pacific Northwest. These areas are composed of
counties with similar patterns of production. The Agricultural Census
was the primary data surce, supplemented by related U.S.
Department of Agriculture publications, and various state publications,
Ordinary least-squares regression (OLS) techniques were employed to derive the initial estimates of the parameters of the production
function models. Tests for detecting interdependence within
the independent variable set of the models revealed a considerable
degree of instability in the OLS parameter estimates. This condition
makes the OLS solutions (and various derivations) particularly vulnerable
to change from measurement error, poor model specification,
and equation form.
A prior information model was selected to explicitly include
available prior knowledge in the estimation process. The model selected
allows (1) tests of comparability of the two information sources
(prior and sample), (2) over-all contribution of prior information to
the new solution set, and (3) derivation of percentage contribution
of the two information sources to individual parameter estimates.
The results of the study indicate that no reliable estimates of
value of production from drainage and ACP were possible from the
sample information. Returns to irrigation were considered lower
than expected in two of the farming areas and higher than expected in
another. Estimated returns were high in the area which produces
primarily field crops (about nine dollars per acre foot). The area
has a small level of current irrigation development. Indications are
that irrigation development is probably beyond the optimum level in
the area where most large, projects have been developed in the past
(less than four dollars per acre foot). Future development would be most profitable (assuming equal development cost) in the dryland field crop area.
Estimated returns to other factor inputs indicate (1) low returns
to labor in two areas, (2) generally high returns to current operating
expenditures, and (3) low returns to machinery capital. Returns to
cropland were about as expected in two areas (five to seven percent)
but low in two other areas (about two percent). Indications are that
labor mobility should be increased in the area and that future land
development should be in the livestock-field crop and the field crop
areas rather than the coastal area or the west-central valley areas
(primarily the Willamette Valley). / Graduation date: 1972
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Rural transformation in northern ThailandWerasit Sittitrai January 1988 (has links)
Typescript. / Thesis (Ph. D.) -- University of Hawaii at Manoa, 1988. / Bibliography : leaves [450]-465. / Photocopy. / Microfilm. / xiv, 465 leaves, bound maps 29 cm
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Method for determining the productivity of irrigation water for the production of sugar in Hawaii: an empirical approachRankine, Lloyd B January 1969 (has links)
Typescript. / Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hawaii, 1969. / Bibliography: leaves [211]-215. / vii, 215 l illus., tables
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The structure and functioning of rural credit in Korea: an empirical analysisKim, Sung-Hoon January 1971 (has links)
Typescript. / Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hawaii, 1971. / Bibliography: leaves [359]-363. / xv, 363 l illus., map, tables
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Economic analysis of fertilizer application in Punjab-PakistanSalam, Abdul January 1975 (has links)
Typescript. / Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hawaii at Manoa, 1975. / Bibliography: leaves [144]-147. / x, 147 leaves
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