Returns on agricultural research and development in the South African sugar industry.
Date
1989
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Abstract
The lack of information on returns to R&D is considered a handicap to
effective decision-making by policy-makers and managers in
agricultural commodity organisations. Results of studies reported in
the literature, mostly using economic analysis of aggregated and
multi-product data, are usually insufficiently detailed to assist
decision-making at institute level. The objective of this study is to
find an empirical and practical method of estimating returns for that
purpose.
Returns on sugarcane production R&D in the South African Sugar
Industry are estimated as the factor share of technology in a
production function analysis of productivity, as yield per unit area
per annum, in which the other significant variables were found to be
rainfall, costs of production and area under crop. Eight other
variables were excluded from the analysis for lack of significance or
collinearity. Under a user pays policy, advisory services are
considered self-financing, leaving the estimated returns to be divided
between the other two primary functions of an R&D institute, research
and extension.
It is suggested that the increase in yields obtained by technologists
in field trials can represent technology (the output of research)
while the increase in the Industry's yield over the same period
represents technology plus the transfer of technology (the function of
extension) . In percentage terms the ratios of research to extension,
for three successive decades to 1986, were found to be 65%:35%,
37%:63% and 17%:83%, indicating decline in the contribution of
research and increase in the contribution of extension to the
Industry's declining productivity. Research's contribution (17% of
the total return on R&D during the last decade) was then apportioned
among research programmes in the proportions of the subjective
estimates made of their returns, after deducting the return on plant
breeding, the only programme whose productivity could be quantified
directly from production data. Returns and costs are then compared in
terms of percentage net returns [(returns - costs) /costs x 100) and
benefit:cost ratios (return/cost). The returns estimated on research,
extension and whole Station activities, were similar, in terms of
benefit : cost ratios, to those obtained in the few other comparable
studies. The advantages of the methods proposed are their empirical
simplicity and applicability down to programme (project) level.
Description
Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 1989.
Keywords
Sugarcane--Economic aspects--South Africa., Sugarcane--Research--South Africa., Sugarcane industry--South Africa., Theses--Agricultural economics.