Allocative Efficiency of Non-Farm Enterprises in Agricultural Households: Evidence from Malawi

According to standard economic theory, households will equate marginal revenue products of inputs across different activities within the household

Abstract

According to standard economic theory, households will equate marginal revenue products of inputs across different activities within the household. We test this prediction using data on agricultural plots and non-farm enterprises in Malawi. Specifically, we test whether the marginal product of labor is equal across agricultural and non-agricultural production within a household. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first such test using non-farm data. We are able to control for many household characteristics using household fixed effects and we find the marginal product of labor is consistently higher in non-farm production than agricultural production. However, when focusing the analysis on households that operate both types of enterprises in the same year, we are unable to reject the null hypothesis of allocative efficiency.

This research is part of the Gender, Growth and Labour Markets in Low-Income Countries programme

Citation

Brummund, P. & Merfeld, J. (2016). Allocative Efficiency of Non-farm Enterprises in Agricultural Households: Evidence from Malawi. GLMLIC Working Paper No. 18. Available at: https://g2lm-lic.iza.org/publications/wp/wp18/

Allocative Efficiency of Non-Farm Enterprises in Agricultural Households: Evidence from Malawi

Updates to this page

Published 1 August 2016