AgEcon Search

AgEcon Search >
       Agrekon >
          Volume 44, Issue 1, March 2005 >

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://purl.umn.edu/31718

Title: An empirical analysis of factors affecting the productivity of livestock in southern Botswana
Authors: Mahabile, M.
Lyne, M.C.
Panin, A.
Authors (Email): Lyne, M.C. (lyne@ukzn.ac.za)
Issue Date: 2005-03
Abstract: This study attempts to identify factors responsible for differences in the productivity of cattle managed by private and communal livestock farmers in the southern region of Botswana during 1999/2000. Sample survey data are used to estimate the parameters of a block recursive regression model. Some of the equations postulated in the model are estimated with two-stage least squares (2SLS) to account for likely correlation between endogenous explanatory variables and the error term. The results show that (a) respondents with secure land tenure (private farms) and larger herds use more agricultural credit than do those who rely on open access communal grazing to raise cattle; (b) secure tenure and higher levels of liquidity from long-term credit and off-farm wage remittances promote investment in fixed improvements to land; (c) liquidity from short-term credit and wage remittances supports expenditure on operating inputs; and (d) herd productivity increases with greater investment in operating inputs and fixed improvements, and is therefore positively (but indirectly) influenced by secure land tenure. It can be inferred that government should (a) uphold private property rights to land where they already exist; (b) privatise open access grazing to individual owner-operators where this is politically, socially and economically feasible; and (c) where privatisation to individuals is not feasible, government should encourage users to convert the grazing into common property by subsidising the transaction costs of defining user groups and the boundaries of their resources, and of negotiating and enforcing rules limiting individual use of common property. This first-step in a gradual shift towards private property might be followed by a conversion of user-groups into non-user groups organised along the lines of investor-owned firms where members exchange use rights for benefits rights.
URI: http://purl.umn.edu/31718
Institution/Association: Agrekon>Volume 44, Issue 1, March 2005
Total Pages: 19
Language: English
Journal Issue : Agrekon
Journal Volume: 44
Journal Date: March 2005
From Page: 99
To Page: 117
Collections:Volume 44, Issue 1, March 2005

Files in This Item:

File SizeFormat
44010099.pdf185KbPDFView/Open
Recommend this item

All items in AgEcon Search are protected by copyright.

 

 

Brought to you by the University of Minnesota Department of Applied Economics and the University of Minnesota Libraries with cooperation from the American Agricultural Economics Association.

All papers are in Acrobat (.pdf) format. Get Adobe Reader

Contact Us

Powered by: