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Abstract
A stochastic cost efficiency equation was estimated for the U.S. dairy industry
using national data from the production year 2000. The cost of producing a unit of milk
was estimated into separate frontier and efficiency components, with both components
estimated as a function of causation variables. Variables that might influence the cost of
production and cost efficiency of an individual dairy farm were entered as impacting the
frontier component as well as the efficiency component of the stochastic curve since a
prior both components could be impacted. The factor that has the greatest impact on the
cost curve frontier is the number of hours a day the milking facility is used. Using the
milking facility more hours per day decreased frontier costs. However, inefficiency
increased with increased hours of milking facility use, such that there was no net
reduction in costs. Thus farmers can decrease costs with increased utilization of the
milking facility, but only if they are efficient in this strategy. Age increased cost of
production since older farmers were less efficient. Parlors used for milking as compared
to stanchion milking did not decrease frontier costs, but did decrease costs because of
increased efficiency, as did the use of a feed nutritionist. Use of rotational grazing
decreased frontier costs but also increased fixed cost inefficiency, with a net reduction in
cost of production per cwt. of milk sold.