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Abstract
The growth in agricultural productivity and significance of science and technology in
contributing to this growth has been well documented
by Bredahl, Cline, Evenson (1967),
Griliches (1964), and Peterson. The results of
these studies generally indicate that over the
past several decades, investment in agricultural
research has paid off with relatively high rates
of return. Most of this previous work, however,
has been directed at estimating returns to aggregate
agricultural research in an ex post sense at
the national level and does not address the question
of potential future returns to research at a
state or regional level (Norton). Thus, a particular
need exists to develop a methodology for
evaluating the potential returns to specific types
of agricultural research at a subnational level.
The allocation of agricultural research funds
in the United States is determined in large part
by political decisionmakers and research administrators
at the state level. Although aggregated,
national-level, ex post estimates of returns to
research are useful to state-level research administrators
as indicators of research potential and
as a means of justifying funding requests, they
are not directly applicable to the larger issues
involved. A state-level assessment of the effects
of agricultural research should be as situation
specific as possible: considering at least the
geographic distribution of benefits and the division
of benefits between consumers and producers.
Essentially, research administrators need to know
which types of agricultural research can be expected
to have the highest payoffs and to whom
the gains will accrue.
Answers to questions regarding the magnitude
and distribution of agricultural research benefits
depend on five primary factors: (1) the
impact which a research finding has on production possibilities, (2) the rate and extent of
adoption, (3) supply elasticities of the commodities
affected, (4) price elasticities of demand
for the commodities affected, and (5) agricultural
policy. An analysis of potential returns to
agricultural research at the state level must
consider each of these factors. The purpose of
this paper is to present a general conceptual
framework for such analyses and also to describe
how this framework is being applied in a study
of potential returns to research in Nebraska.