Abstract

The tomato had nutritional, economic and health benefits to the societies, however, its production and productivity were low in developing countries and particularly in Ethiopia. This might be due to technical inefficiency caused by institutional, governmental, and farmers related factors. Therefore this study tried to investigate the factors that affecting technical efficiency and estimating the mean level of technical efficiency of tomato producers in Asaita district, Afar Regional State, Ethiopia. Both primary and secondary data sources were used; the primary data was collected from 267 tomato producers from the study area cross-sectional by using a multistage sampling technique. The single-stage stochastic frontier model and Cobb Douglas production function were applied and statistical significance was declared at 0.05. The maximum likelihood estimates of the stochastic frontier model showed that land, labor, tomato seed, and oxen have a significant effect on tomato output; and education, extension contact, training, and access to credit have a positive and significant effect on technical efficiency, whereas household size, off-farm income, livestock ownership, distance to market, and pesticides have a worthy and significant effect on technical efficiency; and also estimated mean technical efficiency of tomato producer in a study area was 80.9%. In a line with this, the responsible body should prioritize rural infrastructure development in areas such as education, marketplace, and farmer training centers; demonstrate access to credit and extension services; use the recommended amount of pesticides per hectare, and give more intension to mixed farming rather than animal husbandry exclusively.

Highlights

  • Vegetables occupy approximately 1.64% (238,564 hectares) of total crop production land at the national level and account for approximately 2.08% (8.76 million quintals) of total crop production per season

  • Melkashola, Marglobe, Melkasalsa, Heinz 1350, Fetan, Bishola, Eshet, and Metadel are among the open-pollinated tomato varieties released by the Melkassa Agricultural Research Center (MARC) and are recommended for commercial and small-scale production in Ethiopia [7]

  • The study was conducted at Tendaho Irrigation Project (TIP) in Asaita district, which is situated in the Lower Awash Valley of the Afar National Regional State (ANRS), northeastern Ethiopia

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Summary

Introduction

Vegetables occupy approximately 1.64% (238,564 hectares) of total crop production land at the national level and account for approximately 2.08% (8.76 million quintals) of total crop production per season. Such production is primarily produced by small-scale producers (They are on average holding 0.11 hectares of land per person [2]) with an estimated 5.7 million farmers, and it is produced by large-scale producers with fruit and vegetable processing carried out solely by state organizations [1,2].

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