Abstract

Tanzanian produced rice is not competitive because of high production costs. To increase competitiveness will require improvements in production efficiency. This study was conducted to analyse production cost efficiency using cross sectional data (2013/2014 agricultural season) from 200 farmers that belong to four cooperative irrigation schemes in Coast and Morogoro regions. Two stage sampling and translog stochastic cost frontier were used for sampling and cost efficiency analysis, respectively. Production costs were estimated quantitatively using the enterprise budgeting technique. Study data suggest that total costs of production are US$315/MT. Rice output and prices for labour, fertilizer and irrigation water significantly affected costs of production. Unit cost of production were reduced by increasing rice productivity (p<0.05). Production efficiency was significantly influenced by farming experience, planting methods, frequency of weeding, degree of specialization and source of purchased inputs. These factors accounted for 82% of the variability in costs of production (p<0.05). A major conclusion is that production efficiency is reduced by high production costs relative to rice output produced, input prices, source of purchased inputs and other agricultural practices. Use of labour saving technologies, the purchase of inputs from irrigation scheme cooperatives and greater economies of scale resulting from increased specialization can increase profits. Key words: Cooperative, cost efficiency, irrigation scheme, rice, smallholder farming.

Highlights

  • Rice in Tanzania is the second most important food crop after maize, being grown by 18% of the farming households and more marketed than maize (URT, 2013)

  • The quantity of marketed rice is approximately 42% of the total production while that of maize is 28%, being more commercialized than maize contributing to 2.67% of the GDP (EUCORD, 2012)

  • The present study investigated smallholder farmers’ decision making level in cooperative irrigation schemes on use of production inputs whether follows the efficiency path of the farm production resources

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Summary

Introduction

Rice in Tanzania is the second most important food crop after maize, being grown by 18% of the farming households and more marketed than maize (URT, 2013). The quantity of marketed rice is approximately 42% of the total production while that of maize is 28%, being more commercialized than maize contributing to 2.67% of the GDP (EUCORD, 2012).

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