ABSTRACT

This title was first published in 2003.The principal economic units in most developing countries are family based farm households. Empirical models that recognize the dual role of the farm household as producer and consumer in a theoretically consistent manner are essential tools for policy analyses. This book provides an important extension of the conventional farm household model by developing an analytical framework that allows for efficiency differences between family and hired labour as inputs in farm production. The model is estimated with survey data from the southern lowland region of Nepal. The estimation strategy is a two-step process. The first step estimates a farm-level production function in which is embedded a test for heterogeneity between family and hired labour. The labour heterogeneity detected in the production function estimation is incorporated, at the second step, in the labour supply estimation in a theoretically consistent manner. The methodological novelty is to relate the shadow wage rate for family labour to the observed market wage rate for hired labour, adjusted for the differential productivity of family and hired labour detected in the production function estimation.

chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|20 pages

Background and Literature Review

chapter 3|29 pages

A Farmi Household Model with Heterogeneous

chapter 4|19 pages

Estimation Strategy

chapter 5|20 pages

The Setting and the Data

chapter 7|48 pages

Labour Supply Estimation

chapter 8|12 pages

Summary and Conclusions