| Steady as she goes: Improved maize
and wheat varieties actually lower farmers’ risks
A USAID-funded study by Williams College economist
Douglas Gollin shows that modern maize and wheat varieties not only
increase maximum yields in developing countries, but add hundreds
of millions of dollars each year to farmers’ incomes by guaranteeing
more reliable yields than traditional varieties.
Modern crop varieties developed through scientific
crop breeding clearly produce higher yields than farmers’
traditional varieties. But critics have long maintained that, in
developing countries, yields of modern varieties vary more from
season to season than the traditional varieties, thereby exposing
producers and consumers to greater risk.
Gollin’s study analyzed changes in national-level
yield stability for wheat and maize across developing countries
and related them directly to the diffusion of modern varieties.
“The outcomes strongly suggest that, over the past 40 years,
there has actually been a decline in the relative variability of
grain yields—that is, the absolute magnitude of deviations
from the yield trend—for both wheat and, to a lesser extent,
for maize in developing countries,” says Gollin. “This
reduction in variability is statistically associated with the spread
of modern cultivars, even after controlling for expanded use of
irrigation and other inputs.”
The value to farmers of reduced risk
Valuing these reductions in yield variability requires assumptions
about society’s willingness to trade off risk against return.
Using a standard analytic framework, the study finds that the reductions
in variability are as valuable as small increases in average yield.
Assuming a moderate level of risk aversion on farmers’ part
and taking estimates for the magnitude of reductions in yield variability,
the results suggest that the reductions in yield variability due
to modern varieties are worth about 0.3% of annual production in
the case of wheat and 0.8% of production in the case of maize. These
appear to be small effects, but the sheer scale of wheat and maize
production in the developing world means that the benefits from
improved yield stability are large in absolute terms. At appropriate
world prices, the benefits are about US$143 million for wheat and
about US$149 million for maize, on an annual and recurring basis.
The study drew on country-level data for the diffusion
of modern wheat and maize varieties compiled by Robert Evenson of
Yale University, as well as aggregate data on production and yields
from FAOSTAT, the global food information database of the Food and
Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. The analysis also
made novel use of a mathematical tool called the Hodrick-Prescott
filter to disentangle changes in long term trends from annual fluctuations.
The filter is most often used in macroeconomics.
According to Gollin, the benefits are not attributable
to any particular research theme or program. “They reflect
longstanding efforts in breeding for disease and pest resistance,
drought tolerance, and improved cropping systems, to name a few,”
he says. “By reducing the fluctuations in maize and wheat
grain yields, scientists have played a vital role in making modern
crop technology attractive, accessible, and beneficial to farmers
and consumers around the globe.”
For more information contact
John Dixon (j.dixon@cgiar.org)
To read or download the study Impacts
of International Research on Intertemporal Yield Stability in Wheat
and Maize: An Economic Assessment:
http://www.cimmyt.org/english/docs/impacts/ImpIntlResIntertemp.pdf
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