Agricultural supply response for sunflower in South Africa (1947–2016): the partial Nerlovian framework approach

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Authors

Nhundu, Kenneth
Gandidzanwa, Colleta
Chaminuka, Petronella
Mamabolo, Manana
Mahlangu, Sandile
Makhura, Moraka Nakedi

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Routledge

Abstract

The study estimates sunflower supply response in South Africa using time series data from 1947 to 2016, modelled through the Nerlovian Partial Adjustment approach. Short- and long-run price elasticities of 0.238 and 0.313 respectively, suggest that farmers do not easily adjust acreage devoted to sunflower given price changes, indicating the influence of other non-price factors. An adjustment coefficient of 0.272 indicates that the time taken to adjust from the actual to the desired acreage level is slow, at 27% per year. The estimated elasticities provide some scope for using price and non-price incentives to influence sunflower production in the long-run. This could facilitate decision-making by sunflower producers to spearhead internal and external adjustment processes. The study contributes to a growing body of literature on agricultural supply response determinants, thus providing evidence-based macro-economic tools towards agricultural policy-making and reform process.

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Keywords

Supply response, Elasticities, Sunflower, Acreage, Nerlovian partial adjustment

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Citation

Nhundu, K., Gandidzanwa, C., Chaminuka, P. et al. 2022, 'Agricultural supply response for sunflower in South Africa (1947–2016) : the partial Nerlovian framework approach', African Journal of Science, Technology, Innovation and Development, vol. 14, no. 2, pp. 440-450, doi : 10.1080/20421338.2020.1844944.