The Costs and Benefits of Land Fragmentation of Rice Farms in Japan

Land fragmentation, in which a farm operates multiple, separate plots of land, is a common phenomenon in Japan and many other countries. Usually, land fragmentation is regarded as a harmful phenomenon as it increases production costs and reduces the advantages of scale economies. However, it is also known that fragmentation may have beneficial effects in reducing risk through spatial dispersion of plots. Thus, land fragmentation has both costs and benefits, and whether it is beneficial or harmful is determined by the magnitude of these costs and benefits. This article investigates the costs and benefits of land fragmentation empirically using panel data from Japanese rice farms. The empirical results reveal that fragmentation increases production costs and offsets economies of size, and these impacts strengthen as farm size increases. Moreover, although fragmentation does reduce production risk, its monetary value is far below the cost of land fragmentation. From these findings, we conclude that land fragmentation is an impediment to efficient rice production in Japan.

[1]  Y. Arimoto The impact of farmland readjustment and consolidation on structural adjustment: The case of Niigata, Japan , 2011 .

[2]  D. Jorgenson,et al.  TRANSCENDENTAL LOGARITHMIC PRODUCTION FRONTIERS , 1973 .

[3]  Ben White,et al.  Farm household efficiency in Bangladesh: a comparison of stochastic frontier and DEA methods , 2000 .

[4]  E. Castle Is Farming a Constant Cost Industry , 1989 .

[5]  Christopher Findlay,et al.  Land fragmentation and farm productivity in China in the 1990s , 1996 .

[6]  Tim Coelli,et al.  A Guide to Frontier version 4. 1: A Computer Program for Stochastic Frontier Production and Cost Fu , 1996 .

[7]  J. Chavas Risk analysis in theory and practice , 2004 .

[8]  Guang H. Wan,et al.  Effects of land fragmentation and returns to scale in the Chinese farming sector , 2001 .

[9]  B. Fleisher,et al.  Economies of scale, plot size, human capital, and productivity in Chinese agriculture , 1992 .

[10]  Ashok Parikh,et al.  Measurement of economic efficiency using the behavioral and stochastic cost frontier approach , 1996 .

[11]  Franz C. Palm,et al.  Wald Criteria for Jointly Testing Equality and Inequality , 1986 .

[12]  Mark R. Rosenzweig,et al.  Behavioural and material determinants of production relations in agriculture , 1986 .

[13]  S. Tan,et al.  Land Fragmentation and Rice Production : a Case Study of Small Farms in Jiangxi Province, P.R. China , 2005 .

[14]  J. Bentley,et al.  Economic and Ecological Approaches to Land Fragmentation: In Defense of a Much-Maligned Phenomenon , 1987 .

[15]  G. Battese,et al.  A model for technical inefficiency effects in a stochastic frontier production function for panel data , 1995 .

[16]  Francis M. Epplin,et al.  Impacts of land fragmentation on the cost of producing wheat in the rain-fed region of northern Jordan , 1994 .

[17]  John Quiggin,et al.  The Economics of Farm Fragmentation: Evidence from Ghana and Rwanda , 1992 .

[18]  T. Reardon,et al.  Farm productivity in Rwanda: effects of farm size, erosion, and soil conservation investments , 1996 .

[19]  S. Fenoaltea Risk, transaction costs, and the organization of medieval agriculture☆ , 1976 .

[20]  R. Just,et al.  Production Function Estimation and Related Risk Considerations , 1979 .

[21]  G. Kruseman,et al.  Do fragmented landholdings have higher production costs? Evidence from rice farmers in Northeastern Jiangxi province, P.R. China , 2008 .

[22]  A. Parikh,et al.  MEASUREMENT OF TECHNICAL EFFICIENCY IN THE NORTH-WEST FRONTIER PROVINCE OF PAKISTAN , 1994 .

[23]  Sanzidur Rahman,et al.  Impact of land fragmentation and resource ownership on productivity and efficiency: The case of rice producers in Bangladesh , 2009 .

[24]  A. Alvarez,et al.  Diseconomies of Size with Fixed Managerial Ability , 2003 .

[25]  Pham Van Hung,et al.  The Economics of Land Fragmentation in the North of Vietnam , 2007 .