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The  Nature of the Farm: Contracts, Risk, and Organization in Agriculture
 
 
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The Nature of the Farm: Contracts, Risk, and Organization in Agriculture [Hardcover]

Douglas W. Allen (Author), Dean Lueck (Author)

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Book Description

January 24, 2003

The Nature of the Farm is a theoretical and empirical study of contracts and organization in agriculture based on the transaction cost framework. Transaction costs are important in agriculture because nature (for example, seasonality, weather, pests) plays such a critical role in determining output and limiting the ability of farmers to specialize. The book develops specific models and tests the implications of those models against data sets from across North American agriculture, as well as against historical case studies such as eighteenth-century European land contracts and the late nineteenth-century Bonanza farms in the United States.The book is organized in three parts. Part I examines the classic question of what determines the optimal choice between fixed rent and cropshare arrangements, concluding that it is determined by a trade-off between incentives to overuse rented land and incentives to underreport shared output. Part II tests several predictions derived from a standard risk-sharing model of contracts and finds little evidence that risk sharing is important in contract choice. Part III extends the transaction costs analysis to broader organizational issues. It introduces seasonality and timeliness costs as forces influencing the gains from specialization and the costs of contracting, and finds that farm ownership and farm organization are routinely shaped by these forces.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

"The Nature of the Farm is a superb application of the theory of incentives to the organizational features of agriculture, including the still-popular practice of sharecropping. Allen and Lueck measure their theories of sharecropping against the evidence more carefully and in more detail than previous authors. In so doing, they demonstrate persuasively that contractual arrangements between farmers and landowners are explained not by the traditional theory of risk-sharing but purely by incentives and enforcement considerations. This is an important contribution to agricultural economics and to the economics of organizations."--Ralph A. Winter, Faculty of Commerce and Business Administration, University of British Columbia



"A coherent and largely persuasive case for... the transaction cost approach to farm organization over the principal-agent paradigm." Journal of Economics

About the Author

Dean Lueck is Cardon Professor of Agricultural and Resource Economics at the University of Arizona.



Douglas W. Allen is Endowed University Professor in the Department of Economics at Simon Fraser University.


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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Despite their briefcase reputation, economists have shown a remarkable fascination with farming and its various economic details. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
cropshare contracts, cash rent contracts, farmland contracts, asset moral hazard, sharing input costs, complete residual claimant, specialized wage labor, nonmarket inputs, leasing survey, unpriced attribute, exogenous variability, logit coefficient estimates, custom combiners, crop yield variability, contracted plot, soil exploitation, moral hazard losses, custom cutters, custom combining, effort moral hazard, timeliness costs, moral hazard costs, land attributes, contract choice, share contracting
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
British Columbia, Nebraska-South Dakota, Great Plains, United States, North American, Census of Agriculture, North Dakota, Mother Nature, Adam Smith, Coase Theorem, Corn Belt, National Agricultural Statistics Service, Farm Bill, Red River Valley
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