This study examined the effect of ill-health on technical efficiency of food crop farmers in Ondo State, Nigeria. Primary data were obtained from 300 randomly selected food crop farmers using multistage sampling procedure. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics and Stochastic Frontier Analysis (SFA). Findings revealed that respondents were still in their economic active age with mean age 46.5 years. Most (82.3%) of the farmers were male and 44.3% of the sampled farmers have primary education. Majority (70.0%) of the respondents had access to health care services out of which 50.7% had access to government maternity. 58.3 percentage of the respondents lost about 5 farming days due to illness of a member while majority (93.3%) of the farmers reported ill-health due to malaria, cold and catarrh. Farmers’ mean annual expenditure transportation to the nearest health care Centre and medication were ₦137.00 and ₦4,228.83 respectively. Mean technical efficiency was estimated to be 0.627 and the returns to scale computed as the sum of output elasticity for all inputs was estimated as 1.6506, indicating increasing return to scale. SFA showed that travel cost to health care centres (p<0.01) and cost of disease treatment (p<0.05) significantly decreased efficiency. The study concluded that cost of disease treatment decreased farmers’ efficiency. Therefore, government is encouraged to site health care facilities closer to farmers and ensure that the facilities are adequately equipped with modern medical equipment, drug and trained medical personnel. This should be accessible by farmers to improve efficiency.
Published in | American Journal of Agriculture and Forestry (Volume 9, Issue 4) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.ajaf.20210904.13 |
Page(s) | 183-188 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
Copyright |
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Food Crop, Ill-health, Malaria, Technical Efficiency, Stochastic Frontier
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APA Style
Adewuyi Samuel Ayodele, Oladapo Adewale, Afolami Carolyn Afolake, Fabusoro Eniola, Oshati Titilola. (2021). Effect of Ill-health on Technical Efficiency of Food Crop Farmers in Ondo State, Nigeria. American Journal of Agriculture and Forestry, 9(4), 183-188. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajaf.20210904.13
ACS Style
Adewuyi Samuel Ayodele; Oladapo Adewale; Afolami Carolyn Afolake; Fabusoro Eniola; Oshati Titilola. Effect of Ill-health on Technical Efficiency of Food Crop Farmers in Ondo State, Nigeria. Am. J. Agric. For. 2021, 9(4), 183-188. doi: 10.11648/j.ajaf.20210904.13
AMA Style
Adewuyi Samuel Ayodele, Oladapo Adewale, Afolami Carolyn Afolake, Fabusoro Eniola, Oshati Titilola. Effect of Ill-health on Technical Efficiency of Food Crop Farmers in Ondo State, Nigeria. Am J Agric For. 2021;9(4):183-188. doi: 10.11648/j.ajaf.20210904.13
@article{10.11648/j.ajaf.20210904.13, author = {Adewuyi Samuel Ayodele and Oladapo Adewale and Afolami Carolyn Afolake and Fabusoro Eniola and Oshati Titilola}, title = {Effect of Ill-health on Technical Efficiency of Food Crop Farmers in Ondo State, Nigeria}, journal = {American Journal of Agriculture and Forestry}, volume = {9}, number = {4}, pages = {183-188}, doi = {10.11648/j.ajaf.20210904.13}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajaf.20210904.13}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ajaf.20210904.13}, abstract = {This study examined the effect of ill-health on technical efficiency of food crop farmers in Ondo State, Nigeria. Primary data were obtained from 300 randomly selected food crop farmers using multistage sampling procedure. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics and Stochastic Frontier Analysis (SFA). Findings revealed that respondents were still in their economic active age with mean age 46.5 years. Most (82.3%) of the farmers were male and 44.3% of the sampled farmers have primary education. Majority (70.0%) of the respondents had access to health care services out of which 50.7% had access to government maternity. 58.3 percentage of the respondents lost about 5 farming days due to illness of a member while majority (93.3%) of the farmers reported ill-health due to malaria, cold and catarrh. Farmers’ mean annual expenditure transportation to the nearest health care Centre and medication were ₦137.00 and ₦4,228.83 respectively. Mean technical efficiency was estimated to be 0.627 and the returns to scale computed as the sum of output elasticity for all inputs was estimated as 1.6506, indicating increasing return to scale. SFA showed that travel cost to health care centres (p<0.01) and cost of disease treatment (p<0.05) significantly decreased efficiency. The study concluded that cost of disease treatment decreased farmers’ efficiency. Therefore, government is encouraged to site health care facilities closer to farmers and ensure that the facilities are adequately equipped with modern medical equipment, drug and trained medical personnel. This should be accessible by farmers to improve efficiency.}, year = {2021} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Effect of Ill-health on Technical Efficiency of Food Crop Farmers in Ondo State, Nigeria AU - Adewuyi Samuel Ayodele AU - Oladapo Adewale AU - Afolami Carolyn Afolake AU - Fabusoro Eniola AU - Oshati Titilola Y1 - 2021/06/29 PY - 2021 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajaf.20210904.13 DO - 10.11648/j.ajaf.20210904.13 T2 - American Journal of Agriculture and Forestry JF - American Journal of Agriculture and Forestry JO - American Journal of Agriculture and Forestry SP - 183 EP - 188 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2330-8591 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajaf.20210904.13 AB - This study examined the effect of ill-health on technical efficiency of food crop farmers in Ondo State, Nigeria. Primary data were obtained from 300 randomly selected food crop farmers using multistage sampling procedure. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics and Stochastic Frontier Analysis (SFA). Findings revealed that respondents were still in their economic active age with mean age 46.5 years. Most (82.3%) of the farmers were male and 44.3% of the sampled farmers have primary education. Majority (70.0%) of the respondents had access to health care services out of which 50.7% had access to government maternity. 58.3 percentage of the respondents lost about 5 farming days due to illness of a member while majority (93.3%) of the farmers reported ill-health due to malaria, cold and catarrh. Farmers’ mean annual expenditure transportation to the nearest health care Centre and medication were ₦137.00 and ₦4,228.83 respectively. Mean technical efficiency was estimated to be 0.627 and the returns to scale computed as the sum of output elasticity for all inputs was estimated as 1.6506, indicating increasing return to scale. SFA showed that travel cost to health care centres (p<0.01) and cost of disease treatment (p<0.05) significantly decreased efficiency. The study concluded that cost of disease treatment decreased farmers’ efficiency. Therefore, government is encouraged to site health care facilities closer to farmers and ensure that the facilities are adequately equipped with modern medical equipment, drug and trained medical personnel. This should be accessible by farmers to improve efficiency. VL - 9 IS - 4 ER -