Citation
Elkhidir, Elrashied Elimam
(2003)
Economic Efficiency of Sharecropping in Drylands: A Case Study of Gum Arabic Production in Kordofan Gum Belt, Sudan.
Doctoral thesis, Universiti Putra Malaysia.
Abstract
The enigma of sharecropping as an economic institution of resource allocation has a
long history and always been a fruitful source of controversy in economic literature.
The Marshallian economists generally condemned sharecropping as an inefficient
institution in that it did not provide incentives to the sharecroppers, because
producers had to share the output with the landlords, while the Cheungian
economists claimed sharecropping to be as efficient as any other tenure system. This
study examines the empirical validity of these two approaches, using evidence from
the Kordofan gum arabic orchards of Sudan.
This study was planned mainly to examine the differences in input and output
intensities among the mixed and pure sharecroppers of gum arabic orchards. Mixed
sharecroppers are gum farmers who rent-in land besides cultivating own land. Pure
sharecroppers are gum farmers who rent-in land with no land of their own. We
examined these differences by modeling three comparison cases. Case (A) compares
input and output differences on owned versus sharecropped gum orchards of mixed
sharecroppers. Case (B) compares input and output differences on the owned orchards of mixed sharecroppers with the gum orchards of pure sharecroppers. Case
(C) compares input and output differences on the shared gum orchards of mixed
sharecroppers with the gum orchards of pure sharecroppers.
The significance of these differences in input and output intensities was measured
by employing two test procedures. An F-test based on Hotelling's T2 statistic was
employed to measure the significance of differences in input and output intensities
of comparable but different cases. The second test, which is based on Shaban's
methodology, measures the impact of tenancy on input and output intensities by
isolating the pure tenancy effect from the total variation in input and output
intensities. Shaban's methodology was modified to incorporate five new variables:
gum orchard size, gum trees capital services flow, gum trees tapping intensity,
rainfall and its fluctuation, and soil type, in the model.
The findings of the study reveal that total differences in inputs and output intensities
across the tenure systems can be explained by differences in gum orchard size, gum
trees capital services flow, gum trees tapping intensity, rainfall and its fluctuation,
soil type and the tenancy effect. The tenancy effect and gum orchard specific
characteristics (in particular differences in gum orchard size, gum trees capital
services flow, rainfall and its fluctuation, and tapping intensity) are the most
significant factors in determining inputs and output intensities.
The results of this study also indicate that the impact of tenancy is stronger and
more sizeable for those inputs that are not shared by the gum orchard owner. Mixed
sharecroppers apply more family labour in their owned-operated gum orchards than
in the shared-operated orchards they tap. Among the shared inputs, differences in input intensity are sizeable and significant for other inputs variable. There are
similar results in case (B) (comparing owned-operated gum orchards of mixed
sharecroppers and pure sharecroppers), though differences in inputs and output
intensities are relatively smaller, a result consistent with Bell's findings.
Our case (C) comparison between mixed sharecroppers and pure sharecroppers is
fully corroborating Bell's findings. A sharecropper-owned resources such as family
labour is used more intensively in pure sharecropped gum orchards in the case (C)
comparison. Input intensity of other inputs is mainly determined by input share rules
applicable to them. Mixed as well as pure sharecroppers' input intensity increases
when their gum orchard owners share these inputs.
Our empirical results, moreover, contain some implications for the theoretical
controversy . between the traditional and the Cheungian views of land tenure
arrangements. Our results, which confirm and extend the earlier views of Bell and
Shaban, support the traditional view of the matter; in some relative sense
sharecropping arrangements are less efficient than production on owned gum
orchards.
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