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Factors Influencing the Profitability of Fertilizer Use on Maize in Zambia

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Author Info
Z Xu
Z Guan
T.S. Jayne
Roy Black

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Abstract

Major Findings: The additional maize produced from a given amount of fertilizer applied varied widely across households even after largely controlling for soil and rainfall conditions. The median estimated response rate was 15.9kgs of maize per kg nitrogen applied; Under the range of conditions and smallholder management practices, average maize fertilizer response rates declined as the application rate increased beyond 2 bags of urea and 2 bags of D compound; Factors raising the response rate and profitability of fertilizer use included timely availability, application rates less than the MOA 4x4 recommendation, use of animal draft power in land preparation, and use of hybrid seed. In remote areas, and given current management practices, fertilizer use appears to be profitable only for a minority of smallholder farmers in the relatively remote areas. For farmers in the more accessible areas, profitability of fertilizer use depends on timely availability. If fertilizer is not available on time, even farmers in the more accessible parts of this area of relatively high agronomic suitability for maize production are largely unable to use fertilizer profitably. Because over 30 percent of the households reported that fertilizer was delivered late, these findings indicate that efforts to ensure timely distribution can contribute substantially to the productivity gains achievable from fertilizer use.

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Publisher Info
Paper provided by Department of Agricultural Economics, Michigan State University in its series International Development Collaborative Policy Briefs with number zm_fsrp_pb_032.

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Date of creation: Feb 2009
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Handle: RePEc:msu:icpbrf:zm_fsrp_pb_032

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Related research
Keywords: agriculture; africa; zambia; fertilizer;

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Find related papers by JEL classification:
Q12 - Agricultural and Natural Resource Economics; Environmental and Ecological Economics - - Agriculture - - - Micro Analysis of Farm Firms, Farm Households, and Farm Input Markets

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This page was last updated on 2009-11-4.


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