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Input Measurement in Agricultural Productivity: The Case of Seed Use in the United States

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  • Nehring, Richard
  • Bailey, Sam
  • Bonin, Dan
  • Dodson, Laura

Abstract

Conclusions • There have been large quality changes in seeds due to hybridization, genetic engineering, and conventional breeding. • We use hedonic regressions to account for quality change. The adjusted quantities are close to 50 percent higher in earlier time periods. • New genetic traits have large effects on the price of seed and we also expect large effects on quality-adjusted quantity in more recent years. • This will update the Fernandez-Cornejo seed AIB 786 from 2004 and the Fernandez-Cornejo et al. seed ERR 162 from 2014.

Suggested Citation

  • Nehring, Richard & Bailey, Sam & Bonin, Dan & Dodson, Laura, 2023. "Input Measurement in Agricultural Productivity: The Case of Seed Use in the United States," Miscellaneous Publications 361276, United States Department of Agriculture, Economic Research Service.
  • Handle: RePEc:ags:uersmp:361276
    DOI: 10.22004/ag.econ.361276
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