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Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA)

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LECTURE 1 INTRODUCTION * * * * * * * * * * * * * Definition Agricultural Economics Is the discipline that adapts the principles of economics to: Farming activities ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA)


1
LECTURE 1
  • INTRODUCTION

2
Definition
  • Agricultural Economics
  • Is the discipline that adapts the principles of
    economics to
  • Farming activities
  • Farm Input manufacturing and distribution.
  • Food processing.
  • Wholesaling and retailing.
  • Integration of these activities gives rise to a
    set of products and services that are passed on
    until they reach the consumer.

3
Definition
  • It helps people to decide what kind of food and
    how much of each should be produced in order to
    supply the needs of a country.
  • It also aids decisions about which crops are most
    profitable for the farmer to grow.

4
Definition
  • Resources available restrict the ability of the
    producer to supply demand, especially the
    availability of land, labour and capital.
  • The farmer has to decide on the best use of each
    resource to bring the highest return.
  • Agricultural production economics is primarily
    concerned with economic theory as it relates to
    the producer of agricultural commodities.

5
Definition
  • Agricultural Management
  • Is the application of management principles to
    agricultural production.
  • Combines the inputs of labour, capital, services
    and natural resources to yield farm products.
  • Organises the production, distribution,
    consumption and investment of the farm products
    and resources.

6
Agricultural Economics Concerns
  • Major concerns include
  • Farming goals and objectives
  • Choice of output to be produced
  • Allocation of resources among outputs
  • Assumption of risk and uncertainty

7
Farming Goals and Objectives
  • Assumption is that
  • The objective of any farm manager is that of
    maximizing profits
  • Reality
  • Individual farmers have unique goals.
  • One farmer might be more interested in obtaining
    ownership of the largest farm in the area.
  • Another might have as his/her goal that of owning
    the best set of farm machinery.
  • Still another might be interested in minimizing
    his/her debt load.

8
Farming Goals and Objectives
  • The goals and objectives of a farm manager are
    closely intertwined with a persons psychological
    makeup, and the goals selected by a particular
    person may have very little to do with profit
    maximization.

9
Choice of output to be produced
  • Farm manager faces an array of options with
    regard to what to produce given available land,
    labour, machinery and equipment.
  • Choices to be made include
  • What to produce
  • How much to produce
  • How to allocate available resource to competing
    uses
  • Other constraints
  • Government may restrict number of acres of a
    commodity a farmer may grow.
  • Farmers knowledge of certain commodities may be
    limited
  • Limited labour and machinery and other inputs

10
Resource Allocation
  • Farmer needs to decide how available resources
    are to be allocated among outputs.
  • Questions to answer include
  • which field is to be used for the production of
    each crop
  • What amount of farm labor, machinery and time
    must be allocated to each crop and livestock
    activity, consistent with the farmers overall
    objective.

11
Risk and uncertainty Assumption
  • Economic production models assume that the farm
    manager knows with certainty the
  • Applicable production function
  • Prices of inputs to be purchased and outputs to
    be sold.
  • This assumption is almost never met.
  • Weather is a key challenge but nature presents
    other challenges such as
  • Cattle developing diseases and dying
  • Insects and diseases destroying crops.

12
Risk and uncertainty Assumption
  • Farmers may know the prices of they must pay for
    fuel, fertilizer and seed at the time they
    purchase these inputs.
  • However they are almost never aware at the
    beginning of the production season the prices
    that will prevail when outputs are sold.

13
Agricultural Economic Principles
  • Help producers produce the goods that the
    consumer wants to buy, in quantities that fit the
    demand and at the time the goods are required.
  • Help producers allocate restricted resources
    among competing uses
  • Help producers decide on the best use of each
    resource to bring the highest return.

14
Agricultural Economic Principles
  • Help producers answer the basic questions in
    organizing the production such as
  • Which inputs to use
  • What quantity of different inputs to use
  • Which technology to use e.g. in controlling downy
    mildew what combination of resources and
    technology will minimize crop losses for the
    least possible cost? You could
  • Choose a resistant variety or cultivars
  • Control environment to minimize incidence and
    spread e.g. Use of greenhouses
  • Utilize a fungicide spray program

15
Agricultural Economic Principles
  • Since resources are limited in every economy,
    when more of them are used to produce certain
    goods and services, fewer resources are left to
    produce other goods and services.
  • Help producers choose the technique (technology)
    that results in the least cost possible (in terms
    of resources used) to produce each unit of a good
    or service that the society wants.

16
Agricultural Economic Principles
  • Help producers organize the production process
    through the price mechanism.
  • The price of an input normally represents its
    relative scarcity.
  • If the price of an input increases in relation to
    the price of other inputs used in the production
    process of a commodity, producers will switch to
    a technique that uses less of the more expensive
    input in order to minimize their cost of
    production.

17
Agricultural Economic Principles
  • Dictate that the best technique to use in the
    production process is the one that results in the
    least cost of production.
  • If fuel prices increase, then minimum tillage
    could be used
  • If greenhouse labor prices increase, then the
    farmer could decide to use automated watering
    technology
  • The opposite occurs when the relative price of an
    input decreases

18
Agricultural Economic Principles
  • The problem of distributing resources,
    commodities and proceeds from the production
    process is also answered the price mechanism.
  • Resources are distributed to producers who have
    the money to pay for them while commodities are
    distributed to consumers who have the money to
    pay for them.
  • Proceeds are paid to producers for commodities
    efficiently provided while proceeds are paid to
    consumers for resources provided.

19
Agricultural Economic Principles
  • In distribution there is government intervention
    in order to provide for equitable distribution
    of resources commodities and proceeds.
  • The government taxes wealthy individuals and
    business enterprises and redistributes to the
    poor in form of subsidies or in order to provide
    certain public goods such as public education,
    national defense, law and order, agricultural
    extension as well as agricultural commodity
    programs.

20
Importance Of Agriculture
  • Provision of food for the ever-increasing
    population.
  • Provision of jobs in the agricultural industry as
    for farmers, crop processors, traders, middlemen
    and transporters.
  • Government revenue through taxes.
  • Agricultural products are a major source of
    domestic and international trade.
  • Foreign Exchange earnings through export.
  • Used to pay for essential import goods

21
Importance Of Agriculture
  • Provision of market for other industries
  • Serves as a large consumer market for industrial
    products such as plastic shoes and boots,
    buckets, fertilisers, pesticides, agricultural
    tools and machinery, building and construction
    materials, bicycles, trucks, lorries, tractors,
    boats and many others.

22
Importance Of Agriculture
  • Provision of raw materials for the Industries.
  • The ratio of agricultural raw materials to
    non-agricultural raw materials used in industries
    is 41.
  • Education and Training
  • Many agricultural education institutions are
    established to educate and train people in the
    science of agriculture. This provides people
    with a career
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