| Literature DB >> 26577645 |
P Veysset1, M Lherm1, M Roulenc1, C Troquier1, D Bébin1.
Abstract
Over the past 23 years (1990 to 2012), French beef cattle farms have expanded in size and increased labour productivity by over 60%, chiefly, though not exclusively, through capital intensification (labour-capital substitution) and simplifying herd feeding practices (more concentrates used). The technical efficiency of beef sector production systems, as measured by the ratio of the volume value (in constant euros) of farm output excluding aids to volume of intermediate consumption, has fallen by nearly 20% while income per worker has held stable thanks to subsidies and the labour productivity gains made. This aggregate technical efficiency of beef cattle systems is positively correlated to feed self-sufficiency, which is in turn negatively correlated to farm and herd size. While volume of farm output per hectare of agricultural area has not changed, forage feed self-sufficiency decreased by 6 percentage points. The continual increase in farm size and labour productivity has come at a cost of lower production-system efficiency - a loss of technical efficiency that 20 years of genetic, technical, technological and knowledge-driven progress has barely managed to offset.Entities:
Keywords: beef cattle; economics; efficiency; farming system
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26577645 DOI: 10.1017/S1751731115002013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animal ISSN: 1751-7311 Impact factor: 3.240