Profitability of Fertilizer Use in Sub-Sahara Africa
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Washington, DC: World Bank
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This paper estimates the
profitability of inorganic fertilizer use in maize
production in Malawi. It employs a two-wave, nationally
representative panel of data on smallholder households and
plots to estimate household fixed effects, plot fixed
effects, and multilevel regressions. The results suggest
that inorganic fertilizer use is generally unprofitable at
prevailing market prices when, assuming that farmers incur
positive transaction costs in the use of fertilizer. The low
fertilizer profitability is driven by low nitrogen use
efficiency, the kilograms of maize produced per kilogram of
nitrogen, which is estimated to range from 9.2 to 12.1. For
fertilizer use to be profitable, the nitrogen use efficiency
would have to increase by at least 137 percent (from 11.89)
if maize output is valued at the farmgate price and by 50
percent (from 11.89) if maize is valued at the lean season
market price. For farmers who receive the fertilizer
subsidy, it improves the profitability of fertilizer use by
increasing the maize-nitrogen price ratio at all rates of
subsidy (0 to 100 percent). However, unless farmers can
store their produce and sell during the lean season when the
output price is relatively higher, they would be better off
by at least MKW 66.16 (US$0.18) per kilogram of subsidized
nitrogen with the cash equivalent of the subsidy than with
subsidized fertilizer. The analysis also finds that,
compared to the current rate of nitrogen application, the
government recommended rate of application is between 116
and 119 percent more profitable on smallholder fields.
Palabras clave
FERTILIZER PROFITABILITY, FERTILIZER RESPONSE RATE, FERTILIZER SUBSIDY, MALAWI
