Authors
Banchayehu Tessema Assefa, Jordan Chamberlin, Pytrik Reidsma, João Vasco Silva, Martin K van Ittersum
Publication date
2020/2
Journal
Food Security
Volume
12
Pages
83-103
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Description
Ethiopia has achieved the second highest maize yield in sub-Saharan Africa. Yet, farmers’ maize yields are still much lower than on-farm and on-station trial yields, and only ca. 20% of the estimated water-limited potential yield. This article provides a comprehensive national level analysis of the drivers of maize yields in Ethiopia, by decomposing yield gaps into efficiency, resource and technology components, and accounting for a broad set of detailed input and crop management choices. Stochastic frontier analysis was combined with concepts of production ecology to estimate and explain technically efficient yields, the efficiency yield gap and the resource yield gap. The technology yield gap was estimated based on water-limited potential yields from the Global Yield Gap Atlas. The relative magnitudes of the efficiency, resource and technology yield gaps differed across farming systems; they ranged from …
Total citations
20202021202220232024623271719
Scholar articles
BT Assefa, J Chamberlin, P Reidsma, JV Silva… - Food Security: The Science, Sociology and Economics …, 2020