4.0 Article

Re-Estimating South African Agricultural Output Value, Quantity And Price Aggregates, 1910-2010

Journal

AGREKON
Volume 54, Issue 4, Pages 1-27

Publisher

AGRICULTURAL ECON ASSOC SOUTH AFRICA
DOI: 10.1080/03031853.2015.1072995

Keywords

agricultural production; Divisia indexes

Funding

  1. South African Department of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (DAFF)
  2. Agricultural Research Council (ARC)
  3. University of Minnesota's International Science and Technology Practice and Policy (InSTePP) centre
  4. International Food Policy Research Institute
  5. University of Pretoria
  6. Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

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A number of past studies of South African agricultural production and productivity performance used a hybrid Tornqvist-Theil approach to forming output aggregates based on a series of Laspeyres-type aggregations of sub-sectoral outputs rather than using the underlying commodity-specific price and quantity data directly. As a result, the studies suffer index number bias and a number of shortcomings that are due to the underlying price and quantity data. These shortcomings include inconsistencies over time in the inclusion of production originating from homeland farmers as well as changing statistical methods and definitions used in forming the national estimates of agricultural production. By addressing these data and measurement issues, including the use of the Fisher Ideal indexing methods, we generate an output quantity index that differs substantially from those presented in past studies. For example, the hybrid Tornqvist-Theil approach suggests that South African agricultural output grew by an average of 2.96 per cent per year over the century spanning 1910-2010, whereas a Fisher Ideal aggregation of the same underlying price and quantity data suggests a growth rate of 3.33 per cent per year.

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