|
Das Dokument ist frei verfügbar |
|
| Nachweis | Kein Nachweis verfügbar |
|
This paper investigates the impact of labour force composition on productivity in EU arable farming. We test for heterogeneous effects of family and hired labour for a set of five EU member states. To this end we estimate augmented production functions using FADN data for the years 2001-2008. The results reject the notion that hired labour is generally less productive than family workers. In fact farms with a higher share of hired workers are more productive than pure family farms in countries traditionally characterised by family labour namely France and West Germany. Here an increase in reliance on hired labour or the shift of family labour to more productive tasks could raise productivity. This finding calls into question a main pillar of the received family farm theory. In about half the countries there are no statistically different effects of both types of labour. For the United Kingdom we find the classical case with family farms being more productive than those relying on hired labour. As a side result we find little evidence of non-constant technical returns to scale. |
|
|