an application of the o ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

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AN APPLICATION OF THE O – RING THEORY TO AGRICULTURE DEVELOPMENT IN MALAWI

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Michael Kramer's O - Ring Theory is about sequential production. A firm can produce great quality products but if its marketing is messy, it can make a loss. I apply the idea of the O - Ring to explain what happens in the agriculture sector in Malawi We have a subsidy program in Malawi which is good but with little going to extension services and R&D, the subsidy is not having much of an impact. I also explore other factors which affect overall agriculture production All such factors inputed into the O - Ring Production Function of say maize, have an effect on output

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Page 1: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

AN APPLICATION OF THE

O – RING THEORY TO

AGRICULTURE DEVELOPMENT IN

MALAWI

Page 2: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

Outline

• Coordination Failure• Multiple Equilibria• Models about Multiple Equilibria• The Big Push Model• The O Ring Theory of Economic Development• Agriculture in Malawi• How the O – Ring Theory Fits into the picture• Conclusions

Page 3: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

Underdevelopment as coordination Failure

• Coordination failures occur when agents’ inability to coordinate their actions leads to an outcome that makes all agents worse off

• Who are these agents?– Government Institutions (Statutory, Research, Planning…)– The Private Sector– The Citizenry

• Coordination Failure mostly occur when actions are complementary. For Example: actions taken by one agent reinforces incentives for others to take similar actions

Page 4: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

Multiple Equilibria

• Refers to a system in which there is more than one equilibrium, most commonly a market in which a backward bending supply curve crosses a demand curve more than once, at prices each of which is a market clearing price.

• In Developing countries there is presence of multiple Equilibria

Page 5: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi
Page 6: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

Models about Multiple Equilibrium

• The Big Push Model• The O – Ring Theory of Economic

Development

Page 7: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

The Big Push Theory

• Conditions for Big Push• Sometimes market failures lead to a need for public policy

intervention• Multiple Equilibria• Inter - temporal effects• Urbanization effects• Infrastructure effects• Training effects• Linkages• These needs cannot be addressed by a super entrepreneur

Page 8: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

Explosion of the Space Shuttle Challenger, 1986

Page 9: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

What is the O – Ring Theory

• Takes the name after what happened to the Space Shuttle Challenger in 1986. The rocket exploded because a part – the O – Ring – failed to expand

• Output depends on completion of a series of tasks/processes

• Failure at any one of these tasks reduce the value of the output, sometimes output can be zero (The Weakest Link)

• Quantity cannot substitute quality

Page 10: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

Weakest Link TV Show on BBC follows O – Ring Theory

Page 11: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

Examples of O – Ring Production

• Micro chips that become soiled• Symphony Orchestra – when one member is out of

tune• The Space Shuttle Challenger, 1986 – which exploded• In the United States of America, E-coli (bacteria)

contaminated spinach sickened consumers in 25 states in 2006. Spinach was destroyed, loss of business

• These cases show the cost mistakes have on output

Page 12: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

The O – Ring Production Function

Page 13: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

O – Ring Production Function

When Kα and β are exogenous, I assume they are 1. Model becomes:

Y = n (q1 x q2 x q3x … qi x …x qn)

When n = 10 and qi = 1, Y = 10

[qi is the quality of skill. qi = probability of making a mistake = 0; qi = 0.9, probability of making a mistake = 0.1 or 10%]

Page 14: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

Effect on Output, E(y), as q decreases

Page 15: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

Observations from the model

• Output is affected as the level of skill drifts away from the perfect skill level (q

i = 1)

• The probability to make a mistake of 0.1 results in a considerable reduction of the expected output

• We conclude that to realize total potential output, there should be no mistake in any one sequential production process

Page 16: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

How the O – Ring fits Agriculture Production

• Cigarette production• Cornflakes production• Coffee production• Attracting Vertical Foreign Direct Investment in

Agriculture• Maize production

Page 17: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

How the O – Ring fits in Agriculture

• Maize Production tasks– Land Preparation (distance between ridges)– Ridging– Planting (seed type due to weather, planting method, distance)– Fertilizer application – the timing– Banding– Harvesting– Storage– Price information– Export licenses– Protection from thieves– Research and Development– Infrastructure– Extension Services

Page 18: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

Cereal Yield in World RegionsThe developed countries, Latin America and the Caribbean and Asian Developed countries – have registered commendable progress with growth rates in excess of 3%. SSA registered a measly growth rate of as little as 0.2%.

Page 19: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

Consumption of Fertilizer by World RegionAfrica as evidenced from the graph is far out classed by the other World Regions

Source: [http://www.ourworldindata.org/data/food-agriculture/fertilizer-and-pesticides/]

Page 20: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

Fertilizer use, by developing regions and type (Nitrogen, Phosphates, Potassium) kg/ha (1961 to 1999) – FAO

http://www.ourworldindata.org/data/food-agriculture/fertilizer-and-pesticides/

Page 21: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

Agriculture in Malawi

• Malawi is a landlocked SSA country with a population of 16 million people.

• One third of the land is cultivatable; • Agriculture is the major source of income, jobs,

foreign exchange and also the largest contributor to Gross Domestic Product.

• The sector employed 85% of the population and contributed 31% to GDP in 2013.

• Incidence of poverty is very high as depicted

Page 22: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

Poverty Headcount in Malawi

1998 2005 20110%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%1998 – 68%2005 – 52%2011 – 51%

Page 23: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

Selected Indicators from Malawi

Page 24: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

Trends in Agriculture Spending in Malawi

Page 25: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

Proportion of Subsidy in Agriculture Budget

Page 26: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

Why Agriculture underperforms in Malawi

• 54% of the smallholder farmers use hybrid seed, which is problematic.

• 60% of farming households reported the use of fertilizer, which again is a problem

• 18% of smallholder farmers are reached by extension workers; • The average landholding size of 0.44 ha; • Access to loans being only 3% and the little allocation in the

government budget to Research and Development and Extension Services

• 80% of the farm land is customary land; just 6% is private land; the rest is public land

Page 27: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

Recall the O – Ring Production Function

Y = n (q1 x q2 x q3x … qi x …x qn)

q1 = extension services (q1 = 1. if less output will be affected)

q2 = Research and Development (q1 = 1. if less Output will be affected)

q3 = Fertilizer Application.

.

.

qi = Weeding

.

.

.

qn = Property rights

Page 28: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

Quality Matching

Consider a situation where there are 2 high quality skilled workers and 2 low skilled workers in an industry

Which combination will produce the maximum Output? Should the skills be matched or mixed for maximum output?

• Assume high quality (skilled) workers = (qh = 1) and Low

(skilled) Quality Workers = (qL = 0.9)

When Skills are matched:

E(y) = 2qh

2+ 2qh

2 = 2(1)2 + 2(0.9)2 = 3.62

Page 29: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

Quality Matching…/2

When skills are mixed (not matched)E(y) = 2q

hq

L + 2q

hq

L

E(y) = 2(1) (0.9) + 2(1)(0.9) = 1.8 + 1.8 = 3.6

E(Y) is higher where skills are matched than where they are mixed

Page 30: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

Conclusions

• To achieve increased agriculture production, a multiplicity of factors is at play

• When one or so such factors are not executed at 100%, Output is affected

• Agriculture output in Malawi experiences colossal underperformance due to coordination failures

• To give a boost to agriculture, there has to be investment or priority given to these factors

Page 31: An application of the o   ring theory to agriculture development in malawi

Conclusions…/2

• The failure of agriculture to deliver has an effect also on the vertical FDI in agriculture a country attracts; Malawi attracts the lowest FDI in agriculture

• Adoption of capital intensive use in agriculture is very minimal

• And poverty continues being a problem