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Determinants of the GM cotton adoption: evidences for Brazil

Determinants of the GM cotton adoption: evidences for Brazil. Alexande Gori Maia- IE/Unicamp Bruno C. B. Miyamoto – IE/Unicamp José Maria F.J. da Silveira – IE/Unicamp. Paper presented in the XVI ICABR Conference- Ravello , Italy 25-27 June -2012. cotton in Brazil.

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Determinants of the GM cotton adoption: evidences for Brazil

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  1. Determinantsof the GM cotton adoption: evidences for Brazil AlexandeGori Maia- IE/Unicamp Bruno C. B. Miyamoto – IE/Unicamp José Maria F.J. da Silveira – IE/Unicamp Paper presented in the XVI ICABR Conference- Ravello, Italy 25-27 June -2012.

  2. cotton in Brazil • High growth of quantity due to increasing productivity; • High price variability;

  3. Spatial Distribution of Cotton • MatoGrosso and Bahia accumulate the highest shares of total production (49% and 34%, respectively);

  4. First GM cotton approval: 2005, Mon 810 (Cry1AC) and three years after, HT Liberty link varieties Main reason for a slow diffusion: Duopal and Nuopal were not considered good varieties in quality for growers and industry; Alabama argilacea Delay in the approvals of other Bt Genes, like Cr2Ab + Cry1Ac), Vip3A e (Cry1Ac +Cry1F). Cry1F)- control of Spodopterafrugiperdaand plusídios

  5. I. Brazil: GM cotton in main production areas Some features

  6. Panels in main cotton regions • Evaluate cost differentials of GM cotton in Brazil, 2010/2011 harvest. • Comparison between conventional x GM production systems. • Additionally, evaluate the potential general equilibrium impacts.(we skip this in the paper)

  7. Methodology • First step: field survey by CEPEA(ESALQ-USP) on the main cotton production regions. Cost differentials. • Sorriso (MT) • Campo Novo Parecis (MT) • Campo Verde (MT) • Mineiros (GO) • Luiz Eduardo Magalhães (BA). • Surveys: “Panel” method. Costs and area with GM and conventional varieties estimates.

  8. Survey results: adoption

  9. GM adoption in regions • Only herbicide tolerant (HT) GM cotton in use. • Mineiros: low potential of GM varieties. • Luiz Eduardo: low potential, BT cotton do not control other common pests in the region. • Only Mineiros used GM cotton in the first harvest. • Use of HT in the second harvest to facilitate weed control. • Low availability of seeds reported for this year. • No price differentiation for the fiber.

  10. Cost comparison, R$/ha. No GM cotton in Bahia.

  11. Operational costs differentials GM – conventional(Important reduction in labor)

  12. Profitability comparison

  13. Final remarks: Brazil main production areas • GM cotton is a labor saving technology. • Labor will be released from cotton to other economic activities, with beneficial effects under full employment. • Regions that do not adopt the GM technology will tend to reduce production.

  14. Spatial Distribution of Cotton • Where are the small holders?

  15. Cotton in Brazil: small holders share in 2006

  16. Review of literature • Papers on seed adoption • HUBBELL et al 2001; Bt cotton in US: revealed and declared preferences; • FERNANDEZ-CORNEJO et al, 2001): Bt and PrecisonFarming; • QAIM e de JANVRY, 2003 Bt cotton in Argentina (Willingness to pay; even commercial growers would like to pay half a royalty value. They conclude that profits would be higher if the firm reduce seed prices); • KOLADY e LESSER, 2006;- Bt eggplants (Hybrid and open pollinated varieties, imperfect substitutes): production systems conditioning adoption; • BREUSTEDT et al, 2008; Colza GM (two types) and a conventional variety,( probit multinomial, ex-ante);

  17. Survey details • Sample: 175 small producers (aprox. 1,5% of the population) • Coverage: States of Bahia, Paraíba, Rio Grande do Norte, Minas Gerais and Goiás;

  18. This is a “first year” analysis Typology What is the preference for cotton varieties? Ex-post analysis: Conjoint Analysis in order to estimate utilities for each characteristics of cotton production. • Descriptive analysis: Multiple Correspondence Analysis (ACM) in order to identify patterns of association among types of cotton and farmers’ characteristics.

  19. Multiple Correspondence Analysis Positive Values Negative Values Dimension 1 (16% of the total variability) Area up to 1 ha Absence of boll weevil Organic Cotton Area over 5 ha Mechanization Dimension 2 (9% of the total variability) Bt cotton Area between 2 – 5 ha Pink Bollworm Low use of pesticide Area up to 1 ha Permanent Employee White Cotton Dimension 3 (8% of the total variability) HT Cotton Silverleaf No mechanization Access to credit

  20. ACM: methodology • From a contingency list with multiple combinations of qualitative categories, MCA determines the number of relevant dimensions to understand the structure of associations among the categories of analysis (GREENACRE, 1984). • The MCA is based on the technique of principal components to simplify the data structure, (CUADRA, 1981). • The technique decomposes the structure of the distances between the categories of interest (distances c2) in (i) eigenvalues representing the partial contributions of each dimension to the total variability, and (ii) eigenvectors representing geometric projection planes of the sub-populations characteristics (GREENACRE & HASTIE, 1987). • The total inertia represents the average degree of separation of the multiple combinations of frequencies in relation to the average behavior of the population. The K eigenvalues l1, ...,lK resulted from the decomposition of the total inertia are called main inertia and correspond to the partial contributions of the respective dimensions. • The geometric dispersion of the categories in the space defined by the dimensions of correspondence analysis shows the nature of associations between qualitative variables of the problem. • Groups of categories close together reveal similarities in the patterns of associations, while groups far apart mean repulsion between the categories (HOFFMANN & FRANKE, 1986).

  21. Multiple Correspondance Analysis • Pattern 1: Organic + small area + low education + no credit; • Pattern 2: Colored + no mechanization + no employee; • Pattern 3: White + higher education + mechanization + employee; • Pattern 4: Bt + area 2-5 ha + credit + lower use of pesticide; • Pattern 5: HT + Budworm + Silverleaf whitefly;

  22. C.A. methodology • Data were collected by asking farmers about their preferences for different characteristics of cotton systems. • The CA decomposed rank-ordered evaluation judgments of cotton systems into components based on qualitative cotton characteristics. • For each characteristic of interest, a numerical "part-worth utility" value was computed. The sum of the part-worth utilities for each product is an estimate of its utility. • The aim is to compute part-worth utilities in such a way that the product utilities are as similar as possible to the original rank ordering.

  23. The methodology applied • Two attributes of interest were considered: type of cotton and price (Table 1). • The type of cotton represents the five most usual productions in Brazil: GM Bt, BM RR, white conventional, organic and colored. • Since there were no expressive differences between the sales prices of these seeds in Brazil, the attribute price expressed the payment of royalties for GM seeds. • Thus, no prices were presented for white conventional, organic and colored cotton. Based on a range of values practiced in Brazil, three values of royalties were considered: R$ 20 / ha, R$ 55 / ha and R$ 90 / ha. We also considered the option for a pirate GM seed (with no royalty payments). • Such design would imply a total of 11 possible alternatives (4 prices of GM Bt + 4 prices of GM RR + 1 choice of white conventional + 1 choice of organic + 1 choice of colored cotton), which were randomly distributed in sets of four alternatives for each interviewed.

  24. Since all cotton characteristics are nominal, the CA can be similarly represented by a main-effect ANOVA, where the attributes are the independent variables and a function of the rank order comprise the dependent variable (KUHFELD, 2010): where The yij represent the stated preference of farmer i for a cotton production with characteristics j and  designates its monotonic transformation. Analyses were done using TRANSREG procedure of SAS System (SAS, 2012) and non-metric conjoint analysis models were fit using an alternating least squares algorithm (Young, 1981; Gifi, 1990).

  25. Cotton characteristics of valuation in the contingent ranking

  26. Conjoint Analysis • Organic cotton has the higher utility; • Bt cotton in second place, with low royalties (R$ 20/ha); • High rates of royalties imply negative utility in comparison with other choices;

  27. Agroecological network The existence of a complex network established in order to support market access for cotton growers in the semi-arid areas, where most actors do not obtain direct financial returns and many do not aim to.; This goal has been achieved thanks to collective work, which entails organizational, technical and relational issues. It can therefore be concluded that the collective actions performed by the Network are driven by various motivations in addition to economic goals.; These motivations are not easy to identify or measure. However, where actions geared to equality, justice and solidarity are concerned, subjective values are necessarily present.

  28. Next Steps • Multinomial logit model (MLM) in order to estimate the main determinantes of the producer’s revealed choices; • Based on the MLM results, to apply propensity score (PS) approach in order to indentify groups of producers with similar socioeonomic characteristics and different revealed choices for cotton seeds (Bt, RR, white conventional, colored and organic); • Based on the PS results, to apply a new conjoint anlysis for selected farmers (relatively similars) in order to estimate stated preferences for cotton seeds with no selection bias.

  29. Final Remarks Diffusion process of GM cotton crops is still under way: is depends crucially of the quality of the varieties; Impacts in Brazil of Bt cotton and even stacked varieties is not as high as in other countries, like China and India; There is limit to accept the payment of royalties in cotton by small grower. However, the case of Catuti shows that Bt cotton could be important in certain situations; Agro-ecological networks are complex, demanding a huge effort by different types of stakeholders, part of them not directly involved in profit seeking activities.

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