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Economic Comparison of Alternative Tillage Systems for Delaware Grain Farms

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 May 2017

Judy Ohannesian*
Affiliation:
University of Delaware
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Abstract

Modern farm management decisions deal with problems concerning the most profitable size and the best combination of enterprises for a given resource base. These decisions determine a farm's operational and/or organizational efficiency. In addition to selecting a new combination of enterprises, farm managers can make decisions on altering and changing their production practices. New methods allow the same products to be produced, but by a different technique. Situations may arise which also change a farm's resource base. A new method of production may enable a farm operator to continue at a desired output level, while decreasing a production input, thereby increasing efficiency of labor, land or capital.

Type
Commercial Agriculture
Copyright
Copyright © Northeastern Agricultural and Resource Economics Association 

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Footnotes

The author is deeply indebted to Drs. G. Joachim Elterich, Raymond C. Smith and Gerald L. Cole for their help in reviewing this paper.

References

Grain and Forage Crops Guide 1976–1978, Cooperative Extension Serice, College of Agricultural Sciences, Universities of Delaware, Extension Bulletin 109.Google Scholar
Collins, N., Kemple, L. and Williams, T. H., Energy Requirements for Tillage on Coastal Plains Soils, Agricultural Experiment Station, Miscellaneous Paper 761, University of Delaware, Newark, DE 1971.Google Scholar
1973 Delaware Field Tests With No-Tillage Corn and Soybeans, Extension Bulletin 107, Cooperative Extension Service, University of Delaware, Newark, DE 19711, December 1973.Google Scholar