Multidirectional analysis of technical efficiency for pig production systems: the case of Sweden

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Multidirectional analysis of technical efficiency for pig production systems : the case of Sweden . / Labajavo, Katarina; Hansson, Helena; Asmild, Mette; Göransson, Leif; Lagerkvist, Carl-Johan; Neil, Maria.

In: Livestock Science, Vol. 187, 2016, p. 168-180.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Labajavo, K, Hansson, H, Asmild, M, Göransson, L, Lagerkvist, C-J & Neil, M 2016, 'Multidirectional analysis of technical efficiency for pig production systems: the case of Sweden ', Livestock Science, vol. 187, pp. 168-180. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.livsci.2016.03.009

APA

Labajavo, K., Hansson, H., Asmild, M., Göransson, L., Lagerkvist, C-J., & Neil, M. (2016). Multidirectional analysis of technical efficiency for pig production systems: the case of Sweden . Livestock Science, 187, 168-180. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.livsci.2016.03.009

Vancouver

Labajavo K, Hansson H, Asmild M, Göransson L, Lagerkvist C-J, Neil M. Multidirectional analysis of technical efficiency for pig production systems: the case of Sweden . Livestock Science. 2016;187:168-180. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.livsci.2016.03.009

Author

Labajavo, Katarina ; Hansson, Helena ; Asmild, Mette ; Göransson, Leif ; Lagerkvist, Carl-Johan ; Neil, Maria. / Multidirectional analysis of technical efficiency for pig production systems : the case of Sweden . In: Livestock Science. 2016 ; Vol. 187. pp. 168-180.

Bibtex

@article{6147f4589fb94196b4e35bbc851d9bdc,
title = "Multidirectional analysis of technical efficiency for pig production systems: the case of Sweden ",
abstract = "Declining profitability and ongoing structural changes in the pig sector require thorough efficiency analysis of individual production factors. In this study we calculated technical efficiency indices for each input and output using multidirectional efficiency analysis and examined the relationship between {\textquoteleft}farm-specific characteristics{\textquoteright} and input and output technical efficiencies by production type (piglet, growing-finishing, finish-to-farrow). The results indicated that advisory services and farm location were not significantly correlated with technical efficiency. Similar results were obtained for {\textquoteleft}housing practices{\textquoteright}, with the exception of the latest technology such as heated floors in relation to input labour technical efficiency for growing-finishing and finish-to-farrow productions. Use of written instructions for feeding for growing-finishing and finish-to-farrow production and written instructions for preventing infectious diseases for piglet production was associated with higher technical efficiency, for example for output from pigs. We were able to explain differences between less and more efficient livestock pig production in detail. The results obtained suggest that advisory services and politicians should devise separate approaches depending on which input and output efficiencies they mainly intend to improve and also on type of pig production.",
author = "Katarina Labajavo and Helena Hansson and Mette Asmild and Leif G{\"o}ransson and Carl-Johan Lagerkvist and Maria Neil",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.1016/j.livsci.2016.03.009",
language = "English",
volume = "187",
pages = "168--180",
journal = "Livestock Science",
issn = "1871-1413",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Multidirectional analysis of technical efficiency for pig production systems

T2 - the case of Sweden

AU - Labajavo, Katarina

AU - Hansson, Helena

AU - Asmild, Mette

AU - Göransson, Leif

AU - Lagerkvist, Carl-Johan

AU - Neil, Maria

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - Declining profitability and ongoing structural changes in the pig sector require thorough efficiency analysis of individual production factors. In this study we calculated technical efficiency indices for each input and output using multidirectional efficiency analysis and examined the relationship between ‘farm-specific characteristics’ and input and output technical efficiencies by production type (piglet, growing-finishing, finish-to-farrow). The results indicated that advisory services and farm location were not significantly correlated with technical efficiency. Similar results were obtained for ‘housing practices’, with the exception of the latest technology such as heated floors in relation to input labour technical efficiency for growing-finishing and finish-to-farrow productions. Use of written instructions for feeding for growing-finishing and finish-to-farrow production and written instructions for preventing infectious diseases for piglet production was associated with higher technical efficiency, for example for output from pigs. We were able to explain differences between less and more efficient livestock pig production in detail. The results obtained suggest that advisory services and politicians should devise separate approaches depending on which input and output efficiencies they mainly intend to improve and also on type of pig production.

AB - Declining profitability and ongoing structural changes in the pig sector require thorough efficiency analysis of individual production factors. In this study we calculated technical efficiency indices for each input and output using multidirectional efficiency analysis and examined the relationship between ‘farm-specific characteristics’ and input and output technical efficiencies by production type (piglet, growing-finishing, finish-to-farrow). The results indicated that advisory services and farm location were not significantly correlated with technical efficiency. Similar results were obtained for ‘housing practices’, with the exception of the latest technology such as heated floors in relation to input labour technical efficiency for growing-finishing and finish-to-farrow productions. Use of written instructions for feeding for growing-finishing and finish-to-farrow production and written instructions for preventing infectious diseases for piglet production was associated with higher technical efficiency, for example for output from pigs. We were able to explain differences between less and more efficient livestock pig production in detail. The results obtained suggest that advisory services and politicians should devise separate approaches depending on which input and output efficiencies they mainly intend to improve and also on type of pig production.

U2 - 10.1016/j.livsci.2016.03.009

DO - 10.1016/j.livsci.2016.03.009

M3 - Journal article

VL - 187

SP - 168

EP - 180

JO - Livestock Science

JF - Livestock Science

SN - 1871-1413

ER -

ID: 166279758