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Potato farmers’ preference for agricultural insurance in China: An investigation using the choice experimental method
HUANG Ze-ying, Alec ZUO, SUN Jun-mao, GUO Yan-zhi
2020, 19 (4): 1137-1148.   DOI: 10.1016/S2095-3119(19)62868-6
Abstract167)      PDF in ScienceDirect      
Potato insurance plays an important role in transferring agricultural risks to promote the potato staple strategy.  Understanding farmers’ real preferences for potato insurance attributes is important to improve the potato insurance.  In this study, a choice experiment was designed with attributes such as peril, minimum compensation ratio for production loss, types of crops covered by insurance, annual premium per mu after subsidy, and complexity of claims procedures.  We constructed a mixed logit model based on a questionnaire survey of 362 potato farmers’ choices of insurance attributes from 24 villages in Dingxi City of Gansu Province using random sampling.  The results show that: (1) farmers prefer agricultural insurance with widely perils including output price drop and input cost risk; (2) farmers who have suffered plant disease and insect and pest damage are willing to pay a high premium for the insurance with a high compensation ratio and several types of crops covered; full-time farmers and large-scale farmers preferred insurance products with low complexity of claims procedures.  Therefore, new potato insurance design could be considered specifically for different farmer groups such as those who had previous disaster experiences, and large- or small-scale farm operations. 
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One size fits all?  Contract farming among broiler producers in China
HUANG Ze-ying, XU Ying, ZENG Di, WANG Chen, WANG Ji-min
2018, 17 (2): 473-482.   DOI: 10.1016/S2095-3119(17)61752-0
Abstract819)      PDF in ScienceDirect      
Contract farming has been increasingly found to benefit smallholders in developing countries, yet much less is known about its role in the poultry industry where economies of scale could be more prominent.  This study aims to narrow this gap by analysing the choice of contract farming among Chinese broiler producers using a nationally representative survey.  Simply cost-benefit analysis and multinomial logit regression modelling are jointly employed to explain contract farming decision making especially among small producers.  In contrast to many recent studies, we find that small producers, though not passively excluded, usually opt out of contract farming due to limited profitability when large producers are coexistent.  Such relationship is appropriately identified through a control function approach to correct for possible endogeneity.  Therefore, contract farming may not help achieve higher welfare goals for small broiler producers who actually instead seek alternative market opportunities that better realise their comparative advantages. 
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Adoption of HPAI biosecurity measures: The Chinese broiler industry
HUANG Ze-ying, Adam Loch, Christopher Findlay, WANG Ji-min
2017, 16 (01): 181-189.   DOI: 10.1016/S2095-3119(16)61511-3
Abstract869)      PDF in ScienceDirect      
Highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) contamination via wild birds and rodents poses a threat to food security and safety.  As chicken meat comprises an increasing proportion of diet in China, it is useful to determine whether broiler farmers are adopting wild bird and rodent controls to minimize the risk of HPAI impacts on food supply.  Our study surveyed a cross sectional sample of 331 Chinese broiler farmers in six provinces.  We find that only 47% of farmers (mainly farmers with large herds) adopted control measures against wild birds and rodents, while 14% adopted no measures.  Farm size was the biggest driver of adoption followed by proportion of farm revenue derived from broiler production.  However, southern farmers were at a far greater probability of non-adoption.  We suggest that assistance in the form of education/training programs and subsidized traps or baiting controls across smaller producers could help raise of the adoption level toward more effective HPAI control.
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