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Abstract
The role of farm size has recently come to the forefront of agricultural development debates.
Agricultural development policy often focuses on small farms given evidence of their role in
poverty reduction and of higher yields. Yet policy has also focused on large farms due to their
share of output, efficiency gains from vertical and horizontal integration, and potential
employment generation. Brazil offers an interesting case study because of its wide spectrum of
farm sizes and the country’s dual agricultural policy focus towards large commercial
“agribusiness” enterprises, led by the Ministry of Agriculture, and “family farms,” led by the
Ministry of Agrarian Development. Our purpose is to examine the role that farm size may have
in Brazil’s agricultural total factor productivity (TFP) growth, which has accelerated at one of
the world’s fastest rates over the last twenty years. The data are drawn from the agricultural
censuses of 1985, 1995/96, and 2006, aggregated at the municipality level into five farm-size
classes. The findings of this study point to heavy technical efficiency losses across all size
classes, creating a substantial drag on national agricultural TFP growth. Moreover, because
farms in the middle of the size distribution achieved the slowest technical change and TFP
growth – bookended by faster growth in the smallest and largest farm-size classes – we identify
an unexpected and unexplored source of inefficiency, namely medium-sized farms.