Kenya, which has been traditionally near self-sufficiency in most food-staffs, faces the imminent danger that rapid population growth may overtake increases in food production capacity. In a situation where the international community and donor agencies have been aiding Kenya both in terms of research development and food-aid, there is the logical pressure to justify research budgets in the face of slow agricultural productivity increases. Wheat is one commodity whose productivity increase has not marched demand. This study analyses the returns to wheat research and the policy factors that may affect those returns. The study applies time series econometric analysis with receiit modifications of the Error correction models.
Level: post-graduate
Type: dissertations
Year: 1991
Institution: university
Contributed by: kintu256
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