Ahmad J., Wang Y., Zhang L., Shah W.U.H., Yasmeen R., Pathiranage H.S.K. (2026). Impact of climate change on agricultural production efficiency in leading agriculture-producing economies: a DEA Malmquist Productivity Index. Agricultural Water Management, 01/03/2026, vol. 324, p. 110114.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agwat.2025.110114
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agwat.2025.110114
| Titre : | Impact of climate change on agricultural production efficiency in leading agriculture-producing economies: a DEA Malmquist Productivity Index (2026) |
| Auteurs : | J. Ahmad ; Y. Wang ; L. Zhang ; W.U.H. Shah ; R. Yasmeen ; H.S.K. Pathiranage |
| Type de document : | Article |
| Dans : | Agricultural Water Management (vol. 324, March 2026) |
| Article en page(s) : | p. 110114 |
| Langues : | Anglais |
| Langues du résumé : | Anglais |
| Catégories : |
Catégories principales 07 - ENVIRONNEMENT ; 7.6 - Changement ClimatiqueThésaurus IAMM CHANGEMENT CLIMATIQUE ; EVALUATION DE L'IMPACT ; PRODUCTION AGRICOLE ; PRODUCTIVITE ; ECONOMIE AGRICOLE |
| Résumé : | Climate change significantly impacts global agricultural productivity, making it essential to examine its precise influence on production efficiency. This study evaluates the impact of climate change on agricultural production efficiency among the global leading agriculture-producing economies from 1990 to 2021. Using a DEAMalmquist Productivity Index, the study estimates total factor productivity change (TFPC) and decomposes it into efficiency change (EC) and technological change (TC), both without and with explicit climate variables (temperature, precipitation). Average TFPC without climate factors is 1.0428, indicating 4.28 % productivity growth over the period, primarily driven by technological change. When climate variables are incorporated, the average TFPC is 1.0409; the mean difference of −0.0019 (≈ −0.18 %) shows a small but non-negligible climate impact on productivity growth. Regional variations are heterogeneous: South America and Africa exhibit diverse climate impacts, while Oceania shows the least climate effect. Mann-Whitney U and Kruskal-Wallis tests confirm significant differences in TFPC (and components) between climate and non-climate specifications and across regions. The findings underscore technology's key role in sustaining productivity under climate stress and highlight the need for region-specific adaptation policies to complement technological diffusion. |
| Cote : | En ligne |
| URL / DOI : | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agwat.2025.110114 |


