November, 2003
Size and Distribution of Market Benefits From Adopting
Biotech Crops
by Gregory K. Price, William Lin, José B. Falck-Zepeda, and
Jorge Fernandez-Cornejo
An electronic publication from the
Economic Research Service
of USDA
Abstract
This study estimates the total benefit arising from the adoption
of agricultural biotechnology in one year (1997) and its
distribution among key stakeholders along the production and
marketing chain.
The analysis focuses on three biotech crops: herbicide-tolerant
soybeans, insect-resistant (Bt) cotton, and herbicide-tolerant
cotton.
Adoption of these crops resulted in estimated market benefits of
$212.5-$300.7 million for Bt cotton, $231.8 million for
herbicide-tolerant cotton, and $307.5 million for
herbicide-tolerant soybeans. These benefits accounted for small
shares of crop production value, ranging from 2 percent to 5
percent.
U.S. farmers captured a much larger share (about a third) of the
benefits for Bt cotton than with herbicide-tolerant soybeans (20
percent) and herbicide-tolerant cotton (4 percent).
Innovators’ share ranged from 30 percent for Bt cotton to 68
percent for herbicide-tolerant soybeans. For herbicide-tolerant
cotton, U.S. consumers and the rest of the world (including both
producers and consumers) received the bulk of the estimated
benefits in 1997.
Estimated benefits and their distribution depend on the
specification of the analytical framework, supply and demand
elasticity assumptions, the inclusion of market and nonmarket
benefits, crops considered, and year-specific factors (such as
weather and pest infestation levels).
The complete publication is
at
http://www.ers.usda.gov/publications/tb1906/ |