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Question 2 A dairy cooperative certifies its farmers depending upon the quality of the milk delivered. There are 2 quali

Posted: Wed Mar 09, 2022 8:15 am
by answerhappygod
Question 2 A Dairy Cooperative Certifies Its Farmers Depending Upon The Quality Of The Milk Delivered There Are 2 Quali 1
Question 2 A Dairy Cooperative Certifies Its Farmers Depending Upon The Quality Of The Milk Delivered There Are 2 Quali 1 (80.74 KiB) Viewed 73 times
Question 2 A dairy cooperative certifies its farmers depending upon the quality of the milk delivered. There are 2 quality criteria; a) quality A-highest quality and earns an average premium to the dairy farmer of $7,500 b) quality B-average quality and results in an average annual return of $3,000 To improve the dairy herd health status and, consequently the possibility of obtaining a higher certification level, the farmer can join a herd health management program. There are three alternatives available to dairy farmer: 1. An intensive advisory program in which an expert will visit the farm on a monthly basis to discuss and support the herd health decisions of the farmer. The costs of this program are $3,500 annually. 2. A general support program in which the farmer can call for an expert visit twice a year. During those visits, the health status of the farm will be discussed and the farmer will receive accurate advice on how to improve the current health state of the herd. The cost is $750 per year. The probabilities of obtaining a given certification level A are 0.70 with the intensive program and 0.15 with the general support program. Thus, the respective probabilities of certification level Bare 0.30 (-1- 7) with the intensive and 0.85 with the general program. a. (10 marks) Calculate the net returns to quality A and quality B milk for each of the two support programs. b. (12 marks) Which support program would you recommend to the dairy farmer using the expected value approach? Explain. c. (15 marks) At what probability of obtaining an A quality from the intensive program would the dairy farmer be indifferent using the expected value approach between the two programs assuming all else stays the same?