Full Text (PDF)
Original Article

Profitability Analysis of Sericulture Enterprise: A Comprehensive assessment for Diversifying Farm Income

S. M Vanitha, B. V. Chinnappa Reddy, Nalina C. N

Author Information

Licence:
Attribution-Non-commercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0)

This license enables re-users to distribute, remix, adapt, and build upon the material in any medium or format for noncommercial purposes only, and only so long as attribution is given to the creator. 


Indian Journal of Agriculture Business 10(1):p 15-20, 2024-06-05. | DOI: http://dx. doi. org/10. 21088/ijab.2454.7964.10124.2
How Cite This Article:
S. M Vanitha, B. V. Chinnappa Reddy, Nalina C. N. Profitability Analysis of Sericulture Enterprise: A Comprehensive assessment for Diversifying Farm Income. Ind. J Agri Busi 2024;10(1):15–21.

Received : February 19, 2024         Accepted : March 29, 2024          Published : June 05, 2024

Abstract

Agriculture farm enterprises comprise of cultivation of multiple crops such as field crops (cereals and millets), horticultural crops (fruits, vegetables, flowers and plantation crops) and commercial crops (cotton and sugarcane) etc., along with sericulture (mulberry), livestock, poultry etc. Diversification in agriculture reduces income risk to farmers and increases the returns. This study was conducted in the selected 3 taluks/blocks of Kolar district in Eastern Dry Zone of Karnataka. Agriculture and allied enterprises comprising dairy and livestock, sericulture and crops such as tomato, cabbage, carrot, mango, beans, potato, marigold, cotton, ragi etc. was a common practice in the study area. Different sources of income of the sample farmers and the risk involved in them were analyzed and tabulated. The least risk was in sericulture at 64. 55 percent in Malur taluk followed by 57. 73 percent in Mulbagal and 7 percent from Srinivasapura taluk. It showed that income from sericulture was significant and a rise led to the decrease in income risk for farmers. The cost and returns of sericulture enterprise is divided into two parts namely mulberry cultivation and silkworm cocoon rearing. The average area under mulberry cultivation was 1. 88, 1. 42 and 2. 00 acres growing V-1 variety of mulberry in Malur, Mulbagal and Srinivaspura taluks, respectively. The total cost per crop of mulberry was lowest at Rs. 46875 in Mulbagal taluk followed by Rs. 58137 in Malur taluk and Rs. 58822 in Srinivaspura taluk (2016-17 prices). On an average, four crops were taken up in a year. The average shed size for rearing silk worms was 1400 sq. ft. in Malur taluk, 375 sq. ft. in Mulbagal talukand 600 sq. ft. in Srinivaspura taluk. The total cost of rearing one cycle of silkworm was Rs. 66354, Rs. 65621 and Rs. 60786 in Malur, Mulbagal and Srinivaspura taluks, respectively. Average cocoon yield was 280, 300 and 240 kgs with a total return of Rs. 61600, Rs. 54000 and Rs. 38400 in Malur, Mulbagal and Srinivaspura taluks, respectively. On an average, 2 rearing in Malur, 4 and 5 rearing in Mulbagal and Srinivaspura taluks were taken up. The total net return per year was Rs. 34044, Rs. 84418 and Rs. 57318 in the respective taluks. The return per rupee of expenditure was 1. 38, 1. 64 and 1. 43 in Malur, Mulbagal and Srinivaspura taluks, respectively. Therefore, sericulture income has lower Coefficient of Variation because of the stability in the flow of income. Thus it can be inferred that inclusion of sericulture enterprise along with crop cultivation leads to stability in farm income.


References
  • 1.   Gajanan T M and Sharma B M. Farm planning under risk-MOTAD approach. Indian J. Econ. 1994;75(1): 93-110.
  • 2.   MaharjanA. Risk minimizing crop production strategy for northern dry zone of Karnataka. M. Sc. (Agri. ) Thesis, University of Agricultural Science, Dharwad. 2002.
  • 3.   Krishnakumare B, Niranjan S, andSnehadohare. Agribusiness potential of sericulture in Karnataka. International Journal of Commerce and Business Management. 2017; 10(1): 42-47.
  • 4.   Lyaqat Ali, S KKher, P S Slathia, L K Sharma, PawanKumar Sharma and Sandeep Kumar. Maharashtra Jn. of Agril. Economics. 2017; 20 (2): 150-153.
  • 5.   Todmal S B, Khalache P G, Gaikwad J H and Jadhav R M. A study of the profile and knowledge of thesericulturists about sericulture production technologies. Agriculture Update. 2013;8(1&2):278-282.
  • 6.   Lakshmanan S. Impact of technological changes on income opportunities in mulberry sericulture an economic analysis. Journal of agricultural economics. 2010; 7(3):75-84.
  • 7.   Balakrishnappa Y K and Rajan R K. Study on socioeconomic factors of different categories of sericulturists on bivoltine sericulture technologies in Karnataka. Research Journal of Agricultural sciences. 2010;1(40): 380-384.
  • 8.   Babu C M,Dandin S B and Swamy T T. Comparative economics of mulberry cultivation under different inputs of organic farming. Indian Journal of sericulture. 2011;50(1): 9-15.
  • 9.   Vassalo M, Dillon C R and Coolong T. Optimal land allocation and production timing for fresh vegetable growers under price and production uncertainty. J. Agric. Appl. Econ. 2013;45(4): 683- 699.
  • 10.   Zen S, Peres F Cand Barros G S C. Diversification as a form of risk management in agriculture. Paper presented at the 14th International farm management congress, Western Australia, Burswood convention centre, Perth. 2003.

Funding


Author Information

Authors and Affiliatione

  • S. M Vanitha
    ICAR-IISWC, Research Centre Udhagamandalam, India
  • B. V. Chinnappa Reddy
    College of Sericulture, India
  • Nalina C. N
    College of Sericulture, India

Conflicts of Interest

Supplementary Information

Below is the link to the supplementary material.


Rights and Permissions



About this article


Cite this article

S. M Vanitha, B. V. Chinnappa Reddy, Nalina C. N. Profitability Analysis of Sericulture Enterprise: A Comprehensive assessment for Diversifying Farm Income. Ind. J Agri Busi 2024;10(1):15–21.


Licence:
Attribution-Non-commercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0)

This license enables re-users to distribute, remix, adapt, and build upon the material in any medium or format for noncommercial purposes only, and only so long as attribution is given to the creator. 


Download citation

Received Accepted Published
February 19, 2024 March 29, 2024 June 05, 2024
DOI: http://dx. doi. org/10. 21088/ijab.2454.7964.10124.2
Keywords Sericulture; Mulberry; Farm income; Enterprise; Profit.SericultureMulberryFarm incomeEnterpriseProfit

Article Level Metrics

Last Updated

Sunday 08 June 2025, 02:07:14 (IST)


96

Accesses

00
0
00

Citations


22
11
23

View full article metrics including social shares, article views and publishing history


Article Keywords


Keyword Highlighting

Highlight selected keywords in the article text.


Timeline


Received February 19, 2024
Accepted March 29, 2024
Published June 05, 2024

licence


Attribution-Non-commercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0)

This license enables re-users to distribute, remix, adapt, and build upon the material in any medium or format for noncommercial purposes only, and only so long as attribution is given to the creator. 


Access this article

Open access


Share