Marketable surplus and marketed surplus definition
Answers
Answer:
marketable surplus is produce that a farmer currently has on hand to take to market to earn a profit,
while marketed surplus is what she has already taken to market to earn a profit.
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The principal difference is time perspective: marketable surplus is produce that a farmer currently has on hand to take to market to earn a profit, while marketed surplus is what she has already taken to market to earn a profit.
Term that closely relates to marketable surplus is marketed surplus. In some cases, these terms may be interchangeable. The principal difference is time perspective: marketable surplus is produce that a farmer currently has on hand to take to market to earn a profit, while marketed surplus is what she has already taken to market to earn a profit.
How do you calculate marketable surplus?
Marketable Surplus=Net availability of the Crop in the year–Retention including all seed feed and wastage – Purchases. The marketable surplus differs from region to region and within the same region, from crop to crop. It also varies from farm to farm.
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