Ateka, Josiah M.Onono, Perez A.Etyang, Martin2019-05-132019-05-132018Global Journal of Science Frontier Research: Agriculture and Veterinary Volume 18 Issue 32249-4626http://ir-library.ku.ac.ke/handle/123456789/19461Research ArticleThe smallholder tea sub-sector in Kenya has enjoyed relative growth in acreage, output, and number of growers since its inception in the early 1960s, but productivity has remained low. There are huge differentials between actual and potential yields suggesting underlying production inefficiencies. This study estimated the level of technical efficiency and analyzed its determinants among tea farmers from two selected counties in Kenya. Using data from a sample of 525 farm households, the non-parametric data envelopment analysis was applied to estimate technical efficiency scores. The scores were then regressed on a set of explanatory variables to establish their influence on efficiency. The average efficiency score of 0.46 indicates that overall productivity in Kenya’s smallholder tea sub-sector is low but has a potential to increase if most of the farmers can adopt practices of the frontier farms. The intensity of family labor use, farm size, age of the tea farm, education level of the household head, access to extension services through the farmer field schools, and the sale of green leaf through alternative marketing channels have a significant influence on levels of efficiency.enSmallholderTea productionTechnical efficiencyDeterminantsFractional regressionTechnical efficiency and its determinants in smallholder tea production: Evidence from Nyamira and Bomet Counties in KenyaArticle