Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Revitalizing Agriculture and Rural Development to Sustain Growth and Reduce Poverty Dina Umali-Deininger Lead Agriculture Economist, World Bank 1 Most of South Asia’s poor are in rural areas Where are South Asia's Poor? 5% 15% 23% 5% 27% 100% 80% 16% 60% 95% 85% 40% 95% 84% 77% 73% 20% 00 02 20 ut an Bh iL an ka 20 /0 5 Rural Poor (%) Sr n 20 04 00 3/ 04 Pa ki sta N ep al 2 4/ 05 20 0 di a In Ba ng l ad es h 20 05 0% Urban Poor (%) 2 Most of rural people and poor depend on agriculture Agriculture a major employer in South Asia, but contribution to economy is shrinking Agriculture in the Economy 100% 93% 80% 81% 80% 60% 52% 60% 58% 40% 40% 34% 14% 20% Ne pa l Pa kis ta n Sr iL an ka So ut h As ia es al di v M In di a Af gh an is ta Ba n ng la de sh Bh ut an 0% Agriculture as % of GDP 2003/06 Share of Labor Force in Agriculture 2000-03 India: Low labor productivity contributes to rural poverty Pun Ker Har WB Uttn Ass All India AP Kar Guj UP Mah TN Raj Oris MP Bih Jha Chh 0.0 Non Ag Ag 50.0 100.0 150.0 3 Labor Productivity, Rs 000/w orker 3 5% 3 0% 1800 Sri Lanka Exports, $ million (2000 prices) Sh ar e in H o us e ho ld E x p end itu re s ,% New opportunities: A “new agriculture” with dynamic demand 2 5% 2 0% 1 5% 1 0% 5% 0% Ric e 19 80 /81 W h eat pr od uc ts V e g & Fru its Me at, Milk,Fis h, Eg gs 1600 India 1990 2006 1400 1200 1000 800 600 400 200 0 Meat & Meat Products Fruit & Vegetables Coffee & Tea Fish & Fish Products 200 2 Rising consumer demand for high value crops and animal products Rising high value crops and animal products in exports 4 Challenges in Agriculture in South Asia • Slow down in agricultural productivity growth – < 3% per year, in context high rural poverty rate – Climate change: droughts, cyclones, floods – Leading to rising rural-urban & regional income disparities • Increasing land and water scarcity – Land degradation: erosion, over-extraction of groundwater, waterlogging • New demands on agriculture: – strict sanitary and phyto-sanitary standards • Health epidemics linked to agriculture – Avian flu, mad-cow disease 5 India: Slowdown in yield growth and large yield gaps in many states Slow down in progress in yields for 10 major crops With large gaps between potential and actual yields (2003-05) Technology Index 190.0 • 170.0 • 150.0 130.0 • 110.0 • 90.0 Need invest more in research 2002-03 2000-01 1998-99 1996-97 1994-95 1992-93 1990-91 1988-89 1986-87 1984-85 1982-83 1980-81 70.0 • Wheat: 6% (Punjab) to 84% (M.P.) Rice: Over 100% in Bihar and UP Maize: 7% (Gujarat) to 300% (Assam) Soybean: 7% (Rajasthan) to 185% (Karnataka) Sugarcane: 16% (A.P.) to 167% (M.P.) 6 Need invest more in extension Strategic priorities for Agriculture Ag Technology Enabling policy environment Water use Improving agric productivity and competitiveness INCLUSIVE GROWTH & POVERTY REDUCTION Land Income generation Rural Livelihood Development Sustainable Natural Resource Management Water Markets Social empowerment 7 Skills development A. Improving agricultural productivity & competitiveness 1. Rationalizing role of government Promoting more effective public expenditures Towards productivity enhancing investments: research, extension, irrigation, roads, electricity, markets, education Improving policy and regulatory environment Promoting PPP 7 Public Expenditures India Percent of Ag. GDP 6 5 Subsidies 75% 4 3 2 1 Public investments 25% 0 8 1975-79 1980-84 1985-89 1990-94 1995-99 2000-02 A. Improving agricultural productivity & competitiveness 2. Technology, innovation & markets Effective agricultural research and extension systems increase agricultural productivity and enable diversification to high value products (F&V, livestock, fisheries) by small farmers Link farmers to market, Promote value addition and value chain development Invest in rural infrastructure: roads, electrification, markets Foster producer associations, agribusiness development services 3. Water/Irrigation management Better irrigation service delivery Farmer participation in management thru WUAs, pricing, water regulatory authority Reduce losses better O&M of irrigation system, technology—drip irrigation 9 B.Sustainable Natural Resource Use Watershed Management Participatory and holistic approach to soil and water conservation at watershed level Land Reforming of land ownership and tenancy policies Improving land administration systems 10 C. Rural Livelihood Development Promote growth of Rural Non-farm economy Promote employment and investment opportunities improve rural investment climate, public-private partnerships Develop skills of rural people for employment in RNF Education, vocational training Help labor out of agriculture: requires massive investment in human capital 11 Challenges to making this happen • Government failures – Lack of financial resources – Inadequate capacity to implement programs effectively – Political economy: vested interests against reforms • Market failures: high costs of working with small/marginal farmers • Lack of awareness/knowledge of new approaches 12 Conclusion • Agricultural growth is critical to promoting rural growth and to reducing poverty in rural areas • Making this a reality requires commitment of all stakeholders— government, farmers, private sector, civil society 13