A melhor ferramenta para a sua pesquisa, trabalho e TCC!
Página 1 dos resultados de 3178 itens digitais encontrados em 0.106 segundos
‣ The Kyrgyz Republic : Farm Mechanization and Agricultural Productivity
Fonte: World Bank, Washington, DC and FAO, Rome
Publicador: World Bank, Washington, DC and FAO, Rome
Português
Relevância na Pesquisa
48.406025%
#ACCESS TO CREDIT#ADVISORY SERVICES#AFFORDABILITY#AGRARIAN REFORM#AGRIBUSINESS#AGRICULTURAL BUSINESS#AGRICULTURAL COOPERATIVES#AGRICULTURAL CREDIT#AGRICULTURAL CROPS#AGRICULTURAL INPUTS#AGRICULTURAL OUTPUT
This policy note reviewed the status of
farm machinery in the Kyrgyz Republic. Agricultural
productivity, particularly in terms of grain yields, is low
because of underinvestment. This note finds that a
significant deficit in agricultural machinery is hindering
sector productivity. The Kyrgyz Republic has fewer tractors
per hectare than any comparable country, with a deficit
estimated at 40 percent. The deficit of combine harvesters,
estimated at 45 percent, is even more critical. When the age
of agricultural machinery is taken into account, the
underinvestment becomes even more acute. The reduced
domestic production of wheat exacerbates food security
concerns. Inadequate access to credit and small farm size
are the main factors that constrain farm mechanization. The
policy note presents three sets of short- to medium-term
policy options to: i) promote the demand for farm machinery,
by developing credit lines for agricultural productive
assets, leasing, facilitating access to secondhand
equipment, and testing/demonstrating the efficiency of farm
machinery for small-scale farming; ii) increase the supply
of farm machinery...
Link permanente para citações:
‣ Agricultural systems of Papua New Guinea: Working Paper No.2. East Sepik Province: text summaries, maps, code lists and village identification
Fonte: The Australian National University
Publicador: The Australian National University
Tipo: Working/Technical Paper
Português
Relevância na Pesquisa
48.390605%
#Agricultural systems#Papua New Guinea#East Sepik Province#Agricultural mapping#Agricultural geography#subsistence agriculture#shifting cultivation#fallow#food supply#rural income sources#dietary recall
The major purpose of the Papua New Guinea Agricultural Systems Project is to produce information on small holder (subsistence) agriculture at provincial and national levels (Allen et al 1995). Information was collected by field observation, interviews with villagers and reference to published and unpublished documents. Methods are described by Bourke et al. (1993). This Working Paper contains a written summary of the information on the Agricultural Systems in this Province, maps of the location of agriculture systems, a complete listing of all information in the database in coded form, and lists of villages with National Population Census codes, indexed by agricultural systems. This information is available as a map-linked database (GIS) suitable for use on a personal computer in ESRI and MapInfo formats. An Agricultural System is identified when a set of similar agricultural crops and practices occur within a defined area. Six criteria are used to distinguish one system from another: 1. Fallow type (the vegetation which is cleared from a garden site before cultivation). 2. Fallow period (the length of time a garden site is left unused between cultivations). 3. Cultivation intensity (the number of consecutive crops planted before fallow). 4. The staple...
Link permanente para citações:
‣ Agricultural systems of Papua New Guinea: Working Paper No.3. West Sepik Province: Text summaries, maps, code lists and village identification
Fonte: The Australian National University
Publicador: The Australian National University
Tipo: Working/Technical Paper
Português
Relevância na Pesquisa
48.390605%
#agricultural systems#agricultural geography#agricultural mapping#Papua New Guinea#West Sepik Province#subsistence agriculture#shifting cultivation#fallow#food supply#rural income sources#dietary recall
The major purpose of the Papua New Guinea Agricultural Systems Project is to produce information on small holder (subsistence) agriculture at provincial and national levels (Allen et al 1995). Information was collected by field observation, interviews with villagers and reference to published and unpublished documents. Methods are described by Bourke et al. (1993). This Working Paper contains a written summary of the information on the Agricultural Systems in this Province, maps of the location of agriculture systems, a complete listing of all information in the database in coded form, and lists of villages with National Population Census codes, indexed by agricultural systems. This information is available as a map-linked database (GIS) suitable for use on a personal computer in ESRI and MapInfo formats. An Agricultural System is identified when a set of similar agricultural crops and practices occur within a defined area. Six criteria are used to distinguish one system from another: 1. Fallow type (the vegetation which is cleared from a garden site before cultivation). 2. Fallow period (the length of time a garden site is left unused between cultivations). 3. Cultivation intensity (the number of consecutive crops planted before fallow). 4. The staple...
Link permanente para citações:
‣ Agricultural systems of Papua New Guinea: Working Paper No.4. Western Province: text summaries, maps, code lists and village identification
Fonte: The Australian National University
Publicador: The Australian National University
Tipo: Working/Technical Paper
Português
Relevância na Pesquisa
48.390605%
#agricultural systems#agricultural geography#agricultural mapping#Papua New Guinea#Western Province#subsistence agriculture#shifting cultivation#fallow#food supply#rural income sources#dietary recall
The major purpose of the Papua New Guinea Agricultural Systems Project is to produce information on small holder (subsistence) agriculture at provincial and national levels (Allen et al 1995). Information was collected by field observation, interviews with villagers and reference to published and unpublished documents. Methods are described by Bourke et al. (1993). This Working Paper contains a written summary of the information on the Agricultural Systems in this Province, maps of the location of agriculture systems, a complete listing of all information in the database in coded form, and lists of villages with National Population Census codes, indexed by agricultural systems. This information is available as a map-linked database (GIS) suitable for use on a personal computer in ESRI and MapInfo formats. An Agricultural System is identified when a set of similar agricultural crops and practices occur within a defined area. Six criteria are used to distinguish one system from another: 1. Fallow type (the vegetation which is cleared from a garden site before cultivation). 2. Fallow period (the length of time a garden site is left unused between cultivations). 3. Cultivation intensity (the number of consecutive crops planted before fallow). 4. The staple...
Link permanente para citações:
‣ Agricultural systems of Papua New Guinea: Working Paper No.5. Gulf Province: text summaries, maps, code lists and village identification
Fonte: The Australian National University
Publicador: The Australian National University
Tipo: Working/Technical Paper
Português
Relevância na Pesquisa
48.390605%
#agricultural mapping#agricultural geography#agricultural systems#Papua New Guinea#Gulf Province#subsistence agriculture#shifting cultivation#fallow#food supply#rural income sources#dietary recall
The major purpose of the Papua New Guinea Agricultural Systems Project is to produce information on small holder (subsistence) agriculture at provincial and national levels (Allen et al 1995). Information was collected by field observation, interviews with villagers and reference to published and unpublished documents. Methods are described by Bourke et al. (1993). This Working Paper contains a written summary of the information on the Agricultural Systems in this Province, maps of the location of agriculture systems, a complete listing of all information in the database in coded form, and lists of villages with National Population Census codes, indexed by agricultural systems. This information is available as a map-linked database (GIS) suitable for use on a personal computer in ESRI and MapInfo formats. An Agricultural System is identified when a set of similar agricultural crops and practices occur within a defined area. Six criteria are used to distinguish one system from another: 1. Fallow type (the vegetation which is cleared from a garden site before cultivation). 2. Fallow period (the length of time a garden site is left unused between cultivations). 3. Cultivation intensity (the number of consecutive crops planted before fallow). 4. The staple...
Link permanente para citações:
‣ Agricultural systems of Papua New Guinea: Working Paper No.6. Milne Bay Province: Text summaries, maps, code lists and village identification
Fonte: The Australian National University
Publicador: The Australian National University
Tipo: Working/Technical Paper
Português
Relevância na Pesquisa
48.390605%
#agricultural systems#agricultural geography#agricultural mapping#Papua New Guinea#Milne Bay Province#subsistence agriculture#shifting cultivation#fallow#food supply#rural income sources#dietary recall
The major purpose of the Papua New Guinea Agricultural Systems Project is to produce information on small holder (subsistence) agriculture at provincial and national levels (Allen et al 1995). Information was collected by field observation, interviews with villagers and reference to published and unpublished documents. Methods are described by Bourke et al. (1993). This Working Paper contains a written summary of the information on the Agricultural Systems in this Province, maps of the location of agriculture systems, a complete listing of all information in the database in coded form, and lists of villages with National Population Census codes, indexed by agricultural systems. This information is available as a map-linked database (GIS) suitable for use on a personal computer in ESRI and MapInfo formats. An Agricultural System is identified when a set of similar agricultural crops and practices occur within a defined area. Six criteria are used to distinguish one system from another: 1. Fallow type (the vegetation which is cleared from a garden site before cultivation). 2. Fallow period (the length of time a garden site is left unused between cultivations). 3. Cultivation intensity (the number of consecutive crops planted before fallow). 4. The staple...
Link permanente para citações:
‣ Agricultural systems of Papua New Guinea: Working Paper No.7. Madang Province: Text summaries, maps, code lists and village identification
Fonte: The Australian National University
Publicador: The Australian National University
Tipo: Working/Technical Paper
Português
Relevância na Pesquisa
48.390605%
#agricultural systems#agricultural geography#agricultural mapping#Papua New Guinea#Madang Province#subsistence agriculture#shifting cultivation#fallow#food supply#rural income sources#dietary recall
The major purpose of the Papua New Guinea Agricultural Systems Project is to produce information on small holder (subsistence) agriculture at provincial and national levels (Allen et al 1995). Information was collected by field observation, interviews with villagers and reference to published and unpublished documents. Methods are described by Bourke et al. (1993). This Working Paper contains a written summary of the information on the Agricultural Systems in this Province, maps of the location of agriculture systems, a complete listing of all information in the database in coded form, and lists of villages with National Population Census codes, indexed by agricultural systems. This information is available as a map-linked database (GIS) suitable for use on a personal computer in ESRI and MapInfo formats. An Agricultural System is identified when a set of similar agricultural crops and practices occur within a defined area. Six criteria are used to distinguish one system from another: 1. Fallow type (the vegetation which is cleared from a garden site before cultivation). 2. Fallow period (the length of time a garden site is left unused between cultivations). 3. Cultivation intensity (the number of consecutive crops planted before fallow). 4. The staple...
Link permanente para citações:
‣ Agricultural systems of Papua New Guinea: Working Paper No.8. Eastern Highlands Province: Text summaries, maps, code lists and village identification
Fonte: The Australian National University
Publicador: The Australian National University
Tipo: Working/Technical Paper
Português
Relevância na Pesquisa
48.390605%
#agricultural systems#agricultural geography#agricultural mapping#Papua New Guinea#Eastern Highlands Province#subsistence agriculture#shifting cultivation#fallow#food supply#rural income sources#dietary recall
The major purpose of the Papua New Guinea Agricultural Systems Project is to produce information on small holder (subsistence) agriculture at provincial and national levels (Allen et al 1995). Information was collected by field observation, interviews with villagers and reference to published and unpublished documents. Methods are described by Bourke et al. (1993). This Working Paper contains a written summary of the information on the Agricultural Systems in this Province, maps of the location of agriculture systems, a complete listing of all information in the database in coded form, and lists of villages with National Population Census codes, indexed by agricultural systems. This information is available as a map-linked database (GIS) suitable for use on a personal computer in ESRI and MapInfo formats. An Agricultural System is identified when a set of similar agricultural crops and practices occur within a defined area. Six criteria are used to distinguish one system from another: 1. Fallow type (the vegetation which is cleared from a garden site before cultivation). 2. Fallow period (the length of time a garden site is left unused between cultivations). 3. Cultivation intensity (the number of consecutive crops planted before fallow). 4. The staple...
Link permanente para citações:
‣ Agricultural systems of Papua New Guinea: Working Paper No.9. Enga Province: Text summaries, maps, code lists and village identification
Fonte: Universidade Nacional da Austrália
Publicador: Universidade Nacional da Austrália
Tipo: Working/Technical Paper
Português
Relevância na Pesquisa
48.390605%
#agricultural systems#agricultural geography#agricultural mapping#Papua New Guinea#Enga Province#subsistence agriculture#shifting cultivation#fallow#food supply#rural income sources#dietary recall
The major purpose of the Papua New Guinea Agricultural Systems Project is to produce information on small holder (subsistence) agriculture at provincial and national levels (Allen et al 1995). Information was collected by field observation, interviews with villagers and reference to published and unpublished documents. Methods are described by Bourke et al. (1993). This Working Paper contains a written summary of the information on the Agricultural Systems in this Province, maps of the location of agriculture systems, a complete listing of all information in the database in coded form, and lists of villages with National Population Census codes, indexed by agricultural systems. This information is available as a map-linked database (GIS) suitable for use on a personal computer in ESRI and MapInfo formats. An Agricultural System is identified when a set of similar agricultural crops and practices occur within a defined area. Six criteria are used to distinguish one system from another: 1. Fallow type (the vegetation which is cleared from a garden site before cultivation). 2. Fallow period (the length of time a garden site is left unused between cultivations). 3. Cultivation intensity (the number of consecutive crops planted before fallow). 4. The staple...
Link permanente para citações:
‣ Agricultural systems of Papua New Guinea: Working Paper No.10. Western Highlands Province: Text summaries, maps, code lists and village identification
Fonte: The Australian National University
Publicador: The Australian National University
Tipo: Working/Technical Paper
Português
Relevância na Pesquisa
48.390605%
#agricultural mapping#agricultural geography#agricultural systems#Papua New Guinea#Western Highlands Province#subsistence agriculture#shifting cultivation#fallow#food supply#rural income sources#dietary recall
The major purpose of the Papua New Guinea Agricultural Systems Project is to produce information on small holder (subsistence) agriculture at provincial and national levels (Allen et al 1995). Information was collected by field observation, interviews with villagers and reference to published and unpublished documents. Methods are described by Bourke et al. (1993). This Working Paper contains a written summary of the information on the Agricultural Systems in this Province, maps of the location of agriculture systems, a complete listing of all information in the database in coded form, and lists of villages with National Population Census codes, indexed by agricultural systems. This information is available as a map-linked database (GIS) suitable for use on a personal computer in ESRI and MapInfo formats. An Agricultural System is identified when a set of similar agricultural crops and practices occur within a defined area. Six criteria are used to distinguish one system from another: 1. Fallow type (the vegetation which is cleared from a garden site before cultivation). 2. Fallow period (the length of time a garden site is left unused between cultivations). 3. Cultivation intensity (the number of consecutive crops planted before fallow). 4. The staple...
Link permanente para citações:
‣ Agricultural systems of Papua New Guinea: Working Paper No.11. Southern Highlands Province: Text summaries, maps, code lists and village identification
Fonte: Universidade Nacional da Austrália
Publicador: Universidade Nacional da Austrália
Tipo: Working/Technical Paper
Português
Relevância na Pesquisa
48.390605%
#agricultural mapping#agricultural geography#agricultural systems#Papua New Guinea#Southern Highlands Province#subsistence agriculture#shifting cultivation#fallow#food supply#rural income sources#dietary recall
The major purpose of the Papua New Guinea Agricultural Systems Project is to produce information on small holder (subsistence) agriculture at provincial and national levels (Allen et al 1995). Information was collected by field observation, interviews with villagers and reference to published and unpublished documents. Methods are described by Bourke et al. (1993). This Working Paper contains a written summary of the information on the Agricultural Systems in this Province, maps of the location of agriculture systems, a complete listing of all information in the database in coded form, and lists of villages with National Population Census codes, indexed by agricultural systems. This information is available as a map-linked database (GIS) suitable for use on a personal computer in ESRI and MapInfo formats. An Agricultural System is identified when a set of similar agricultural crops and practices occur within a defined area. Six criteria are used to distinguish one system from another: 1. Fallow type (the vegetation which is cleared from a garden site before cultivation). 2. Fallow period (the length of time a garden site is left unused between cultivations). 3. Cultivation intensity (the number of consecutive crops planted before fallow). 4. The staple...
Link permanente para citações:
‣ Agricultural systems of Papua New Guinea: Working Paper No.12. Chimbu Province: Text summaries, maps, code lists and village identification
Fonte: The Australian National University
Publicador: The Australian National University
Tipo: Working/Technical Paper
Português
Relevância na Pesquisa
48.390605%
#agricultural systems#agricultural geography#agricultural mapping#Papua New Guinea#Chimbu Province#subsistence agriculture#shifting cultivation#fallow#food supply#rural income sources#dietary recall
The major purpose of the Papua New Guinea Agricultural Systems Project is to produce information on small holder (subsistence) agriculture at provincial and national levels (Allen et al 1995). Information was collected by field observation, interviews with villagers and reference to published and unpublished documents. Methods are described by Bourke et al. (1993). This Working Paper contains a written summary of the information on the Agricultural Systems in this Province, maps of the location of agriculture systems, a complete listing of all information in the database in coded form, and lists of villages with National Population Census codes, indexed by agricultural systems. This information is available as a map-linked database (GIS) suitable for use on a personal computer in ESRI and MapInfo formats. An Agricultural System is identified when a set of similar agricultural crops and practices occur within a defined area. Six criteria are used to distinguish one system from another: 1. Fallow type (the vegetation which is cleared from a garden site before cultivation). 2. Fallow period (the length of time a garden site is left unused between cultivations). 3. Cultivation intensity (the number of consecutive crops planted before fallow). 4. The staple...
Link permanente para citações:
‣ Agricultural systems of Papua New Guinea: Working Paper No.13. West New Britain Province: Text summaries, maps, code lists and village identification
Fonte: The Australian National University
Publicador: The Australian National University
Tipo: Working/Technical Paper
Português
Relevância na Pesquisa
48.390605%
#agricultural mapping#agricultural geography#Agricultural systems#Papua New Guinea#West New Britain Province#subsistence agriculture#shifting cultivation#fallow#food supply#rural income sources#dietary recall
The major purpose of the Papua New Guinea Agricultural Systems Project is to produce information on small holder (subsistence) agriculture at provincial and national levels (Allen et al 1995). Information was collected by field observation, interviews with villagers and reference to published and unpublished documents. Methods are described by Bourke et al. (1993). This Working Paper contains a written summary of the information on the Agricultural Systems in this Province, maps of the location of agriculture systems, a complete listing of all information in the database in coded form, and lists of villages with National Population Census codes, indexed by agricultural systems. This information is available as a map-linked database (GIS) suitable for use on a personal computer in ESRI and MapInfo formats. An Agricultural System is identified when a set of similar agricultural crops and practices occur within a defined area. Six criteria are used to distinguish one system from another: 1. Fallow type (the vegetation which is cleared from a garden site before cultivation). 2. Fallow period (the length of time a garden site is left unused between cultivations). 3. Cultivation intensity (the number of consecutive crops planted before fallow). 4. The staple...
Link permanente para citações:
‣ Agricultural systems of Papua New Guinea: Working Paper No.14. East New Britain Province: Text summaries, maps, code lists and village identification
Fonte: The Australian National University
Publicador: The Australian National University
Tipo: Working/Technical Paper
Português
Relevância na Pesquisa
48.390605%
#agricultural mapping#agricultural geography#agricultural systems#Papua New Guinea#East New Britain Province#subsistence agriculture#shifting cultivation#fallow#food supply#rural income sources#dietary recall
The major purpose of the Papua New Guinea Agricultural Systems Project is to produce information on small holder (subsistence) agriculture at provincial and national levels (Allen et al 1995). Information was collected by field observation, interviews with villagers and reference to published and unpublished documents. Methods are described by Bourke et al. (1993). This Working Paper contains a written summary of the information on the Agricultural Systems in this Province, maps of the location of agriculture systems, a complete listing of all information in the database in coded form, and lists of villages with National Population Census codes, indexed by agricultural systems. This information is available as a map-linked database (GIS) suitable for use on a personal computer in ESRI and MapInfo formats. An Agricultural System is identified when a set of similar agricultural crops and practices occur within a defined area. Six criteria are used to distinguish one system from another: 1. Fallow type (the vegetation which is cleared from a garden site before cultivation). 2. Fallow period (the length of time a garden site is left unused between cultivations). 3. Cultivation intensity (the number of consecutive crops planted before fallow). 4. The staple...
Link permanente para citações:
‣ Agricultural systems of Papua New Guinea: Working Paper No.15. Central Province: Text summaries, maps, code lists and village identification
Fonte: The Australian National University
Publicador: The Australian National University
Tipo: Working/Technical Paper
Português
Relevância na Pesquisa
48.390605%
#agricultural mapping#agricultural geography#Agricultural systems#Papua New Guinea#Central Province#subsistence agriculture#shifting cultivation#fallow#food supply#rural income sources#dietary recall
The major purpose of the Papua New Guinea Agricultural Systems Project is to produce information on small holder (subsistence) agriculture at provincial and national levels (Allen et al 1995). Information was collected by field observation, interviews with villagers and reference to published and unpublished documents. Methods are described by Bourke et al. (1993). This Working Paper contains a written summary of the information on the Agricultural Systems in this Province, maps of the location of agriculture systems, a complete listing of all information in the database in coded form, and lists of villages with National Population Census codes, indexed by agricultural systems. This information is available as a map-linked database (GIS) suitable for use on a personal computer in ESRI and MapInfo formats. An Agricultural System is identified when a set of similar agricultural crops and practices occur within a defined area. Six criteria are used to distinguish one system from another: 1. Fallow type (the vegetation which is cleared from a garden site before cultivation). 2. Fallow period (the length of time a garden site is left unused between cultivations). 3. Cultivation intensity (the number of consecutive crops planted before fallow). 4. The staple...
Link permanente para citações:
‣ Agricultural systems of Papua New Guinea: Working Paper No.16. Northern Province: Text summaries, maps, code lists and village identification
Fonte: The Australian National University
Publicador: The Australian National University
Tipo: Working/Technical Paper
Português
Relevância na Pesquisa
48.390605%
#agricultural mapping#agricultural geography#agricultural systems#Papua New Guinea#Northern Province#subsistence agriculture#shifting cultivation#fallow#food supply#rural income sources#dietary recall
The major purpose of the Papua New Guinea Agricultural Systems Project is to produce information on small holder (subsistence) agriculture at provincial and national levels (Allen et al 1995). Information was collected by field observation, interviews with villagers and reference to published and unpublished documents. Methods are described by Bourke et al. (1993). This Working Paper contains a written summary of the information on the Agricultural Systems in this Province, maps of the location of agriculture systems, a complete listing of all information in the database in coded form, and lists of villages with National Population Census codes, indexed by agricultural systems. This information is available as a map-linked database (GIS) suitable for use on a personal computer in ESRI and MapInfo formats. An Agricultural System is identified when a set of similar agricultural crops and practices occur within a defined area. Six criteria are used to distinguish one system from another: 1. Fallow type (the vegetation which is cleared from a garden site before cultivation). 2. Fallow period (the length of time a garden site is left unused between cultivations). 3. Cultivation intensity (the number of consecutive crops planted before fallow). 4. The staple...
Link permanente para citações:
‣ Agricultural systems of Papua New Guinea: Working Paper No.17. New Ireland Province: Text summaries, maps, code lists and village identification
Fonte: The Australian National University
Publicador: The Australian National University
Tipo: Artigo de Revista Científica
Português
Relevância na Pesquisa
48.390605%
#agricultural mapping#agricultural geography#Agricultural systems#Papua New Guinea#New Ireland Province#subsistence agriculture#shifting cultivation#fallow#food supply#rural income sources#dietary recall
The major purpose of the Papua New Guinea Agricultural Systems Project is to produce information on small holder (subsistence) agriculture at provincial and national levels (Allen et al 1995). Information was collected by field observation, interviews with villagers and reference to published and unpublished documents. Methods are described by Bourke et al. (1993). This Working Paper contains a written summary of the information on the Agricultural Systems in this Province, maps of the location of agriculture systems, a complete listing of all information in the database in coded form, and lists of villages with National Population Census codes, indexed by agricultural systems. This information is available as a map-linked database (GIS) suitable for use on a personal computer in ESRI and MapInfo formats. An Agricultural System is identified when a set of similar agricultural crops and practices occur within a defined area. Six criteria are used to distinguish one system from another: 1. Fallow type (the vegetation which is cleared from a garden site before cultivation). 2. Fallow period (the length of time a garden site is left unused between cultivations). 3. Cultivation intensity (the number of consecutive crops planted before fallow). 4. The staple...
Link permanente para citações:
‣ Agricultural systems of Papua New Guinea: Working Paper No.18. Manus Province: Text summaries, maps, code lists and village identification
Fonte: The Australian National University
Publicador: The Australian National University
Tipo: Working/Technical Paper
Português
Relevância na Pesquisa
48.390605%
#agricultural mapping#agricultural geography#agricultural systems#Papua New Guinea#Manus Province#subsistence agriculture#shifting cultivation#fallow#food supply#rural income sources#dietary recall
The major purpose of the Papua New Guinea Agricultural Systems Project is to produce information on small holder (subsistence) agriculture at provincial and national levels (Allen et al 1995). Information was collected by field observation, interviews with villagers and reference to published and unpublished documents. Methods are described by Bourke et al. (1993). This Working Paper contains a written summary of the information on the Agricultural Systems in this Province, maps of the location of agriculture systems, a complete listing of all information in the database in coded form, and lists of villages with National Population Census codes, indexed by agricultural systems. This information is available as a map-linked database (GIS) suitable for use on a personal computer in ESRI and MapInfo formats. An Agricultural System is identified when a set of similar agricultural crops and practices occur within a defined area. Six criteria are used to distinguish one system from another: 1. Fallow type (the vegetation which is cleared from a garden site before cultivation). 2. Fallow period (the length of time a garden site is left unused between cultivations). 3. Cultivation intensity (the number of consecutive crops planted before fallow). 4. The staple...
Link permanente para citações:
‣ Mozambique Agricultural Sector Risk Assessment; Risk Prioritization
Fonte: World Bank, Washington, DC
Publicador: World Bank, Washington, DC
Tipo: Working Paper; Publications & Research; Publications & Research :: Working Paper
Português
Relevância na Pesquisa
48.49066%
#FERTILIZER#CASSAVA PESTS#SORGHUM#BEANS#GROUNDNUT PRODUCTION#YIELD LOSS#COPRA#PESTICIDE#LABOR FORCE#CASSAVA#SEED MULTIPLICATION
Agricultural risk management is a
central issue that Mozambique faces in development, and
multiple stakeholders have analyzed this challenge,
sometimes with different terminology and focusing on varying
aspects. The government of Mozambique has adopted the
strategic plan for agricultural development (PEDSA 2010-19)
that focuses on: (i) increasing the availability of food in
order to reduce hunger through growth in small producer
productivity and emergency response capacity; (ii) enlarging
the land area under sustainable management and the number of
reliable water management systems; (iii) increasing access
to the market through improved infrastructures and
interventions in marketing; and (iv) improving research and
extension for increased adoption of appropriate technologies
by producers and agro-processors. The World Bank’s
agriculture sector risk assessment takes a holistic approach
and relies on long time-series historical data to arrive at
an empirical and objective assessment of agricultural risks
and their impacts on Mozambique. This assessment will form
the basis of the second step...
Link permanente para citações:
‣ The Costs and Profitability of Tobacco Compared to Other Crops in Zimbabwe
Fonte: World Bank, Washington, DC
Publicador: World Bank, Washington, DC
Tipo: Publications & Research :: Working Paper; Publications & Research
Português
Relevância na Pesquisa
48.437065%
#TOBACCO INDUSTRY#COST-BENEFIT ANALYSIS#CROP YIELDS#PROFITABILITY#MAIZE#COTTON#GROUNDNUTS#SOYBEANS#WHEAT#COFFEE#NONTRADITIONAL EXPORTS
This study compares the financial costs
and returns to tobacco growing with twelve (traditional and
non-traditional) alternative crops, looking at
profitability, costs, labor intensity, financial support,
technical infrastructure, land-suitability, marketing
difficulties, world demand, and production risks. It aims to
provide an improved understanding of the trade-offs farmers
face in deciding what crops to grow. The analysis is based
on an original set of 91 production budgets estimated in
January 2001 specifically for this study. The study finds
that tobacco is a highly profitable cash crop for both large
and small farmers. however even if global demand for tobacco
were to fall significantly in the future, the impact on
employment and the broader economy would depend on the
extent to which commercial farmers were able to switch to
other high value export crops. Changes in Zimbabwe's
land policy in 2001/2002 are likely to have a much larger
impact on tobacco growing and exports and on the economy
than demand-induced changes in the global market for tobacco.
Link permanente para citações: