Webinar on Costs and Incomes from Crop Production in India : A Report
Long-term trend in costs of cultivation data point to reduced [...]
Long-term trend in costs of cultivation data point to reduced [...]
“Indian agriculture is in the midst of a long-term problem [...]
In June 2023, we participated in the FAS-PARI survey of [...]
Although overlooked in the current policy framework, the consequences of [...]
“Agriculture in developing countries cannot be burdened with the cost [...]
The newly-released global food policy report of IFPRI titled "Building Inclusive Food Systems" has come at a critical juncture. The focus of the Report is on how to address inequality, and include poor and vulnerable individuals and households and communities in the food system.
The Book titled "How do Small Farmers Fare? Evidence from Village Studies" finds a place in the list of annotations that appear in the December 2017 issue of the Journal of Economic Literature (Vol. 55, No. 4).
The sequencing of chapters and their content ensures that the book emerges as a coherent whole rather than a disjointed set of contributions, often a feature of edited books. The data it uses has been collected through a socio-economic census of 17 villages located in different agro-ecological zones in nine large states of India.
This volume is a very important contribution to development studies in India and other parts of South and Southeast Asia. The dynamics of agriculture remain a critical factor in the social progress of these countries, and this careful and detailed research will provide a basis for constructing more effective development policies in India and elsewhere.
The book titled “How Do Small Farmers Fare: Evidence from Village Studies in India”, edited by Madhura Swaminathan and Sandipan Baksi, is a study of the small farm economy in India by the Foundation for Agrarian Studies.