Tropical and subtropical maize in Asia: production systems, constraints, and research priorities

This book examines future technological and policy prospects for the sustainable intensification of rainfed upland maize production in Asia, and derives R&D priorities for specific maize production environments and markets. Village-level and farmer-group surveys were conducted to characterize upland maize production environments and systems in China, India, Indonesia, Nepal, the Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam. Survey findings, particularly farmer-identified constraints to maize production, complemented with other relevant data, were used in country-level, R&D priority-setting workshops. High on the list of farmer constraints was drought, estimated to affect three production environments that are home to about 48 million rural poor and produce an estimated 16 million tons of maize, and others such as downy mildew, stem borers, soil erosion/landslides, waterlogging, poor agricultural extension/ technology transfer services, and poor access to low-interest credit and markets. Farmers felt that socioeconomic and policy-related constraints impact maize productivity more than technical constraints do. It is important to recognize that technology is not the only key to increasing productivity and bettering the conditions of marginal maize farmers in Asia. There is a growing trend towards commercializing and intensifying maize production that is different from the staple food self-sufficiency paradigm that has been the cornerstone of agricultural policy in most developing countries. Appropriate government policies could help alleviate the adverse consequences of commercialization and promote sustainable intensification of maize production, especially in marginal environments inhabited by resource-poor subsistence farmers.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gerpacio, R.V., Pingali, P.L.
Format: Book biblioteca
Language:English
Published: CIMMYT 2007
Subjects:AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY, MAIZE, AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT, FARMING SYSTEMS, PRODUCTION POLICIES, ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS, CROPPING SYSTEMS, RESEARCH PROJECTS, PROJECT MANAGEMENT,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10883/800
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-cimmyt-10883-800
record_format koha
spelling dig-cimmyt-10883-8002021-02-09T18:25:23Z Tropical and subtropical maize in Asia: production systems, constraints, and research priorities Gerpacio, R.V. Pingali, P.L. AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY MAIZE AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT FARMING SYSTEMS PRODUCTION POLICIES ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS CROPPING SYSTEMS RESEARCH PROJECTS PROJECT MANAGEMENT MAIZE AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT FARMING SYSTEMS PRODUCTION POLICIES ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS CROPPING SYSTEMS RESEARCH PROJECTS PROJECT MANAGEMENT This book examines future technological and policy prospects for the sustainable intensification of rainfed upland maize production in Asia, and derives R&D priorities for specific maize production environments and markets. Village-level and farmer-group surveys were conducted to characterize upland maize production environments and systems in China, India, Indonesia, Nepal, the Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam. Survey findings, particularly farmer-identified constraints to maize production, complemented with other relevant data, were used in country-level, R&D priority-setting workshops. High on the list of farmer constraints was drought, estimated to affect three production environments that are home to about 48 million rural poor and produce an estimated 16 million tons of maize, and others such as downy mildew, stem borers, soil erosion/landslides, waterlogging, poor agricultural extension/ technology transfer services, and poor access to low-interest credit and markets. Farmers felt that socioeconomic and policy-related constraints impact maize productivity more than technical constraints do. It is important to recognize that technology is not the only key to increasing productivity and bettering the conditions of marginal maize farmers in Asia. There is a growing trend towards commercializing and intensifying maize production that is different from the staple food self-sufficiency paradigm that has been the cornerstone of agricultural policy in most developing countries. Appropriate government policies could help alleviate the adverse consequences of commercialization and promote sustainable intensification of maize production, especially in marginal environments inhabited by resource-poor subsistence farmers. 93 pages 2012-01-06T04:37:40Z 2012-01-06T04:37:40Z 2007 Book 978-970-648-155-9 http://hdl.handle.net/10883/800 English CIMMYT manages Intellectual Assets as International Public Goods. The user is free to download, print, store and share this work. In case you want to translate or create any other derivative work and share or distribute such translation/derivative work, please contact CIMMYT-Knowledge-Center@cgiar.org indicating the work you want to use and the kind of use you intend; CIMMYT will contact you with the suitable license for that purpose. Open Access PDF Asia Mexico CIMMYT
institution CIMMYT
collection DSpace
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cimmyt
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname CIMMYT Library
language English
topic AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
MAIZE
AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT
FARMING SYSTEMS
PRODUCTION POLICIES
ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS
CROPPING SYSTEMS
RESEARCH PROJECTS
PROJECT MANAGEMENT
MAIZE
AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT
FARMING SYSTEMS
PRODUCTION POLICIES
ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS
CROPPING SYSTEMS
RESEARCH PROJECTS
PROJECT MANAGEMENT
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
MAIZE
AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT
FARMING SYSTEMS
PRODUCTION POLICIES
ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS
CROPPING SYSTEMS
RESEARCH PROJECTS
PROJECT MANAGEMENT
MAIZE
AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT
FARMING SYSTEMS
PRODUCTION POLICIES
ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS
CROPPING SYSTEMS
RESEARCH PROJECTS
PROJECT MANAGEMENT
spellingShingle AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
MAIZE
AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT
FARMING SYSTEMS
PRODUCTION POLICIES
ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS
CROPPING SYSTEMS
RESEARCH PROJECTS
PROJECT MANAGEMENT
MAIZE
AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT
FARMING SYSTEMS
PRODUCTION POLICIES
ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS
CROPPING SYSTEMS
RESEARCH PROJECTS
PROJECT MANAGEMENT
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
MAIZE
AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT
FARMING SYSTEMS
PRODUCTION POLICIES
ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS
CROPPING SYSTEMS
RESEARCH PROJECTS
PROJECT MANAGEMENT
MAIZE
AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT
FARMING SYSTEMS
PRODUCTION POLICIES
ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS
CROPPING SYSTEMS
RESEARCH PROJECTS
PROJECT MANAGEMENT
Gerpacio, R.V.
Pingali, P.L.
Tropical and subtropical maize in Asia: production systems, constraints, and research priorities
description This book examines future technological and policy prospects for the sustainable intensification of rainfed upland maize production in Asia, and derives R&D priorities for specific maize production environments and markets. Village-level and farmer-group surveys were conducted to characterize upland maize production environments and systems in China, India, Indonesia, Nepal, the Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam. Survey findings, particularly farmer-identified constraints to maize production, complemented with other relevant data, were used in country-level, R&D priority-setting workshops. High on the list of farmer constraints was drought, estimated to affect three production environments that are home to about 48 million rural poor and produce an estimated 16 million tons of maize, and others such as downy mildew, stem borers, soil erosion/landslides, waterlogging, poor agricultural extension/ technology transfer services, and poor access to low-interest credit and markets. Farmers felt that socioeconomic and policy-related constraints impact maize productivity more than technical constraints do. It is important to recognize that technology is not the only key to increasing productivity and bettering the conditions of marginal maize farmers in Asia. There is a growing trend towards commercializing and intensifying maize production that is different from the staple food self-sufficiency paradigm that has been the cornerstone of agricultural policy in most developing countries. Appropriate government policies could help alleviate the adverse consequences of commercialization and promote sustainable intensification of maize production, especially in marginal environments inhabited by resource-poor subsistence farmers.
format Book
topic_facet AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
MAIZE
AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT
FARMING SYSTEMS
PRODUCTION POLICIES
ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS
CROPPING SYSTEMS
RESEARCH PROJECTS
PROJECT MANAGEMENT
MAIZE
AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT
FARMING SYSTEMS
PRODUCTION POLICIES
ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS
CROPPING SYSTEMS
RESEARCH PROJECTS
PROJECT MANAGEMENT
author Gerpacio, R.V.
Pingali, P.L.
author_facet Gerpacio, R.V.
Pingali, P.L.
author_sort Gerpacio, R.V.
title Tropical and subtropical maize in Asia: production systems, constraints, and research priorities
title_short Tropical and subtropical maize in Asia: production systems, constraints, and research priorities
title_full Tropical and subtropical maize in Asia: production systems, constraints, and research priorities
title_fullStr Tropical and subtropical maize in Asia: production systems, constraints, and research priorities
title_full_unstemmed Tropical and subtropical maize in Asia: production systems, constraints, and research priorities
title_sort tropical and subtropical maize in asia: production systems, constraints, and research priorities
publisher CIMMYT
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/10883/800
work_keys_str_mv AT gerpaciorv tropicalandsubtropicalmaizeinasiaproductionsystemsconstraintsandresearchpriorities
AT pingalipl tropicalandsubtropicalmaizeinasiaproductionsystemsconstraintsandresearchpriorities
_version_ 1756086306375467008