Economic importance of cotton in Burkina Faso

This report investigated the role that cotton production has played in the economic development and poverty reduction in Burkina Faso, with a principal focus on how cotton prices, as a proxy to agricultural income, affects economic growth. Findings suggest that while cotton contributes to modest rates of economic growth, the lack of profitable investment opportunities in the industrial and service sectors limit agriculture’s growth potential. The artificially low prices paid to Burkinabe cotton producers suppress farm income and constrain the long–term buildup of investment capital needed to adopt more modern and productive technology and management practices. Moreover, the low pricing has aggravated household’s ability to make any meaningful movement out of poverty. One of the major points drawn from this report is that Burkina Faso’s cotton sector has emerged as a model sector that other countries in the region should consider emulating. Burkina Faso has been forward looking and open to innovation as evidenced by its proactive stance in adopting Genetically Modified (GM) cotton and its inclusion of the smallholder farming community as an equal partner in the ginning industry. While cotton sectors in developing countries will continue to face challenges from declining world markets and sustaining productivity, Burkina Faso provides a viable path for cotton’s continued presence in West African agriculture.

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Main Author: Jeffrey Vitale
Format: Book (stand-alone) biblioteca
Language:English
Published: FAO ; 2018
Online Access:https://openknowledge.fao.org/handle/20.500.14283/I8330EN
http://www.fao.org/3/I8330EN/i8330en.pdf
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spelling dig-fao-it-20.500.14283-I8330EN2024-03-16T14:25:05Z Economic importance of cotton in Burkina Faso Economic importance of cotton in Burkina Faso Jeffrey Vitale This report investigated the role that cotton production has played in the economic development and poverty reduction in Burkina Faso, with a principal focus on how cotton prices, as a proxy to agricultural income, affects economic growth. Findings suggest that while cotton contributes to modest rates of economic growth, the lack of profitable investment opportunities in the industrial and service sectors limit agriculture’s growth potential. The artificially low prices paid to Burkinabe cotton producers suppress farm income and constrain the long–term buildup of investment capital needed to adopt more modern and productive technology and management practices. Moreover, the low pricing has aggravated household’s ability to make any meaningful movement out of poverty. One of the major points drawn from this report is that Burkina Faso’s cotton sector has emerged as a model sector that other countries in the region should consider emulating. Burkina Faso has been forward looking and open to innovation as evidenced by its proactive stance in adopting Genetically Modified (GM) cotton and its inclusion of the smallholder farming community as an equal partner in the ginning industry. While cotton sectors in developing countries will continue to face challenges from declining world markets and sustaining productivity, Burkina Faso provides a viable path for cotton’s continued presence in West African agriculture. 2023-04-27T11:19:57Z 2023-04-27T11:19:57Z 2018 2018-01-19T13:51:14.0000000Z Book (stand-alone) 978-92-5-130105-0 https://openknowledge.fao.org/handle/20.500.14283/I8330EN http://www.fao.org/3/I8330EN/i8330en.pdf English FAO 68 application/pdf Burkina Faso FAO ;
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libraryname David Lubin Memorial Library of FAO
language English
description This report investigated the role that cotton production has played in the economic development and poverty reduction in Burkina Faso, with a principal focus on how cotton prices, as a proxy to agricultural income, affects economic growth. Findings suggest that while cotton contributes to modest rates of economic growth, the lack of profitable investment opportunities in the industrial and service sectors limit agriculture’s growth potential. The artificially low prices paid to Burkinabe cotton producers suppress farm income and constrain the long–term buildup of investment capital needed to adopt more modern and productive technology and management practices. Moreover, the low pricing has aggravated household’s ability to make any meaningful movement out of poverty. One of the major points drawn from this report is that Burkina Faso’s cotton sector has emerged as a model sector that other countries in the region should consider emulating. Burkina Faso has been forward looking and open to innovation as evidenced by its proactive stance in adopting Genetically Modified (GM) cotton and its inclusion of the smallholder farming community as an equal partner in the ginning industry. While cotton sectors in developing countries will continue to face challenges from declining world markets and sustaining productivity, Burkina Faso provides a viable path for cotton’s continued presence in West African agriculture.
format Book (stand-alone)
author Jeffrey Vitale
spellingShingle Jeffrey Vitale
Economic importance of cotton in Burkina Faso
author_facet Jeffrey Vitale
author_sort Jeffrey Vitale
title Economic importance of cotton in Burkina Faso
title_short Economic importance of cotton in Burkina Faso
title_full Economic importance of cotton in Burkina Faso
title_fullStr Economic importance of cotton in Burkina Faso
title_full_unstemmed Economic importance of cotton in Burkina Faso
title_sort economic importance of cotton in burkina faso
publisher FAO ;
publishDate 2018
url https://openknowledge.fao.org/handle/20.500.14283/I8330EN
http://www.fao.org/3/I8330EN/i8330en.pdf
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