Agribusiness in South Asia

Agribusiness (including agriculture) accounts for almost one third of South Asia’s GDP and has the potential to almost double over the next fifteen years (reaching 1.5 trillion US dollars by 2030). This increase will be driven by rapid growth in population, incomes and urbanization, as well as accelerated transformation of the sector towards higher value products and downstream activities. The highest growth will come from processed food and related services, such as food retail and restaurants which will create millions of productive jobs outside agriculture and positive backward linkages for farmers. Removing restrictions on trade, markets and prices would support this transformation; reforms in these areas are already showing promising effects. In addition, governments should continue to support smaller and poorer farmers, who may not benefit from this transformation. More targeted and pro-active support should be provided to raise productivity, rather than blanket subsidies and price controls that encourage the status quo and threaten the sustainability of the sector in the face of climate change (for example, large untargeted water subsidies).

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chodavarapu, Soujanya, Giertz, Asa, Jaeger, Peter
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2016-10-01
Subjects:agribusiness, value chains, productivity, agricultural trade, export competitiveness, tourism, global brands, subsidies, market liberalization, investment, inclusivity, public-private partnership,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/10/26845556/agribusiness-south-asia-extended-version-industry-case-study-done-south-asia’s-turn-policies-boost-competitiveness-create-next-export-powerhouse
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/25116
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-okr-1098625116
record_format koha
spelling dig-okr-10986251162024-08-07T19:50:43Z Agribusiness in South Asia Chodavarapu, Soujanya Giertz, Asa Jaeger, Peter agribusiness value chains productivity agricultural trade export competitiveness tourism global brands subsidies market liberalization investment inclusivity public-private partnership Agribusiness (including agriculture) accounts for almost one third of South Asia’s GDP and has the potential to almost double over the next fifteen years (reaching 1.5 trillion US dollars by 2030). This increase will be driven by rapid growth in population, incomes and urbanization, as well as accelerated transformation of the sector towards higher value products and downstream activities. The highest growth will come from processed food and related services, such as food retail and restaurants which will create millions of productive jobs outside agriculture and positive backward linkages for farmers. Removing restrictions on trade, markets and prices would support this transformation; reforms in these areas are already showing promising effects. In addition, governments should continue to support smaller and poorer farmers, who may not benefit from this transformation. More targeted and pro-active support should be provided to raise productivity, rather than blanket subsidies and price controls that encourage the status quo and threaten the sustainability of the sector in the face of climate change (for example, large untargeted water subsidies). 2016-10-06T17:06:45Z 2016-10-06T17:06:45Z 2016-10-01 Working Paper Document de travail Documento de trabajo http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/10/26845556/agribusiness-south-asia-extended-version-industry-case-study-done-south-asia’s-turn-policies-boost-competitiveness-create-next-export-powerhouse https://hdl.handle.net/10986/25116 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
en_US
topic agribusiness
value chains
productivity
agricultural trade
export competitiveness
tourism
global brands
subsidies
market liberalization
investment
inclusivity
public-private partnership
agribusiness
value chains
productivity
agricultural trade
export competitiveness
tourism
global brands
subsidies
market liberalization
investment
inclusivity
public-private partnership
spellingShingle agribusiness
value chains
productivity
agricultural trade
export competitiveness
tourism
global brands
subsidies
market liberalization
investment
inclusivity
public-private partnership
agribusiness
value chains
productivity
agricultural trade
export competitiveness
tourism
global brands
subsidies
market liberalization
investment
inclusivity
public-private partnership
Chodavarapu, Soujanya
Giertz, Asa
Jaeger, Peter
Agribusiness in South Asia
description Agribusiness (including agriculture) accounts for almost one third of South Asia’s GDP and has the potential to almost double over the next fifteen years (reaching 1.5 trillion US dollars by 2030). This increase will be driven by rapid growth in population, incomes and urbanization, as well as accelerated transformation of the sector towards higher value products and downstream activities. The highest growth will come from processed food and related services, such as food retail and restaurants which will create millions of productive jobs outside agriculture and positive backward linkages for farmers. Removing restrictions on trade, markets and prices would support this transformation; reforms in these areas are already showing promising effects. In addition, governments should continue to support smaller and poorer farmers, who may not benefit from this transformation. More targeted and pro-active support should be provided to raise productivity, rather than blanket subsidies and price controls that encourage the status quo and threaten the sustainability of the sector in the face of climate change (for example, large untargeted water subsidies).
format Working Paper
topic_facet agribusiness
value chains
productivity
agricultural trade
export competitiveness
tourism
global brands
subsidies
market liberalization
investment
inclusivity
public-private partnership
author Chodavarapu, Soujanya
Giertz, Asa
Jaeger, Peter
author_facet Chodavarapu, Soujanya
Giertz, Asa
Jaeger, Peter
author_sort Chodavarapu, Soujanya
title Agribusiness in South Asia
title_short Agribusiness in South Asia
title_full Agribusiness in South Asia
title_fullStr Agribusiness in South Asia
title_full_unstemmed Agribusiness in South Asia
title_sort agribusiness in south asia
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2016-10-01
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/10/26845556/agribusiness-south-asia-extended-version-industry-case-study-done-south-asia’s-turn-policies-boost-competitiveness-create-next-export-powerhouse
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/25116
work_keys_str_mv AT chodavarapusoujanya agribusinessinsouthasia
AT giertzasa agribusinessinsouthasia
AT jaegerpeter agribusinessinsouthasia
_version_ 1807160327194804224