Water Management and Agricultural Trade

Improved water management practices and trade in "virtual water" can help alleviate water scarcity, release water for more efficient uses, increase productivity, and ultimately reduce food prices for consumers. Investments in these areas can therefore drive growth and poverty reduction, both directly and indirectly- because they may reduce food costs and supply uncertainties, improve the diets of the rural and urban poor, raise and diversify incomes, provide employment and entrepreneurial opportunities both inside and outside cities, and induce smallholder farmers' productivity gains, which would increase their opportunities for wealth creation and better integrate them into local, national, and international markets.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Shetty, Shobha, Darghouth, Salah, Dinar, Ariel
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2006-02
Subjects:AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT, AGRICULTURAL WATER, ASSET MANAGEMENT, CHANNELS, CIVIL SOCIETY, CONSTRUCTION, CONSTRUCTION OF INFRASTRUCTURE, CROP DIVERSIFICATION, DEFICIT IRRIGATION, DOMESTIC USES, DROUGHT, ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS, ENVIRONMENTAL IMPLICATIONS, EXPORT, FARMERS, FARMING, FOOD INSECURITY, FOOD PRODUCTION, FOOD SECURITY, FOOD SELF-SUFFICIENCY, GROUNDWATER, GROUNDWATER MINING, IMPORTS, IRRIGATION MANAGEMENT, IRRIGATION SCHEME, IRRIGATION SYSTEMS, MIDDLE EAST, MOISTURE, NORTH AFRICA, PIPELINES, PROGRAMS, SALINITY, TARIFF PEAKS, WATER AVAILABILITY, WATER CONSERVATION, WATER HARVESTING, WATER MANAGEMENT, WATER POLICY, WATER QUALITY, WATER REQUIREMENTS, WATER RESOURCES, WATER RESOURCES DEVELOPMENT, WATER RESOURCES MANAGEMENT, WATER RIGHTS, WATER SCARCITY, WATER SUPPLIES, WATER SUPPLY, WATER SUPPLY SYSTEMS, WATER USE,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2006/02/7009103/water-management-agricultural-trade
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/9638
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