Reform Experience with the Tanzanian Cotton Sector

Cotton, Tanzania's second largest crop after coffee, was introduced at the turn of the century by German settlers as a plantation crop but later efforts focused on smallholder production. Output rose considerably with the releases of new varieties, along with better organization of the sector following establishment of the Tanganyika Lint and Seed Marketing Board in 1956. By 1966, production reached 80,000 tons, or 0.75 percent of world production of 10.7 million tons.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Baffes, John
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2005-06
Subjects:ACCOUNTANCY, AGRICULTURE, CENTRAL PLANNING, COFFEE, CONTRACT FARMING, COOPERATIVES, COTTON, COTTON MARKETING, COTTON PRODUCTION, COTTON SALES, COTTON SECTOR, CROP, DEBT, EXPORT CROPS, FAIR TRADE, FARMERS, FARMS, GINNERIES, INFLATION, INPUT PRICES, INPUT USE, INTEREST RATES, MARKET PRICES, MARKETING COSTS, OIL, PESTICIDES, PLANTING, POLICY DECISIONS, POLICY MAKERS, PRODUCERS, PURCHASING, QUALITY CONTROL, SEED, SEED MARKETING, SEEDS, SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT, TAXATION, YIELDS,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/06/6206447/reform-experience-tanzanian-cotton-sector
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/9662
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spelling dig-okr-1098696622024-08-08T17:20:39Z Reform Experience with the Tanzanian Cotton Sector Experience en matirer de reforms dans le Secteur coton de la Tanzanie Baffes, John ACCOUNTANCY AGRICULTURE CENTRAL PLANNING COFFEE CONTRACT FARMING COOPERATIVES COTTON COTTON MARKETING COTTON PRODUCTION COTTON SALES COTTON SECTOR CROP DEBT EXPORT CROPS FAIR TRADE FARMERS FARMS GINNERIES INFLATION INPUT PRICES INPUT USE INTEREST RATES MARKET PRICES MARKETING COSTS OIL PESTICIDES PLANTING POLICY DECISIONS POLICY MAKERS PRODUCERS PURCHASING QUALITY CONTROL SEED SEED MARKETING SEEDS SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT TAXATION YIELDS Cotton, Tanzania's second largest crop after coffee, was introduced at the turn of the century by German settlers as a plantation crop but later efforts focused on smallholder production. Output rose considerably with the releases of new varieties, along with better organization of the sector following establishment of the Tanganyika Lint and Seed Marketing Board in 1956. By 1966, production reached 80,000 tons, or 0.75 percent of world production of 10.7 million tons. 2012-08-13T09:13:24Z 2012-08-13T09:13:24Z 2005-06 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/06/6206447/reform-experience-tanzanian-cotton-sector https://hdl.handle.net/10986/9662 English Africa Region Findings & Good Practice Infobriefs; No. 251 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
topic ACCOUNTANCY
AGRICULTURE
CENTRAL PLANNING
COFFEE
CONTRACT FARMING
COOPERATIVES
COTTON
COTTON MARKETING
COTTON PRODUCTION
COTTON SALES
COTTON SECTOR
CROP
DEBT
EXPORT CROPS
FAIR TRADE
FARMERS
FARMS
GINNERIES
INFLATION
INPUT PRICES
INPUT USE
INTEREST RATES
MARKET PRICES
MARKETING COSTS
OIL
PESTICIDES
PLANTING
POLICY DECISIONS
POLICY MAKERS
PRODUCERS
PURCHASING
QUALITY CONTROL
SEED
SEED MARKETING
SEEDS
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
TAXATION
YIELDS
ACCOUNTANCY
AGRICULTURE
CENTRAL PLANNING
COFFEE
CONTRACT FARMING
COOPERATIVES
COTTON
COTTON MARKETING
COTTON PRODUCTION
COTTON SALES
COTTON SECTOR
CROP
DEBT
EXPORT CROPS
FAIR TRADE
FARMERS
FARMS
GINNERIES
INFLATION
INPUT PRICES
INPUT USE
INTEREST RATES
MARKET PRICES
MARKETING COSTS
OIL
PESTICIDES
PLANTING
POLICY DECISIONS
POLICY MAKERS
PRODUCERS
PURCHASING
QUALITY CONTROL
SEED
SEED MARKETING
SEEDS
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
TAXATION
YIELDS
spellingShingle ACCOUNTANCY
AGRICULTURE
CENTRAL PLANNING
COFFEE
CONTRACT FARMING
COOPERATIVES
COTTON
COTTON MARKETING
COTTON PRODUCTION
COTTON SALES
COTTON SECTOR
CROP
DEBT
EXPORT CROPS
FAIR TRADE
FARMERS
FARMS
GINNERIES
INFLATION
INPUT PRICES
INPUT USE
INTEREST RATES
MARKET PRICES
MARKETING COSTS
OIL
PESTICIDES
PLANTING
POLICY DECISIONS
POLICY MAKERS
PRODUCERS
PURCHASING
QUALITY CONTROL
SEED
SEED MARKETING
SEEDS
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
TAXATION
YIELDS
ACCOUNTANCY
AGRICULTURE
CENTRAL PLANNING
COFFEE
CONTRACT FARMING
COOPERATIVES
COTTON
COTTON MARKETING
COTTON PRODUCTION
COTTON SALES
COTTON SECTOR
CROP
DEBT
EXPORT CROPS
FAIR TRADE
FARMERS
FARMS
GINNERIES
INFLATION
INPUT PRICES
INPUT USE
INTEREST RATES
MARKET PRICES
MARKETING COSTS
OIL
PESTICIDES
PLANTING
POLICY DECISIONS
POLICY MAKERS
PRODUCERS
PURCHASING
QUALITY CONTROL
SEED
SEED MARKETING
SEEDS
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
TAXATION
YIELDS
Baffes, John
Reform Experience with the Tanzanian Cotton Sector
description Cotton, Tanzania's second largest crop after coffee, was introduced at the turn of the century by German settlers as a plantation crop but later efforts focused on smallholder production. Output rose considerably with the releases of new varieties, along with better organization of the sector following establishment of the Tanganyika Lint and Seed Marketing Board in 1956. By 1966, production reached 80,000 tons, or 0.75 percent of world production of 10.7 million tons.
topic_facet ACCOUNTANCY
AGRICULTURE
CENTRAL PLANNING
COFFEE
CONTRACT FARMING
COOPERATIVES
COTTON
COTTON MARKETING
COTTON PRODUCTION
COTTON SALES
COTTON SECTOR
CROP
DEBT
EXPORT CROPS
FAIR TRADE
FARMERS
FARMS
GINNERIES
INFLATION
INPUT PRICES
INPUT USE
INTEREST RATES
MARKET PRICES
MARKETING COSTS
OIL
PESTICIDES
PLANTING
POLICY DECISIONS
POLICY MAKERS
PRODUCERS
PURCHASING
QUALITY CONTROL
SEED
SEED MARKETING
SEEDS
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
TAXATION
YIELDS
author Baffes, John
author_facet Baffes, John
author_sort Baffes, John
title Reform Experience with the Tanzanian Cotton Sector
title_short Reform Experience with the Tanzanian Cotton Sector
title_full Reform Experience with the Tanzanian Cotton Sector
title_fullStr Reform Experience with the Tanzanian Cotton Sector
title_full_unstemmed Reform Experience with the Tanzanian Cotton Sector
title_sort reform experience with the tanzanian cotton sector
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2005-06
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/06/6206447/reform-experience-tanzanian-cotton-sector
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/9662
work_keys_str_mv AT baffesjohn reformexperiencewiththetanzaniancottonsector
AT baffesjohn experienceenmatirerdereformsdanslesecteurcotondelatanzanie
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