000 03654nam a22003257a 4500
001 57067
003 MX-TxCIM
005 20240802225343.0
008 151028s2015 bg a|||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _aMX-TxCIM
041 _aeng
100 1 _aMottaleb, K.A.
_gFormerly Socioeconomics Program
_gFormerly Sustainable Agrifood Systems
_8I1706152
_9810
245 1 0 _aUptake of scale-appropriate agricultural machinery in Bangladesh :
_bpolicy insights from historical and census survey analyses
260 _aBangladesh :
_bCIMMYT :
_bUSAID :
_bCSISA-MI,
_c2015.
300 _a44 pages :
_bill.
490 _aResearch Report ;
_v3
500 _aOpen Access
520 _aIn response to calls for increased crop intensification and technological options that alleviate labour and drudgery constraints in agriculture, donors and policy makers in South Asia increasingly advocate agricultural machinery appropriate for smallholder farmers' landholdings. When carefully utilized, 'scale-appropriate' machinery has the potential to boost returns to land and labour, and alleviate the sometimes substantial funds required for machinery investment that can exclude smallholders from purchase and ownership - especially where subsidies are not offered. Expanding demand among farmers for mechanized planting, irrigation, harvest, and post-harvest equipment has however resulted in popular systems of rural machinery services provision, whereby smallholders access machines through cost-effective fee-for-service arrangements. Such systems are especially prominent in Bangladesh, although the extent of rural mechanization markets are still not comprehensive. As such, a substantial number of farmers could still benefit from increased access. To help prioritize investments in development efforts focussed on scale-appropriate machinery, donors and policy makers require information explaining what influences farmers to purchase machinery and provide services to other farmers as clients. This research addresses this need, by using census data from 814,058 Bangladeshi farm households (HHs) collected by Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics surveyed in 2008. We applied a multinomial probit model estimation approach to identify the factors that are related to ownership of agricultural machinery, inclusive of HH characteristics and assets, as well as proximity and relation to institutional and civil infrastructural variables, to examine the ownership of irrigation pumps, threshers, and two-wheel tractor driven power-tillers. In addition to household asset ownership, credit availability, and electrification, we found that road density also significantly and positively affects machinery ownership in rural Bangladesh. We therefore suggest that donors and policy makers should focus not only on short-term projects aimed at increasing adoption of machinery or in improvement of machinery value chains; rather, sustained emphasis on improving regional physical and civil infrastructure appears to also be prerequisite to create an enabling environment for expansion of scale-appropriate farm machinery, and as such should also receive policy and donor prioritization.
536 _aSocioeconomics Program
536 _aConservation Agriculture Program
546 _aText in English
594 _aI1706152
594 _aINT3222
650 0 _91955
_aFarm equipment
650 0 _91957
_aIntensification
651 0 _91956
_aSouth Asia
_gAGROVOC
700 1 _aKrupnik, T.J.
_gSustainable Intensification Program
_gSustainable Agrifood Systems
_8INT3222
_9906
856 4 _uhttp://hdl.handle.net/10883/4617
_yOpen Access through DSpace
942 _2ddc
_cRE
999 _c57067
_d57059