000 02785nam a22002897a 4500
001 66912
003 MX-TxCIM
005 20250725150127.0
008 231221s1995 rh ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _aMX-TxCIM
041 _aeng
082 _a330.9168 HEI
100 1 _95555
_aHeisey, P.W.
245 1 0 _aEconomist and economics research in the national agricultural research systems of the southern African Development Community
260 _aBulawayo (Zimbabwe) :
_bICRISAT,
_c1995.
300 _avi, 29 pages
490 _aICRISAT Southern and Eastern Africa Region Working Paper
_v95/02
520 _aIn 1993, economists operating in southern Africa under specially funded regional research and development projects for the International Crops Research Institute for the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT) and Centro Internacional de Mejoramiento de MaĆ­z y Trigo (CIMMYT) created a cereal grains Policy Analysis Initiative (PAI). This Initiative was established as a two year pilot project designed to promote policy analysis on cereal grains by economists in the National Agricultural Systems (NARS) of the Southern African Development Community (SACD). In addition, the PAI aimed to provide analytical training for policy analysis, promote the establishment of a network of NARS-based economists working on related policy issues, and facilitate communication between economists based in the NARS and their counterparts in Ministry of Agriculture policy and planning units. Following the end of the initiative's 2-year pilot phase in 1992, the International Development Research Centre (IDRC) sponsored a regional review to assess economic research capabilities in the NARS in order to identify opportunities for improving the long-term contributions of this kind of initiative. This report summarizes the findings of that review. Most, though not all, of the NARS in the SADC region now employ economists. Many of them were first employed under farming systems research progammes and are still guided by the broad mandates of such programmes. A minority have post-graduate degrees, and more graduate training is merited. Links with economists in planning or policy units of Ministries of Agriculture and with economists in universities tend to be limited. Staff turnover rates for economists do not appear unuaual at regional level, but are worryingly high in some countries.
546 _aText in English
650 7 _2AGROVOC
_92462
_aAgricultural censuses
650 7 _2AGROVOC
_915079
_aAgricultural statistics
650 7 _2AGROVOC
_97861
_aResearch systems
650 7 _2AGROVOC
_97948
_aAgricultural research systems
651 7 _2AGROVOC
_91954
_aSouthern Africa
700 1 _97584
_aRohrbach, D.
942 _2ddc
_cRE
_n0
999 _c66912
_d66904