16 research outputs found
Smallholder Participation in Agricultural Value Chains: Comparative Evidence from Three Continents
Food subsidies for the poor in India: are they working?
This study examines food subsidy in India and assesses it critically against the objectives leading to its initiation. Using 61st round of National Sample Survey data on the monthly consumption of households for the year 2004-05, our study locates the outreach of Public Distribution System (PDS) in rural and urban areas in India and also examines its role in maintaining price stability. The findings of the study show that the outreach of PDS in the country is highly inadequate and concentrated more in the relatively developed and less poverty states than vice versa.No Full Tex
Evaluating the impact of agricultural extension on farms' performance in Crete: a nonneutral stochastic frontier approach
Food security policies in India and China: implications for national and global food security
Food insecurity is a much more serious concern in India than China. In addition to income and poverty differences, we argue in this paper that differences in food policies can further explain the different food security outcomes across the two countries. First, India mostly uses price-based input subsidies to support agricultural incentives whereas China has recently adopted direct transfers to support agricultural incentives, which are believed to be less distorting and more efficient. Second, the two countries apply quite different approaches to address poor consumers’ access to food, with India adopting a widely criticized public distribution system and China mainly using direct income transfers and other social safety nets. Third, although both committed considerable fiscal resources to insulating their respective domestic markets, especially during recent food price spikes, India’s heavy dependence on price-based measures causes relatively larger and more volatile fiscal burdens, thereby likely making it more vulnerable in dealing with similar events in the future. These findings have important implications for food policy and food security in the two countries in the future.Food insecurity is a much more serious concern in India than China. In addition to income and poverty differences, we argue in this paper that differences in food policies can further explain the different food security outcomes across the two countries. First, India mostly uses price-based input subsidies to support agricultural incentives whereas China has recently adopted direct transfers to support agricultural incentives, which are believed to be less distorting and more efficient. Second, the two countries apply quite different approaches to address poor consumers’ access to food, with India adopting a widely criticized public distribution system and China mainly using direct income transfers and other social safety nets. Third, although both committed considerable fiscal resources to insulating their respective domestic markets, especially during recent food price spikes, India’s heavy dependence on price-based measures causes relatively larger and more volatile fiscal burdens, thereby likely making it more vulnerable in dealing with similar events in the future. These findings have important implications for food policy and food security in the two countries in the future.</p
