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id21
viewpoints
The
importance of rice for reducing poverty in Tanzania
Abiud
Kaswamila, at the
College of African Wildlife Management in Tanzania, demonstrates the
importance of selling rice as a cash crop in a poor region of Tanzania.
More
than a third of the rice produced in Tanzania comes from Sukumaland,
a semi-arid region in the north-west of the country. Rice from the region
is exported as a cash crop, generating income for farmers in the region.
How important is rice for reducing poverty, compared to other cash crops
such as cotton and maize?
Agriculture in the Sukumaland, Tanzania is constantly changing. Important
factors include climate change, changing market forces (both inside
and outside of Tanzania) and the need to eradicate threats to livestock,
such as disease and drought. In recent years, the need for the farmers
with few resources to reduce poverty has become increasingly important.
Research by the Mlingano Agricultural Research Institute, Tanzania,
considers the economic importance of rice production for farmers in
three villages in Sukumaland: Shishiyu, Mwanhegele and Bukangilija.
Data was collected using formal interviews, village meetings, informal
discussions and by visiting the fields under cultivation. Formal interviews
were also carried out with extension workers in the three villages.
The researchers also studied social effects of rice production in the
villages. This was measured using indicators such as spending patterns,
land use patterns, food security and investment in other economic activities.
Major findings include:
- Rice is much more profitable
than cotton or maize for farmers in Sukumaland.
- Over 80 percent of respondents
ranked rice as their most important cash crop, compared to cotton,
maize, sorghum, groundnuts and sweet potatoes.
- The income generated
from rice is sufficient to comfortably pay a minimum wage of 55,000
Tanzanian shillings each month for each family member for over four
months. These earnings can be even higher when rice is sold during
times of higher demand.
- The largest proportion
of revenue from rice sales is spent on school fees and family welfare.
- Producing rice also improves
household food security.
The importance of rice production
for reducing poverty is likely to continue as long as cotton prices keep
falling. However, if no efforts are made to make cotton production more
profitable, farmers will become increasingly dependent on rice cultivation.
To maintain and improve the profits from rice, the research recommends
to:
- introduce high-yield
rice varieties to the region
- encourage the use of
drought-tolerant and water-efficient rice varieties
- encourage farmers to
prioritise the control of weeds, which occur especially when organic
fertilisers are used
- introduce efficient irrigation
methods and water-storage systems to minimise water loss.
Abiud Kaswamila
What
do you think?
Comment on this viewpoint by emailing
id21viewpoints@ids.ac.uk
Further Information
Abiud Kaswamila
College of African Wildlife Management
Mweka
P.O. Box 3031
Moshi
Tanzania
kaswamila@hotmail.com
College of African Wildlife Management
See
also
Rice Production in Maswa District, Tanzania and its Contribution
to Poverty Alleviation, Mkuku na Nyota: Dar es Salaam, by J A Ngailo,
A L Kaswamila and C J Senkoro, 2007
Useful
links
Less water,
more rice – increasing the productivity of irrigation systems in China
Maintaining rice diversity
in Nepal: what can farmers do?
Balancing food security
and sustainability: the challenges of rice production
April
2008
Comment on this viewpoint by
emailing id21viewpoints@ids.ac.uk
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