Sustainable Agriculture in Central America

Sustainable Agriculture in Central America
Author: Jan P. de Groot
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 239
Release: 1997-07-14
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0230378080

Agricultural development in Central America is based on extensive growth, supported by macroeconomic policies that marginalize small peasants. Deforestation, erosion and resource depletion are particularly severe. This book offers a comprehensive review of the perspectives for state policies and local action to enhance sustainable agriculture. Macroeconomic conditions and institutional arrangements for the establishment of sustainable production systems in different eco-regional settings (hillsides, humid tropics, frontier areas) are discussed, as well as policy instruments to improve property rights, management rules and financial mechanisms to enhance sustainable resource use.

Central America

Central America
Author: Roger D. Hansen
Publisher: [Washington] : National Planning Association
Total Pages: 132
Release: 1967
Genre: Central America
ISBN:

Macroeconomics, agriculture, and food security

Macroeconomics, agriculture, and food security
Author: Díaz-Bonilla, Eugenio
Publisher: Intl Food Policy Res Inst
Total Pages: 644
Release: 2015-10-27
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0896298590

Why write a book on macroeconomic policies and their links to agriculture and food security in developing countries? The food price spikes of the years just prior to 2010 and the economic, political, and social dislocations they generated refocused the attention of policymakers and development practitioners on the agricultural sector and food security concerns. But even without those traumatic events, the importance of agriculture for developing countries—and for an adequate functioning of the world economy— cannot be denied. First, although declining over time, primary agriculture still represents important percentages of developing countries’ overall domestic production, exports, and employment. If agroindustrial, transportation, commercial, and other related activities are also counted, then the economic and social importance of agriculture-based sectors increases significantly. Furthermore, large numbers of the world’s poor still live in rural areas and work in agriculture. Through the links via production, trade, employment, and prices, agricultural production is also crucial for national food security. Second, it has been shown that agriculture in developing countries has important growth and employment multipliers for the rest of the economy, and agriculture seems to have larger positive effects in reducing poverty than growth in other sectors. Third, agriculture is not only important for individual developing countries, but it has global significance, considering the large presence of developing countries in world agricultural production and the increasing participation in international trade of those products (these three points will be covered in greater detail in Chapter 1).

Export Agriculture and the Crisis in Central America

Export Agriculture and the Crisis in Central America
Author: Robert G. Williams
Publisher: UNC Press Books
Total Pages: 272
Release: 2014-02-01
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1469615886

Before social unrest shook the region in the 1970s, Central America experienced more than a decade of rapid export growth by adding cotton and beef to the traditional coffee and bananas. Williams shows how the rapid growth contributed to the present social and political crisis, examines the causes of the export boom and who benefited from it, and shows the impact of the boom on land use, the ecology, and the conditions of life in the rural areas.