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Agricultural Growth, Sustainability, and Poverty Alleviation in the Brazilian Amazon. Aerio S. Cunha and Donald R. Sawyer. Humid tropics of South America - Amazon Basin : 7.8 million square km, 8 countries (Bolivia, Brazil , Colombia, Equador, Guyana, Peru, Surinam and Venezuela)
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Agricultural Growth, Sustainability, and Poverty Alleviation in the Brazilian Amazon Aerio S. Cunha and Donald R. Sawyer
Humid tropics of South America - Amazon Basin : 7.8 million square km, 8 countries (Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Equador, Guyana, Peru, Surinam and Venezuela) • Focuss on : Brazilian Amazon(= 6 northern states of Brazil) and its agricultural production as the most important source of sustainable development • 3 main factors of failure in implementing sustainable management of agricultural land: • 1. Government policy failures (tax and subsidy policies, ill- concieved or ill-executed government projects, deforestation ) 2. Market failures (undervaluation of resource base and inadequate appreciation of economic potential) 3. Speculative rush of natural resources, esp. land
Sustainability - 3 dimensional definition • Technical dimension : - concerns preservation of the resource base - or invention of adequate substitutes or technology at competitive prices • Economic dimension: - choice of technology as a substitute depends on relative factor prices • Social dimension: - social stability is necessary for long-term sustainability and powerty alleviation
Unbalanced Factor Endowments • Richness in natural resources - but: • Exploiting of resources is costly and risky • Many resources have just a potential value • Fragile and biologically diverse ecosystem requires special technological methods of exploitation • Disminishing returns to land • Scarcity of other factors : labour and capital • Access to fertile land is uneasy • Fertile land is scattered throughout the region, mainly in ateas without proper transportation infrastructure • Most of land is claimed by government or private individuals without proper titulation
but: • Because of low density of population, there is still a lot of land available for further cultivation • Amazon area has disadvataged position in national economy - factors: • Uncompetitive agricultural production • Other areas of Brazil are more promising for agriculture (Southeast, Center-West region) as they have better conditions • Agricultural expansion in Amazon involved large opportunity costs and thus stopped in the late 1980s • Low wages for agricultural workers • Decline in rural population growth because of emigration to towns whith public services available • Commercial agriculture largely restricted
Technology enhancing sustainability • Is not available because of : • Lack of competitivness of Amazonian agriculture • Not priority of Brazilian government • Natural resources are not conservated (land is used to maximize output of scarce labour and capital resources) • Technological innovations are focussed on savings of rare labour and capital factors rather than on preservation of natural resources
Evidence on Agricultural Growth and Poverty in Amazon • Agricultural activity and output remain modest • yields per hectare for the major food crops (rice, maize, cassava, beans) : do not increase but do no decrease • Growth in harvested area is highly correlated with population growth • average annual rate of growth : 5% in 1970s x 4.6% in 1980s • level of urbanisation rose from 51.7% in 1980 to 58.3% in 1991 • rapid decline in rural population growth in 1980s • Lack of social sustainability of Amazonian agriculture
Poverty indicators` improvement • Infant mortality - sharp decline in course of 1980s • 61 per 1000 in 1980 x 48 per 1000 in 1988 • Malnutrition - also improved in 1980s • from 24.5% in 1975 to 10.6% in 1989 56.7% decline • Food supply - from 1980 to 1988 the production of beans and maize per inhabitant rose; the production of cassava and rice per capita remained almost constant
4 Top Policies Recomended To promote sustainable growth and alleviate poverty, Brazilian government should : • Create stable conditions for development (incl. law enforcement, construction of basic infrastructure etc.); • Limit speculation on land and natural resources (proper land titling, progressive tax on unproductive landholdings, put end to subsidies and incentives for land speculation); • Upgrade current methods of production (support to adoption of labour and resource-saving technologies); • Implement planning (create inventory of natural resources, plan research priorities, reasonable use of Amazonians competitive advantages)