304 53 112MB
English Pages [143] Year 1993
Tiglneca Cistgsar simula r ce
E
CARLETON UNIVERSITY LIBRARY
wii LA
SITY
LIBRARY
78760
DATE DUE _
GAYLORD
#3523PI
Printed in USA
SUSTAINABLE N I E R U T L U C AGRI EGYPT
SUSTAINABLE N I E R U T L AGRICU EGYPT
Published in the United S tates of America in 1993 by Lynne Rienner Publishers , Inc. 1800 30th Street, Boulder , Colorado 80301
Acknowledgments
and in the United Kingdom by
Lynne Rienner Publishers, Inc.
Introduction Mohamed A.
3 Henrietta Street, Cove nt Garden, London WO E 8LU © 1993 by Lynne Rienner Publishers, Inc. All Tights reserved Library of Congress Catalo ging-in-Publication Data Sustainable agricultuin re Epypt / edited by Moh
Mahmood Hasan Khan, > Includes bi ISBN
i:
blio
1-55587.
bn Il. Khan, Mahmood Hasan.
S473.E38S88 1993 389.1 ‘0962 —dc20
PART 1
ates
Be Agriculture—Epypt. Sypt. I. Faris, Mohamed A.
‘ ; 3
Sust
e T H C 0 y t ainabili Beaye
93-19486 CIP
British Cataloguing-in-Publication Data 4 Cataloguing-in-Publication record for this book
is available from the British Library.
En
of the American National Standard for Permanence of
Paper for Printed Library Materials Z39.48-1984,
iculture in Egypt An EgyP
.
Be
tian
y z w a F r a h z a M d n a . r J b eae
l
nta e m n o I I V
ilit b a n i a t ! Ss us
Agroecosystems
and
es ign the Red
Stuart B. HillSus ta: pitityuy of EgyPti tal
Printed and bound in the United States of Amer ica (=)
AGRICULTURE
e r u : t l u c i r g A e l b a a n i a t s u S 2 d and Main al ining hieving n a i t p y g E n o N A : t p y g E n ! i e r u t l u c i r g e A a f o : y t i l i e b a in' :e SustaB . Perspective
d A. Fari
The paper used in this publication meets the requirements
MAJOR IS
;ronmen
slo
v l t c e p s r e and P
Asit K. Biswas
0.
an Agriculture:
Contents
17 Mahmoud Abu-Zeid Research Process, Huma n
7
18
for Sustainability
19
Howard A. Steppler
8
Towarda Sustainable Rij ce Production System f o r Egypt Mohame
d Sayed Balal Transfer and Adoption of Horticultural Technology: A Global Overview
9
a
y t i l i b a n i a t s u S r fo n o i t i d n Women’s Rights as a Co of Agriculture Hoda Badran n o i t u l o v e R al ci So a s e t a t i s s e c e N t n e m p o l e Sustainable Dev Greg Spendjian l a r u t l u c i r g A e l b a n i a st Su d n a s c i m a n y Population D t p y g E in t n e m p Develo Bre n i d l e g a r i S l i a m s I i a t s u S d n a l a t n e m n o r j 1 and Lee€
eee
et
eRe
Policy Analysis Fahmy K. Bishay
: r e t a W d n a , s b Jo
*
ae
g n i n n a l P l a r u t l u c in Agri
Participation and b
p y g E n i e r u t l u c i r g A e l b a n i a a Sust
Alan Richards
BE
es:ng Committ i z i n a g r O e c Conferen s t n a p i c i t r a P e Conferenc Index
About the Book
Ahmed A. Gouelj
11
Structural Adjustment and Egyptian Agricultur e: Some Preliminary I ndi cations of the I Economic Reforms aie Ngozi : Okonjo-Iweala and You. ssef Fulei7han The Agricultural Sector in the Context of Egypt’ s Structural Ad
12 13 14
justment Program Salah El-Serafy Strategy of the Commons: O Pportunities and Chall enges for Egyptian Agriculture Joseph R. Potvin The Uruguay Round of Multil ateral Negotiations and Egyptian Agriculture Mohamed Maamoun Abdel Fattah
PART6
CULTURAL, SOCIAL, AND POLITICAL ASPECTS
15
The Social Sustainability of Induced Development:
16
Small Farmer Households and Agricultural Sustainab in Egypt Nicholas S. Hopkins
Culture and Organization Michael M. Cernea
ility
Governance
d n a s l a u d i v i d n i l a r e v e s o t t b ft us in de r e f n o c l a n o i t a n r e t n i e h t o t s y a w s u o i r d a l v e h n i ” , d d e n t u o y e B d ontrib n a s 0 9 9 1 e in the
ian Agricultur
: s n o i s s e s e c onferen
e h t n i t r a p k o o t o h w e s o h t d n a s r e p
© e h t g n i s i v re
a i r o t i d e l smal e h t n o s t commen
0 2 e c n e i t with pa
r e n n e i R Lynne
e'
saat n a h K n a s a H d o o m h Ma
a n o i t c u Introd n a h K n a s a H d o o m h a M d n a s i r a F . A d Mohame
d n a d e t n e s e r one papers p g A n a i t p y g E f o y t i l i b a n i a t ; “Sus y a M n i t p y g E , a i r d n a x e l A n i Id environthe e context, h t n i e r u t l u Egyptian c i r in the mainly sustainable of address, aspects political 1992. The papers and social, a central cultural, implies sustainability of mental, economic, notion through the cases, all i In n a w o n , e development. l p o e p f o e r a f l e w e h t ?
conditions.
i r g a e l b a n i susta
i
1
i u l a v d n a s e d attitu ssi i “Sustainable : W e h t n e h w , 7 8 9 1 e c n : si d n a l t d n u r B ment (the m e c n o c g n i w o r g e h T . Future d n a e l p o e p f o s d e e n i n e changing ources and
icies.
i
;
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tch phrase
evelop-
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Our Common d I n a t n e d n e iinntts erdep
h t i w y n o m r a h g n i n i a nt e t e r c n o c d l e to yi ed
hat
s e r l a r u t a their n
. s l e v e l | l a n o i t a n r e t n i d n a l a n o i t a n r i v n e d n actions at a lopment
e v e d t n f e o m p s o e l u s e s v i e D the d n a t n e m n o r i e v h t n E f o n o 2 1 99 t r Summit o p e R t n e m p n a o l o e t v e D y t i v i t i s n e World s d e s a e r c n i : a e n h o t i g f e o r , e l c a b o l g t eviden a t n e m p o l e v e d sustainable i oy,
na olicies for p i ke a t d l u o h s welfare the
g n i n i a t n i a m -
o c e ) 2 ( ; s ation f o n o i t u b i r t e dis
Introduction
y et ri va a in d e d n o p s e r s ha cy li po ic bl pu t, yp Eg in e ur lt cu ri sustainable ag ve ha ts ec oj pr t n e m t s e v n i w e N . s 0 8 9 1 d i m e th e nc si s of important way r e d n u e ar s r e h t o ; t n e m p o l e v e d e c r u o s e r r e t a w d n a d n a l in d e t e l p m o c n e e b n o i t a g i r r i of n o i t a z i n r e d o m , n o i t a t i l i b a h e r d n a n o i t a m a l c e r d n a l in d n a way g n i g g o l r e t a w f o l o r t n o c , e g a n i a r d d n a l in t n e m e v o r p m i , s e n r o u i t a r o struct l p x e e h t d n a , m r a f e h t n o e s u r e t a w f o y c n e i c i f f e d e s a to d e t c e r i d salinity, incre y l g n i s a e r c n i is t n e m t s e v n i c i l b u P . s e c r u o s e r e r , n o i t a c u d e of new water l a r u t l u c i r g A . n o i t c u d o r p m r a f f o y g o l o n , h l e c v e e t l e r h e t d i w e v a o r t p A m i . p u d e p p e t s g n i e b e r a s e c i v r e s n l o a i n s o n i e t t u x t e i t s d n n i a s ’ , t p y g E search e v o r p m i o t y l t n e c e r e d a m n e e n b o i t e a v z a i h l a r s e e b i g l n a h l c a u d a r g a policy e v l o v n i e s e h T . t n e m n o r i f v o n e l a v c o i m m e o r n o , c n e o i t c u d o r p f and macro o n o i t a l u g e r e d , e d a r t s y s n g n i o e i r t o f u b i r d t n s a i d d n a n o i t of domestic c u d o r p e h t f o n o i t a z i t a v i r p d n a , s l price contro tems.
s e u s s I r o j Ma t f o t n e m p o l e v e d e l b a n : A sustai e d u l c n i y e h T . s r o t c a f l a r e v e strained by s
, s t n e m h c a o r c n e
=
, t u o n e v a i s n o tnej e n a S s a ao e . s d l o h e s u o h n and urba
L e s a e c r u o s s n e r e m r e n at anpdrswo z
i r g a e v i s n e t n I : n o i e t e d a dat e l b a r e Co) consid
8 n o i t a l u p o p Rapid n a t n e c r e rate of 2.7 p Its effects on t terious. d 4 , n o i mentat 7 0 s t c e f f e e advers
iti
t s a f is d n a m er and the de y r t s u d n i n i y particularl
:
ha
° e s U t n e i c i f f e d n a , y nolog
ar z i l i t r e f f o s e s o d h g i h f and l a i r t s u d n i d e as
Introduction
gh hi a s ce fa ; bt de n ig re fo of en rd bu ge r; la a s ie rr ca s, ie tr un co developing r fo rs ie rr ba de ra nt no d an e ad tr rs te n u o c n e s; rt po im al level of agricultur , nt me st ju ad al ur ct ru st of od ri pe l fu in pa a h g u o r h t exports; and is going y o l p m e n u d an , ts en tm us j ad e ic pr d r a w p u , ng di including reduced spen l na io at rn te In e th of rt po p su e th s ha t n e m t s u j d a of s es oc pr e h T . t n me . k n a B d l r o W e h t d n a ) F M I ( d n u F y l l r i w a t e t n e m Mon t s u j d a l a r u t c u r st s i h t r e h t e h w s m r e c n o c s u o i r e s e h T . e r u There are t l u c i r g a f o y t i l i b a n i a t s u s m r e t g n o l e h t n o t c a p m i d e t c e f f a e b o t d have a positive e t c e p x e e r a h t w o r g l a r u t l u c i r g a e l b a n g i n a i t t s l u u s s e r f o e d s a t r c t e p s l o a r u pr t l u c i r g a l a n o i t a n r e t n i n i s e g n a h n c o e h t t n e y b m e e y r l g t A n a c l a r e n e signifi G e h t n i s n o i t a i t o g e n f o d n d u n o a R t y n a e u m g n u o r r U i v n E n o from the t i m m u S d l r o W e h t t A . ) T i T r t A s G u d ( n i e e d h t a r T m o d r f e s o h t Tariffs an y l r a l u c i t r a p , s r e d a e l n o , 2 9 9 1 y l e e t n e u r J c n o n i c g n i t c a in s s e r Development g o r p t n a c i f i n g i s e k a p m o l e t v o e n d d e i h d t d n a t n e m n o r i v alized countries, n e d l r o w e h t t c e f f a y l t n e g r u t s issues that mo . s e i r t n u o c g n i p o l e v e d f o s t c e ment prosp s e v i t c e p s r e P t n e r e f f i D : s r e t p a h C e n O Twenty-
nee user organiOF cost Water as een s of water ment for increa z ie
€ efficiency of water-use-
S through diffusion of im-
x e l p m o c n o s u c o f o t d e l l a c s a : W e c n e r e n f i n o s r C o t c e l s a n e o t i a t v i a r n p r e d t n n a I c a i i l r b u d P e h t n i The Alexan' s s t e r v o i f t f c ¢ e j b o g n i e o h g T n o . e s h 0 t 9 9 1 o t e h d t e t n i a e r u t l u c i issues rel r p g o a l e n 1 v e d y t i d l e i t b a a r n g i e a t t n s i u s n a e v r e o f i h c a s e o l t p i c n t i r p p y l g i E d b n a 4 n i a t s s u t s p e f c n o c e t a l l u l a m r o e f z y l o t ) 1 ( e h t were n i — l a ; c e i e agricultur l b a n i a t s u s ment of
a t n e m n o r i v n e ity—
? 4 ; t p y g E f o context n i t o m o r p r o f actions i h t n i s r e p a p d e t i d e e h T o r p d n a s e g challen
ersp'
sustainable de Beene
& r iculture in E would depend not only on the domestic ges and Opporin i t ien Me also on the i nter intena rnatti i onal cono econom m ic environmment. E ByPUs dependence on éex sip factors has inc i reased in recent years for i
ge of global interdependence between
>
Several
countr
1es,
Egy
pt,
reasons.
like
many
In
this
other
y l d i p a r h t i w s e tri
;
cours i
F o l a n o s r e p the e u s s i e h t , d o h t ) l a r e n e g ( l ternationa s m e l b o r p e ess th
f o e c n a v e l e r e h t e z i s a h p m e n , 3 u o o c t g 1 n i s p r e o t l e v e d f o s d o o f ural system f o s l a o heir g e s e h t e v e i h key to ac l a r u t a n e h t f o y t i l i b a d n -term sustain a h t w o r g ) l a n o i t a intergener
Introduction
ll wi s ce ur so d un ro rg de un om fr r te wa on e c n e d n e p e d at th ; le ro t n a t r o imp ga ri ir of ce ur so t an rt po im an be d ul co er at ew st wa d te ea tr at th increase, e e s ou ri se e it qu e m o c e b s ha y it al qu r te wa of e su is tion; that the ull po t ns ai ag k or ew am fr l ga le ng ti is ex e th at th d increasing pollution; an at ed ll ro nt co be st mu n io ut ll po y: tl an ic if gn si d e d n e m a be ld ou sh tion in n o i t source. n e t t a l a i c e p s es receive c r u o s e r n a m u h d n a l r o j a m e h The roles of natura t is , d n a l t o n , r e t a w t a h t is w e i v s ’ d i e Z u b A 8. d n t a s o c h g i h e h T . t chapters 6, 7, p y g E in e r u t l u c i r g a f o n o i s n a p x e l a t n o z n i a r t o s h r r o e f h g i h t n i d a n r a , const n o i t a l u p o p f o e r u s s e r p g n i s a e r c n i e v a h , n s o e i c t r a u m o a s l c e e r r r e t a w d of land n a — r e t a w r o f d n a m e d e h t o t e s u d d t a n l e l i i c i w f f g e n i v n i o e b o t e v dards of l a h l l i w s i s a h p m e r o j a M d . l n o o e i h s t n a n p i x e e r o d f a m m e b n a c little roo y c n e i c i f f e n i s n i a g r . o n j o a i m t a g i d r n r a i e , c s a e f c r r u u o s s e r n o r y e l t e a r w i t n of e t s o m l a d n e e p v e a d h l h l i c w i h w l a v , o s m d n e a r l r i l e a h t r u t : l d u r c a g e r agri s i h t n i s t n i e a h r t t s n e o t c i p l s a e r D e v e . s s r e s s u e t o r n e t a d w i e m Z o r f Abu y r e v o c e r d t n s a o c d r o e t a e s r e t g r a e h h t c r g e n t i a s u w e r e d u h l t i w d to inc e t a i c o s s d a e r e s d t i s o s c n o c d n e a b d s l m u o e h l s b o r s p e c i t c l a potentia g n i r r o e t t i a n w o m e s e s h u t o u n i , r t e n t o a c w e r ; e g draina , e s r u o c f O . d e t p o d a d n a y l serious : ossible imp
upon the ca
0 4 y g o l o n h c e t e t a i r p o r adopt app e m o s s e b i r c s de
r e l p p e t S d r 7, Howa ¢ S a g n i s U . s i h t h t i w d e associat
© . s t r o i t a c u d e d n a , an’ s t n e , s e g o t c i l i c e p s m o r f g n i g n a r ess, ‘ated with the
: a e s e r l a r u t l u c i n r g a a f o o roles i roles may diffe
h g i h t e l p p e t holistic. S m u m i t p o n a pment of
s e i g o l o n h c e t w e n g n i r n transfer o i t c e s s 9. Thi
develo
ers 8 and m e t s y s e l b oavia ct on both
n o t o n s u c o f e is th
e e n e h t s e z emphasi
e h t y f s i t a s o t not d n a ‘ g a n ° a m sustainability. h c n a s t s i t n e i c s f o m e r p l a e r e th dios
, g n i n i a r t , h c r a e s e r of
d n a y t i v i t c u prod
e v l o s d o e t t n e ori
NC *
Res
i l a n o i t u t i t } l s c i n t r i a p _ r o l e e ’ persona n u o f for d e e n 4 c i ers. Hence; , ! v r e s n o i s n e t x e e l b a i v , g s n r e t stro p a h c e s e h T s r e m r a f d n a s er relyin,
m
the
com. m. ng
decades: 9 that
conser
vation
of water
will P. 1
ay an increasingly %
:
, s t u p n i r o f system, . r o t c e s ic l b u p e h t n r u from t e r e l b a t i f o r p a ensure
Introduction
iti to on ti si an tr e i th r u g d — e b y ma ey 'y th as l u f n i a p — s m r o f e r l iona tute nstie ie t p y g E to al rn te ex s or ct fa of 13 r e t p a h C in is ys Joseph Potvin’s anal . rs te wa le Ni of ow fl e th to t ec sp re th wi e c n e d n e p e d s ’ y r t n u o c e h t s y e e v c n a sur n i f l a n r e t x e e h t d n a ; g n i m r a w l a b o l g o t y t i l i b a r e n l u v s e s s u c e m o c e b He also dis y a m It ” . r o i v a h e b | a t n e m n o r i v n e d o o g “ f o t n e m e r i u q o t , y r t n u o c and trade re g n i w o r r o b d n a g n i d a r t a , t p y g E r o f t l u c i f f i r d e h t o y l g e n k i i l s a e , r n c i n v t i o P . s d r a d n a t s l a t n e m n o r i v n e ” e l b a t p m e a c x c e a “ e H e h t . m e e l v b r o e r p obs n o i t a l u p o p s ’ t p y g E o t n o i t n e t t a c u s d w o a r r p d o t , e s v r i o t a l e r s l contribut a i r e t a m w a r d n a y g r e n e f o e h t t u p h g e u v o r r e h s t e r p h g i o t h : n o i t s ines the e g g u s a controversial ey
.
4°
c i n a s g e r k o a m e h t d n f a o e s u d a e r p s e l tion levels d i w e g a r u o c n e d l u s o t p y g E , m e t agroecosys t c a p m i e h t : 4 . 1 g n r i m e r t a p f a f h o C s n i d o s h u t c o me f w o r r a n a s a i h n i — h a t t u t o a F s t n l i e o d p e h — t p y g E Maamoun Ab . s n nego tiatio e
h t T f T o A G e f s o u a c d e n b u o R d o o f y a u r o g f u r l l U i b e h t r o of t p m i d e s a h e t r i c W n i . n a a c i r e c e a m f A o t h t r e o v N a h d n a y a e m p o r u E tially n i s r e o i f d i g s n b i u k s s a l a s i r u t t l p u y c g i E r g a , t f o n e m n a o c i d e r p r a eliminati l i m i r s a m a n i d e v s o e r i r p t m n i u o d c n a g n , i n p o o i t l c e u d o r p e c n other dev a d h e n s e a e o r t c n i e c n e a h t t s i r s o f s a l n a o c i i t n a h s c n e e p m o c r i a f s food aid, t a untries al exports o r c u t l u c d i e r p g o a l e v s e ' t d p y n g i E t s a s h e t c c a d e t o n ket e b d l u o h s t I . d o o f d e t r o p m i f o ies. t i t n s u t co r o p o j n e e m i t e m a s e h t t a l l i w Sustainable n o i t c a r e t n i g evolvin n i s r e p a p n e v and se erment b ’ e z y l a n a e r a
e m r e C l e a h c and 17. Mi i z i s a h p m e ty,”
sustainabili
of,
2 2 y r a s s e c e n is it environmentally
i H . h t w o r rie g . n o not tak
warns
i gZove m ment that the structura] si
a
aol
and
: a r g o r p t n e m sustai m a along us e He incons i path.” ee a possible Heh e en the pr the betwe en of ae ico , agricu the ee lture asec ie the government i implications are Bee “per
se
may
the resour ces optimi ze scarce farmer s of elp es withi a macroeconomic si (especiallyandwater) foreign sa
domestic
libera lized of etiph aseen ihe also e. El-Serafy Or deep
A sound
du
§ , s n o i t i d a r t d o o g f o e g a t i her . l e v e l y t i n u m m o c
a t a h t s e u g r a s n i k p o H s a l o h c i N re
n o i t a m r o f s n tra s a ll tion to, as We ea maintains that e n r e C e r u t o l t u c of e v i c u d n o c r : o i v a h e b l a i c e so the Ee
n o p u t l i u p ces if they are l a c o l t a n o i izat Z
ssroot organ:
r
e
l i b a n i a t s u s agric ultural ll
the role of sma
e c n a t r o p m i e h t e n i l r unde n agricul-
s r e e m i r t a s f s u t m i n u t r p y o g l E a i n a o m i s t f a ity in z o i n e , a l n g o o r r i t a e z h i t n a s g s r e o r t s l a i o c o T s . ral u e r : h o t h farmers e y s o u t o r h t s e e h d t t d a n h a t s e y e l i a c i O l t o e r u l of the fami i fa . e f i l al r , u ? r l o h e d s n u a o p m r ture a f l l a sm e h t n o based
Introduction
11
ys sa He . me ti ng lo a r fo s an me its nd that Egypt has been living beyo d an , ty ri cu se od fo , on ti ea cr b jo r fo pe ho ly on e th rs fe of rm fo re ic om on ec ssu r fo y ar ss ce ne so s, es oc pr g in ur ct ru st re e Th n. io at vi le al poverty at th t Bu . or ct se e at iv pr e th to on ti uc od pr e th of st mo t if tainability, must sh e t a r t n e c n o c d l u o h s it : t n e m n r e v o g e th r fo le ro d e c u does not imply a red h c i h w in y a w t n a t r o p m i n A l. il lf fu n a c e n o l a it h d on those functions whic n a e r o m e z i l a r t n e c e d to it r fo is r e t t e b b o j s it o d n a c r o t c e s c i e c n a l a b the publ e h t , s d r a h c i R Egypt, says In . encourage citizens’ s r o t c e s c i l b u p d n a e t between priva : o i t a n e h t f o y t i l i b long-term sustaina
e t a t i l i c a f to d e r e t l a be radically
1
e a a g n i n i a t n i a M d n a g n i v e i h c A e r u t l u c i r g A e l b a Sustain . r J , k r o Y . E.T y n a m r o f s e n i l p i c s i d e m o s n i d e i l p p a n r e e v e o y e b l n o e s u l a b o l g o t n i inabili the past
1980s there
l a r u t a n s ’ h t r a e the
4 , e c r e m m o c , s n o , y i r t t s u i d n d i n o , e c g medicin n i v i l m i r , e s t e t t e a b r n y i c a r d e t i ' l e t l u s e r r e h g i h d i l a u q vances have i t i e h t n i t n e m ? e p v p o o better educational , n o i t i r t u n r e supplies, bett the world.
many peop
le around
a u q n i t n e m e v o this impr © e g n e l l a h c a ced with fa
This challenge
s s e r g o r p n a m d by hu () Tr
d l r o W e h t , 3 8 19
ission m m o C d n a l t d n n i u r , h s i l b a t s e o t s n o i t a N e d h e T t i n U . t e n h lopme e v e ‘on for t D d ent an' m n o r i v n E on
15
Achieving and Maintaining Sustainability
Minister Gro H. . long . Nor of nd la dt un Br m le ar ting -ter Mm strategiei s to achie ve sustain. f
uture generati9 ons to meet t
Applyin g thisS noti ion of
i
:
a e P y to agri cult : u re, one e of the e h G d e t a t s s Sslon’s panel nduring food security will depend on
commission’
of them
is th , r e v o e r o M . ar ye r pe t n e c r e p 5 2. of te ra a at n w o r g tural output has in g in lt su re , on ti la pu po in h t w o r g e th d e d e e c x e y l l a r growth rate has gene 6 0. y l e t a m i x o r p p a of n o i t c u d o r p d o o f a t i p a c r e p an overall increase in d e t u b i r t t a e b n a c h t w o r g s i h T . 6 8 9 1 d n a 0 5 9 1 n e e w t e b y l l a u n n a y t i v i t percent c u d o r p r e t a e r g to r e h t a r t u b n o i s n a p x e l a t n o z i r o h o t of n o i t a c i l not so much p p a d n a t n e m p o l e v e d e h t m o r f g n i t l u s e r , ) n o i s (vertical expan . s r o t c a f d e t a l e r d n a y g o l o n h c e t d improve
t o n : e v i t p e c e d e r a t u p t u o d o o f d l r o w f o h t w o r d g o o f e h t e t t a u u o q b e a d a s c f i o t s i t e a c t n s e i r e e p s x e e Th e h t d e r a h s e e r v e a h s y d t l n r e o w w t e t h s t a p f e o h t 1 s n o i g e all r n a r a h a S ly b u e s t a m y i l x l o a r i c e p s e , a c i r f A n I e d supply. s a h n o i t c u d o r p p d e c o x o e f n e o a h t c t i c p a a n c g e a e b ct r e e ! p y t i v i t u d o or so, v e a v h : t p y g E P e y k g i l s i s ie tr s e i r t n u o d C n a . y s e l t l a a t u S n n a d e t t i n U e c 1 per e e e , y l e v i t a l e r | a d e y o j n e e v a n they h o i t a c i u s d A o r f o p h s t a i e w r a y l e b v a i r s o n v e a t f x E e r . ) 2 8 9 1 , l a t e ields compa k r o Y ( s e n i i r t n n e u v o E c . s t n e 7 t e a r a c v one m et basic food ii
man-m.
t o n e v a h o s a I a c i r e m A n and Lati d o o g e v a h o d y l l a m r o n regions that esult fro r n a c e n i m a f and even . s r e t s a s i d e v i t p u r s i d r e oth , e l p o e p n o i l l i m d e r d n u u o seven h n e e v i e c e r t o n o d oping countries
, n r r e u e b t n i , s i Th y n a m : r e w o p the food that
;ieve
h c a o t S icatj
account long -term impl
rt
cae
sus
-term
ee andinceds,
H orizontal
and
s may often not
e h c a o r p p a j l i b taina
V er tical
o t n i e k a t t s u m bility goals
o d y e h t e s u a c e b y nou l is ; largel a m d 0 2 y r g n u h of the world’s is available.
. p m i t n e c e r e h t If ’ e m f o t r o h s n e l l fa
. y l t n a c i f i n g i s slowing four of the six
Expans 10n
: (horizontal expansion). As mo
rought into cultivation. The pe ‘ tural production 5 an unpPreced ented growth in agricul
2
seen s er reimt aehaem ‘
ally
.°emeul-
e€
,
foo! 0 1 s d n e r t t n e r r u C ? e r u t fu g a n i h t w o r g Indeed,
s a w n o i t c u d o r p
pare: Pi Se
17
Achieving and Maintaining Sustainability
. es ti ul ic ff di l ta en nm ro vi en al ob gl e es th a victim of, many of
ty li bi na ai st Su l a r u t l u c i r g A of The Issue s m e t s y s l a r u t l u c i r g a e v i t a n r e t l a of t p e c n o c a , s m e l b o r p In response to these at th s m e t s y s l a r u t l u c i r g a to rs fe re It . es at St d e t i n U e h t in d e p o l e v e d s ha h c r a e s e R l a n o i t a N ( s m e t s y s l a n o i t n e v n o c d e l l a c o s e h t to e v i t a n r e t l a n r e t are a l a d e n i f e d s a h e r u t l u c i r g A f o t n e m t r a p e D . S . U e h T . ) 9 8 s e d u l c x e y Council 19 l e g r a l r o s d i o v a h c i h w m e t s y s n o i t c u d o r p a “ as e a r l u u t g e r h t w o r g tive agricul , s e d i c i t s e p , s r e z i l i t r e f d e d n u o p m o c y l l a c i t d e r h e t k n I y ( s f ” o e l b e i s s u a e e f h t nt e t x e m u m i x a m e h t o t s e v i t i d d a d e e e f d u l k c c n o i t s o e t v i d l e s u d n g a n i e b tors is e r u t l u c i r g a ernative
Thes e trends a re not encour: a
d ul co m e l b o r p he o pp su ts on fr
rts
thhiis contentiould n:
n o z i r o h e h t n o s d u o l c &ing, and dark
become
much worse. Evidence on three
t l a m r e t e h t , e , r y l u g t l u n c i i s r a g e a r c n e I v i t . a ) r 9 e n e 198 g e r , g n i m r a f c i n a g r o s a o t d e r r r e e t l f a e r e s e y h l t n o s m e m i t e m o S . what is com e r u t l u c i r g a t u p n i w o l d n a , e r u t l u c i r g a l . e r u t l u c i ecologica r g a e l b a n i a t s u s h t i w d e e h t t a u y q b e d e e r n a i f e s d m e s a , y t i l i b a n n i i native syst a t s u s f o t p e c n o c r c e n n a m he basi e h t y b d e t r o t s i d y l t n a c i f i n g i s g n h i t e i b w d e t on, is a u q e g n i e b e r a e r u t l u c i r g a e v i t a o n t r s e i t l s a m e f t o s y s s e t v p i e t c a n n r o e c t l a e h e t h t f © h c whi imary focus
r p t i w e h T m e h . t e r u g t n l u i c c i a r l g p a e r e y l b b a n s i t u a p t n i sus l a c i m e h c a f o e e e s H u o e h y t n a eliminate ea M reduce or
c d e t a l e r d n a , s n o i t a t o r p o r C , s e r n u a n a m , t i i r e m animal -recognizi ed
l l e w e v a h s i i m4 ey th h c i h w n i i e c a e a pe i n e s s c e a the estion qun J r o f s e c i t c a r p e s the
sp be y a m there I , r e v e w o H . d e y o l p m e sfully ere of t s o m g nerally substitutin l a r u t l u c i r g a e v i t c u d o r p d n a y j t i v i t c u d of pro ee
:
s y a w 0 1 s n o i t a r e op profitability.
p a e r a s e t a t S e United and substantive
euiis
also the
proaching su:
t n i e k a t y e h T basis.
e that over the lo: ng
: s m e t s y s h c u s f y o t i economic viabil sustainable
e o m n o e s a b i g a e c r u o s e r e h t d n ines a a , s d e e n y t r i e l b a i u f q d n a ood l f a t n n e a m m n u o h r i v . e a n e s r e s x m e r c a n f c a r h o n f o e e f ) i l 1 ( f o y term , s d n e p e d e r u t l agricu
s ’ b a i v y l l a c i m o n o c e s (3) i | K e 4 as
r o f y c n e g A of the US ssue
2
i e h t h t g n at some le t a h t n o i t n he conte
and society ’ O s i v h c r a e s e R ) e The w t n e m p o l e v e nal D
Internatio
—th’s surfacel ear e; ds major pro 1 blems of soil erosion; on of i t a n i m a supplies; acid rain; and ielisitcasionian nd iiwa c, terlogging of irriga gated ted areas. Agricu i lture isis vie Vi wed as a contribut fe) T to, as well as
d n a t u p n i of low F O n r e d the mo
” g a e l b a n sustai a l a n o i convent
agric
, e l b a n i a t s su
t
d te ea cr ra de mo e Da y an “M d, 4, te ta Cs RA have, a al y e h t , e l b a n i susta
° e m o S . m e sustains th
the
ae
i
soils were once
Achieving and Maintaining Sustainability
‘ at put and are often ch a r a c t e o Advisory C mMmittee 1986). Tkerd (1989) provi ides f u rther pe
ce en id ev ch mu is e er Th s. on gi re al ur lt cu ri ag ny ma in g in rr cu oc is r wate riga-
rspective on this subject, , su Suggesting
that:
21
ir s, ea ar ny ma In y. tl en ci fi ef in ry ve ed us n te of 1s r te wa on ti ga ri ir at th li re y, bl ta ui eq r te wa te bu ri st di to le ab un e ar es ci en ag tion management y el iv ct fe ef ea ar e th of n io ct du re a in ed lt su re s ha is Th y. ably, and efficientl te in ma of st co gh hi , ed li pp su ly or po s ea ar in ty vi ti irrigated, lost produc n io at or ri te de l ra ne ge a d an s, em st sy on ti ga ri ir of of nance and rehabilitation ms le ob pr re ve se in lt su re n ca s ce ti ac pr on ti ga ri ir or Po s. em st is sy m le of the ob pr e Th . on ti za ni li sa d an ng gi og rl te wa h ug ro th n 12 io at th land degradat d te ma ti es is it e er wh , an st ki Pa d an a di In in e ut m le ob pr s particularly ac ou ri se a so al is It . ed ad gr de y sl ou ri se en be ve ha es ar million hect t u o b a , s e i r t . n t u p o c l a in Egy i r t s u d n i in y l r a l u c i t r a p , n r e c n o c d g n n a i w e o t r s g a w a is n a b r e u r e h m T o r f y l l a i e — n o i t u l l o p d n a y t i r o l f a u q s d r n e t a a m w e d f o e r s m proble . s e c i t c a r p l a r u t l u r c e i r t g a a w e d h n t a n i l a e i n r i t l s ec d a o t d a from indu e l d l u o c tors c e s l a i r t y s b u d n i d e t d a n b a r e n c a a b x r e u e b l l i w m e water from l b o r p e h T . e r u t l u c i r g for a .
s e m l e b t a s l y i s a v n a o i t s a e g c i r r r i w resou e n n i t n e m t s e v n i f o e t a r d e c u d e r y l t n e r r u c the
n o i t u l l o P c i r e h p Atmos
n I . r i a e h t o t n i s t n e m e l e harmful gaseous . e c n a m r o f r e p p o r c l a m i t p o r id fo oe a
Many
in ees in a ©: n o i t s s. The combu e t u e a ae
4 y a m s l i o s s some area e r c n i y a m n o i t a c i f i d i c a s i h T
t l c i x o t e m o c e b y e h t e t i a h a t L t n l e a t i r t s u d n i f e o to the ex m o s s t s c e u d d u o t r i t p l a s er gh u hi o e s a g t 4 e h t s , a r e v o e r o M g n . i d s fuels as well n a u e o r r c g n i e h , t r e y a r ; l a e n e n o s z l e o v e l n e o v L i e t c e t o 1 d r r p a g s e ’ r h t r h a t e i w e h t t u o l l e i g t s a m s a 1 d y r u j y e n h t t a h t e e n v i e m g i tolongen l n e i b m I r a . w n l a b g gl o ae io t a i d a r t e e l o i s v a hofatrhmefsuel ultr : i g n i m r a w l to globa
rring, i Z e b l l i w e ’ r e e h t ,i urn occe g
that t s e g g u s d diiccaattiions h n n s i t i t i f I . s i h t i n o e c n e d i e i v e i e v i d s n u a l c n y o t c i v i i o t n c u d o r p l there 1S a r u t l u c i r g a r o f s n o i t a c i l p m i s ser! jou
. y t i l i b a n i a t s su
e r u t l u c i r , A n i s l a c i m e h C
:its products, ™
ecnvinonT
ay
e b o t s l a c i m e h c s u o d ar z a h l a y r u t n l u a c i m r g a f o e s h t u w o a c -.¢ both the gr
is grow
in s l a c i m e h c r e v concern o
. y t e f a s d n a n o i t u l l o p l a t . n e e r m u t n l o u r c i i v r g n a e n i f o s l s a e c u i s m s e j h ‘ c f o e s u e h t
pe
é
ing the food security of many areas of
& le most im; iP ortant fac o tor th reatthe world. Nonsustainable use of
23
Achieving and Maintaining Sustainability
). 86 19 r e w t i h W ( s ie tr un co ng pi lo ve de in g in rr cu oc es ss lo st te ea crops, the gr ng ni ai st su in t an rt po im so al is s te si ra pa d an es as se di of The control be to id sa e ar s e t i s a r a p d n a s e s a e s i d , y l l a b o l G . livestock production 0 10 d n a o l a f f u b r e t a w d n a le tt ca n o i l l i m 50 of h t a e responsible for the d o d s e r u g i f e s e h t d n A . ) 6 8 9 1 r e w t i h W ( r a e y h c a e s t a o g d n a p e e h s y a m s million e t i s a r a p d n a s e s a e s i d : m e l b o r p e h t f o t n e t x e l l u f e h t e t a c . h t a e not indi d g n i s u a c t u o h t i w s l a m i n a f o y t i v i t c u d o r p e h t e c u d e r seriously s t n i a r t s n o C l a i c o S d n a , c i m o n o c E , l a c Politi
n i s n i g i r o r i e h t e v a h y t i l i b a n i a t s u s l a r u t l u c i r g a n o s t b n o i r a p r t s r n o o j c a m e h o t s l f a o e r a e Many r e h t t u b , t n e m n o r i v n e l a c . i t g n o l e o m i n b o r d i n v a n e l a l c a i c o s d n a the physi , c i m o n al, eco c i t i l o p a e h n t e e b o t s a e h t a l s e e r i r t n u o c g n i p o lems which l e v e d e m o s n i , e l p o m t a x e 5 6 9 r o 1 f m , y o t r i f l d o i r e p e h t n I Political instabi . t n e m p o l e v e d l d a e u n n i n a a t s n u a s o e t v e i t h n c e a r r o e t t e d d e l i a r f o j h ma c i h w s e i r t n u r o o c e n n o a c i r d f a h A m n e e e h t t x i f s o e n h e t e t f r o i h t , e 1980, r o m r o t n e c 1 per ion, OF f s o a v n e i t a r , r a h w t w o r l i v i e — d o i r e p agricultural g t a h t g n i r u d s e s i r c l a c i t i l o p more major i e a e o p l a r u t l . u p c u i o r c g a d e n i major a t s u s a c o l , s e i d r n t a n u o c a n o g i t n a i n p o l y b e v e e d r u t l u c i r a, In oe d e d r o vestment in ority aff
‘
n i f o l e v e l w lo
4 d n a , n o i t a x a t , e d a a r t m in d o J e y b n a r l p r e o w o t l p i c e e m h s T a e . H h l t s a t n r at e u m r t n e r l m e u u v s c o n g s o c n a b a e r u e h t h t r f o o v t n a w e f m p o a l o e t d n the dev e t ees h ofte n
c i h w s e i c i l o pricing p . r e m r a f e h oft
;
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expense
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ition (F
u t l u c i r g A d n a d o o F The
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Js establi
n i s t s i x e t a h t f o e l p m a ex Crop and Lives to ck Pests Intensification of
Production brj
r t n o c t e f se h o t j n , i d f e I a l l t o s . u s s d t n s faee opret run a t n I : s eeds, 2 didi seases, insects, mite 2
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t i l i b a l i a v a f o k c a J edit r . The c e t a u q k of access to ade: in
25
Achieving and Maintaining Sustainability
s al go e th nd mi in ep ke ly nt ta ns co ld ou sh e W e. iv ct pe rs pe ty li bi na ai st su a rt pa al gr te in an ns er nc co ty li bi na ai st su ke ma to y tr d an ty li of sustainabi of all research efforts. t an ic if gn si a d pe lo ve de s ha e er th es at St ed it Un e th in Unfortunately, lcu ri ag e iv at rn te al e th of ch mu s ze ri te ac ar ch as bi is Th antiscience bias. t. yp Eg in ue tr t no is is th pe ho I . t n e m e v o m of ture e ng le al ch e th e us ca be e at un rt fo un y ul tr is as bi e nc ie sc ti an An th wi e ur as me e rg la rests in s em st sy al ur lt cu ri ag in s cu fo achieving sustainable st mu ns io ut it st in e es Th . ns io ut it st in l na io at uc ed to ed ed ne research and gy lo no ch te e th ng yi pl ap d an ng pi lo ve de on n io al nt ic te og at ol ec d an creased ic om on ec e th et me d an ty vi ti uc od pr e l b a n i d a se t ea s cr u in s a e e v e i achiev h c a t o n n a c t e n a l p e h T . y t i l i b a n i f o a t ) s e u s s u f e o h t s t n u o o h t i t i w e l dimensi p o e p f o s d e e n g n i w o r g r e v e e h t 1 m t e e h e c m d n l a a r u t e l r u u c t i l r u g a f o agric e s u e t a i r p o r p p a e h t g n i d u l c n i , y g o l o n h c e t n r e mod cals.
have
disrupte dl
Pumped
int
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— — —
e r u t l u c i r g A f o y t i l i b a n i Susta in Egypt: e v i t c e p s r e P n a i t p y g E A Non y e l t n e B d e r C. F
a n i e r u t l u c i r g A n a i t p y g E f o y t i l i b a n i a t s u e S b “ — t e s m u e m h t h c i e h c w n s e g n e l l a h c e The confere r a e r e h t t a h t d e z y i l n l u g f o s c s e e c r c — u s ” d l t e m e b t s u m s e Changing Wor g n e l l a h c f o s e i r o g e t a c : e t e p r y h g t E t n a i h t d k e n n i i h a t t n i a m d n faced. I a d e v e i h c a e b o t is e r u t l u c i r g a e l b a n i a if sust
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A Non-Egyptian Perspective
au re bu a by t o n no , s, ie it un mm co l ca lo by be st mu e us rte wa d r fo operations : t Bu s. al av he up me so e us ca ll wi s ge an ch ch Su ). 92 19 y ha is (B cracy in Cairo . al iv rv su n a i t p y g E r fo l a i t n e s s e be to r a e p p a s n o i t c a such nd la at th d e d u l c n o c e c n e r e f n o c e th at s n o i s s u c s i d d n a Presentations t s u m I t, is nt ie sc il so a s A . t n i a r t s n o c t n a t r o p m i t s o m d n o c e s s ’ e r u t l u c i r g k is a n i h t I t a h t ” s d n a l w e n “ e h t of s t s o c l a e r e h t to d e t a l e r t c a f a e z i s s d a n a l emph w e n f o y t i c r a c s a is e r e h t , y l l a b o l G . r a e l c e d ' a m n e l e al t s o m l a n has not b I . n o ducti
o r p l a r u t l u c i r g a o t n i g n i r b o t e l b a t i u , s s d n a l h c u s f o reasonably y t i l a u q r o i r e f n i e h t r o , t n e m p o l e v e d f o s t s o c l a e r h u t t l u r c e i h r t g i a e f , o s e t s i n ca u t e p t s o c e h t e k a m , s r o t c a f o w t e h . t e s u f o n i n o y d i a t e a r n l i a b s d n a l or com n o s t s o c e h t n a h t s d n a l w e n n d o n a l r e r h o f g i h s n a n o o l i t c e produ to mak g n i l l i i n a c s e i r t n i u o c g evelopin r e t n i . s t , c s e e j s a o c r p t mos n I . s d n development a l w e n g n i p o l e v e d f o s t u s c o o c f o e t h t d d e r s o i f v f d a a 5 r e t t e b e b themselves d l u o w s e i c n e g a e c n d a e t m s r i a s s f a t g n n i e e m b p o l y d a e r l a s d n a national deve l n o n
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o i t c u d o r p g n i s a e r c n i n o e c n a t s i s s their a . s t c e j o r p : p t o n l e e v m e p d o l f o e v s e t d s o c d n a l l a e w r e n e h n t o f n o a h t t n e m s s e s s a s y u b o r o e g n i o r d a e b e e d s l u o t o h s e k i l n o i d t l a u u o l w a v J e n a h c u S d l u . o n h o i s t h c ' a i g h i r : r w i r o s f m e s t d I n a l . l w e e n n n o s r e p ment of g n i r . e d e n n a i g , n s e r n i o v o n r e s , e t r n e d n , e s p m e a d d n i ; g , n t ri o t n competen o m d d n n a a g t n e m n i p n i n a u l q p e f o n o s t i s o t c a g e i r r a r i d ; s e c i v e d be include l o r i t v n r o e p u c s r d e t n a a w , g d n n i a t e a r r u e t c p u o r t s a , r e c n a n e t n canals; inf r i o a ( m s d l ; e s i m r y a f r o i w r e e n f n e i h t y l r l o f a r e n y e r g e n i e h h c t a m r o f m t r s a o e f c c n l a a t w o t o l e l h a t f e o t a i n r o p i t o a r p n p i a m r e t e d d n a . s sion services; an e i r t ; n s u d o n c a l t n w e e i n p i n c o e ) s fr t s d n o c a n d oth donor l u higher productio o w s d n a l w e n f e t a i c o s s a e h t f o g n l l i s of a a e r c n i f e o t s o c s i h t h t i w , I doubt that
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A Non-Egyptian Perspective
i u q e e r o m to t n i a r t s n o c e r e v e s t os m e h t y l b a b o r p e r a s n o i t i d a r t l a r u t l u C h t i w e p o c to t l u c i f f i d y r
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e v is it , r e v e w o H . n e m o w r o f s e i t i n u t r o p p o to g n i table l l i w w o n e r a s r o n o d e m o s , y l e t a n u t r o F . s n o i t i d a r t f o s e g n e l f l o s n o i the cha t i d n o c d n a s u t a t s e h t e v o r p m i o t d e n g i s e d s m a s n o i t a z i n a g r support progr o s ’ n e m o w t a h t d e p o h is It . n e m o w l a r u r y l l e a r i a c e p s o e h w , s n r e o m n o o d w f o l l i w d o o g e h t t i o l p x e l l i w t a h t s l a s o p o r p p o l e v e d l l wi . l u f p l e h e b o t anxious r e f s n a r T y g o l o n h c e T d e v o Impr t l u c i r g a e l b a n i a t s u s d n a d e Improv g d e l w o n k g n i t s i x e h t o b — e g d e , l a c i n h c e t w e n y l g n t i i o l p x e o t y r a s n i s m e o c c e n e b is s n o i t a world i r e p o o c 2 , o g y a r a n i e l d p a i c c e s i d d r e A t n i . p o r c , e r o f r a l u c i t r a p 4 tion. There f o e c u d n o o r p i t c o u t d o r p st e b t a h t w o h ) 9 r 8 o 9 f 1 A D I C ( 0 knowledge 7 d e t o t r o p e 0 r 5 y d d e u t t a s m i t s e k n a n B a y b d l d r e o s 2 a W e / r c D n I i e A h t S U n i n e e b e l b a l i e v a a v h a d I e r u e o w c t a t h p t y s e i g o l o n h c cereals in Eg e t f o ive use t c e f f e e r o m percent by
t h g u o s t a h t y r t n : u o c n a ‘ i s A cu d a populo us o r p n i s e s a e r c n i t n e c r e p 0 5 e l b na e r e h t f o t r a de. P
. D . h P d n a . for M.Sc .. >. n i o V i t a u l a v e p a r e t . f n A o i s n e t n x u o c n e d a h ciplines and e e h e a e e t y e d a e r l y n a t k t y e t th n f u i f . o F i n c t o n e i h t t t h g u c o a :ialty by 50 perce t p m that he th5 o r p d e ent spark ations m d e n t e a m t m s o c t e a r h and s e ively. T c i t c en farmer pra 1
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33
A Non-Egyptian Perspective
e os th of n o i t a r t s i n i m d a e th d l u o h s : m e l b o r p a is e er th t u improvement. B le ro e th y l t n e r r u C ? up m o t t o b e th m o r f or n w o d p o t e h t m o r f e b s e i t i v i t c a n i a t s u s d e s a e r c n i t a h t l u f t b u o d is It . l l a m s y r e v is s n o i t a z i n a g r o e g a l l i d of v n a s r e w o p d e s a e r c n i t u o h t i w d e n i a t t a e b l l i w n o i t c u d o r p l a r u t l u c i r g able a . l e v e l e g a l l i v e h . t n o i t s e u q t roles at a h t g n i r e d i s n o c n 1 l u f p l e h e b y a m e c n e i r e p x e n f o r e b m Sri Lanka e m a d e y o l p m e a k n a L i r S in y t i n u m m o c l a c o l h c a e r o f , m s e e t i s r y u s t n e n c o i t u r b o F i r t s i d r e t a w e h t e g a n a m d n a n i a t n i a m o d t o o g y t in i n t p u e k m m e o r e c W e th s m e t s y s e h t : y r o t c a f s i t a s y r e v e r e t w u B s . t s l r u e s s u e R o t . e g e a l l b a l i a v a the vil y l b a i l e r d n a y l r i a f s a w y l p p l u a s r t n r e e c t a o w t e h t t n e m t i m m o c a repair, and h t i w t n e m n r e v o g @ o g a u b s i r r a t e s y i d e v r e i t f a w r o f y t i l i about twenty b i s n o p s e r r e v o k o o t e n r o e i w t a r s t m s e i t n s i y m s d a e h t , e d a c e d a planning and n i h t i W . s m e t s y s n e h r t e v f o o g e h t e c n h a t n i w e n o i t c a f s i t a s s i tion and maint d p e e d s a w e r e h t d n a d e t a i r y o i i r e t e d y l s u o i ser , t n e m e g a n a m , n o i t a z i n a g r o . t n o i men t a g i r r i t l s a e c t o l d l e o i t f ) y o t t i l i y r b t i s n d o l p u s o e h r s l l u t f p F o ( Egy e l o r r , o s j n a o m i t a a c o l g n d i v e i t g a r a p , e e s c n a y n l e e d t i n w i w e f a and ma t a d e i r t e b t h g i m g n i t s e t h c u S . l u f people. s s e c c u s s i ollow if it f o t n o i s n a p with ex
s a t o u Q d n a , s l o r t n , o e C l p o e e c p i r P l a , r s e u r p l e h Input Subsidi s y a w l a t o n s i e r o g a d e on d j s a e r c n i s a h , e r l u p t l m u a c x i r e g a r o d f e s a n e e , r e d c r n G In a e l h i T a h . T s e d . a s c n o e i d t a l e u e p o r p t h ast ban
p r u e o h t t i g a e n h v i T i t r a u l : e r n o d i t y u l l o l v a e c r i t a c m i a m r o d n n o o c i e t c u e d l o b r f o a p k l r e a t a r a m r u t l u d c e n i a t s u s n i d J r o w e e r e h t j on on Revoluti t e h t n i s land rank
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nation. But e c a l p t e k r a m ae the n e e e r e l p o e p n a b tion, Ur ne l a e R . greatly. e n e b e l p o : e p m r a f n o n s e e so eth cleassn, p
i t c u d o r p d e increase
35
A Non-Egyptian Perspective
d an s ug dr of le sa d an e Us s. al ic em ch al ur lt cu ri ag d e v o r p p a of priate use l ct ri st ry ve e ar s, ve li of ng vi sa e th or , on ti ec ot pr chemicals for health t a y h W d. se su mi if s u o r e g n a d ly gh hi e ar m e h t of y n a m : d e l l o r t n co r? go ri d an re ca e l b a r a p m o c th wi s l a c i m e h c regulate agricultural
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, t n e i c i f f e s s e l , r e l l a m s r e v e o t n i s m r a f l l a m s f o p u g n i t d t n u a c n g o n i i t u c n u i d t o n r p o c f o s The e i c n e i c i f f e n i t n a c i f i n g i s s e s u a c , s m l e e l c b r o a r p p d e e m r a e s t t e a h t h t i w and sc s e i r t n u o c r e h t o y n a m n a h t d n a e r o e m c r a c , s t p y o g o t E is d n a L . labor use. t r o f f e n a m u h d n a d n a l f o e t s a w h c u s d r . e t cannot affo a n g a t s o t y t i v i t c u d o r . p s t i f e e s n u e a b c n a t c n a t r o p m i g n i r b n a fragmentation c a e r a y n r o h t f o s i h t s n i g n i d l n o o h i t c a e h t f o n o i t a d i l Appropriate o s n o c e r e h w a e r a a h 0 0 2 : s a t c e f n e f e e s e s e e v h t d a h , t u o y a Tn India I ha l d e n n a l p y l l u f e r a c a d n a , s r many owne e v n o c , e l g sin © s t n e m g a r f s ' r e n w o h e Eac . a e r a g n i k r o w d e p a h s y l t " v O T a nien ! n a uniform d e v i e c e r s All owner
. n o i t a z i r o t c a . t n e c r e p o w t y b t d o e p s a e e e r h c T in s a w v i t . l t n l u e c l c r a e p r e 0 v 5 o t u o p © The e s a e r c n i n o i t c . u y d l o b r a p i c e n r e i p a p d Gr a e s a e r c e d s t n e m e equir r r i o b e a L f o d n i k . a 4 e s o p s r e b m e m e e l l a ( : y b e s u e r o f t s d o n a l C n y t i n u m n m , e Co y l l e a c i p s y T . m e l b o r p ! e t s e n d e m e g a n ma ly deplete e
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s n o i n i p O g n i g n e l l a h C Four
im t n a t r o p m i ry ve k, in th I , ve ha s n o i n i p o l a n o s r e p ur fo g The followin : t p y g E in e r u t l u c i r g a e l b a plications for sustain n e e r o m d n a s u o i r e s e r o m is n o i t a d a r g e d l a t n e m n o r i v n e l a b o l G 1. . s e z i l a e r c i l b u p e h t n a h t e r u t u f e h t o t g n i r dange n o i t a l u p o p g n i d n e n u e h t , s n o i t a t i m i l e c r u o s e r h t i w d l r o w e t i n i f n i a t s u s 2. Ina n u e r a s s e c o r p h t w o r g c i m o n o c e g n i t u l [ o p e h t d n a increase i r a p s i d h c u s able. If . g n i w o r g e r a s e i r t n u o c n i h t i w s e i t i r a p r s e i h d t a r c d i n m a o n o c , E s t n 3, e m n r e v o g l a n o i t a n f o s n o i t c a y b d e y c u n d a e m r in t o n s e o r a a h c r o ties y h c r a n a l a i c o s d e t n e d e c e r p n u t c i d e r p I , n soo d i p a R . t s o . h s s e t i i r t s y o r coun t s e d r e c n a c rolled t n o c n n o u c n u n a f i t a , h h t c i h w h t r a E r e 4. We know h t o M n o r e c n a c a s i e s a e r c n i n populatio . t n e m n o r i v n e e h t y o r t s e d l l i w trolled, References
. d u o m h a M , d i e Z Abul a n o i t a n r e t n I
incr ease
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M . t p y g E , a i r d n a x e l A , P R CEMA asa *sRi
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ae Tapid rate of POpulation j t n a t r o p m i t s o Pr© otdhuectmio n.
” . s e i c i l o P d n a t n e m e g : a n a M e c ” . e r r u u t o s l y e u R c e i R r r g e A t “Egypt’s Wa y of Egyptian ty of Egy i l i «Sustainab r o f s m e t s y S d e e S d e v o r p m AS n, Virginia.
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c e h n t a h t n a e d e , n y i t f e i c de o s e h t f o s d e e n t u o b l a a r u t s l u u c s i n r g e a s n o e h c t A . y s l e l c a r c u i o m s e r econo l a r u t l u c i r g a n a d o n t a d a , e t l n e m , n r o e r v e i w v o n h e , , e t f o i n l s e o d e human r u t l u c i r g able a
n i a t s u s f o y t i l i b a r i s e d e th
¢ : t p y g E n i e tur p n i l a r u t l u c growth, agri s n o i t i d n o c l a i c o s d n a c economi
a
— s e u s s i e s e h t y e v r u s t s r i f l l i w s e g g u s r e f f o n e h t i d n a — i s m e l b o r p s a reas. a e d p e t a J e S i a e i o D O e v i t c e e p r s r r e e t p n i ” n a a l i a t r p e p v y e g s a E 0 y c i l o ith our “ p wS c i l b u p f tation o .
m4
.
t
n e i r o e r a r o f s n tio
p s A l a t n e m n o Envir
’ e e r g a c i s a b is e r e Th y e k e h t e r a y t ductivi 9
: incr?!
! v e g n o r t s 1S e r e Likewise th o d n e p e d o l have t
l i w h t w o r g r e t a w y l r a l particu n o i t a g i r r i r o water f
) m e e h t ° S , supply
r e t a w f o ge a t s a W t n a e g o of eee l r e t a w y b d n a l f o l t g a f o y t spoilage i l i b a n i a t s u s e h t o t s t e b t o strain n l l i w s e s o p r u p e v e agricultural ! e and r
existing
l f o e c n s u experie c o f o t s 1 t n i o p t n a t r o p m i
. t p y g E in y t i l i b a n i a t economic sus l a r u t l u c i r g a e r u he fut t
al
e h T . d n a l and t c e p x e t o n e ar
o r p d n a n ductio
tural resources,
41
An Egyptian Perspective
ng si es dr ad y tl ec rr co is , 86 19 in or ct se al ur lt cu ri ag e th in d te ar st which culture
ri ag e bl na ai st su e ot om pr to es ci li po l ro nt co d an g in ic pr e th of some in Egypt. Political Aspects
st la e h t n i , a t l e D e h t d n a y e l l a c V i m o e n o i l c N a e d t n n a e m n o Y r i L serious env : e t . New s e c e n t o n e v a h s t c u d o r p d n a e a c e a e h T t. ps have been
h
concern
onment.
ural reso urce b
rated
ase of
o r c r o j a m s f o l e v e l ab yield- i : out the
s e c r u o s e r f o s m r e t eir costs in
e h t o t d e t a l e r s e u s s i c i m o n o c e o i c o s e h t f o l al e d u l c n i s t c e s e m e h t o w t Political asp , e c n e r e f n o c e h t t A . e r u t l u c i r g a n a i t p y g E m r f o a f y y b t i l n i o b i a t n a i p a i t c s i u t s r a p d e s a e r c n i d n a ; y c i l o p c i l b u p f o g e l n o i r k a e m h n t o i s : i d c e e t d a f o s s domin e c o r p e h t n i ) r a l u c i t r a p n i s r e m r a f l l a m s ( s d l o h ; house . t s s l a e e v l e l t a l a n , o t i p t y a g n E n d I n s t n e m at local a n r e v o g e h t f o roles c i m o n o c e d n a l a The politic 1 f o n o i t u l o v e R since the
ive
i f e n e b s y a w l a t o n but
ership and contro w e n e h t n o s t c e j pro in y e k o t y t i l i b i access to e c u d o r p m r a f delivery of r u t l u c i r g a e h t o t tly related ities direc
maintained
i r g a f o m e t s y a support s
e t o m o r p o t s e c i extension serv s, e r e h p s l a i c o s d economic an
s a w e r e h t t u b , d e t a b e d y l t o h . s r d e i n i e l a h i t | fam o t a i s d r r e a v g o r e t r n o h c t i w e es r ‘li e w s e i ; c i l ; o d p l o h : e s e u o s h e | h T the farm families g n i : t c e f f a s e g n a little focus on ch
; t n e m y o l p m e d incomes an a r u r f o s u t a t s the role and a h t e c n e d i v e considerable n i s r o t c a e v i s s a p e g lar j o r p d n a s e i c i l o p the
;
n i d e v o r p s a h n o i t a p i c i t r a p 4 without e l b a n i a t s u s 4 g n i v e i h c a strategy for m those
o r f e t a n a . s d e e n do not em c i s a b r i e h t t e e n m e t d n a s t s s e m le nter i prob r i e h t d .< happene an le op pe the ity to
ine aliz r np s seeking behavior ©and tathi e rt , 6 8 9 1 n i , d e decid
liberalizing
its contro
e t a e r g w o n There is ! e e n e r u t l u agric
e l b a n i a t s u s a
n a c i m o n o c e (1)a macro k s i r e k a t o t for people
x e ) e v i t a g e n d n a e v i t i s o p (
r
=atiso
An Egyptian Perspective
43
nt me rn ve go by ed us n te of , ch oa pr ap nt ri -p ue scale first. The bl r ro er dan lia tr a by ed ac pl re be ld ou sh , es departments and agenci or d/ an s rt pe ex en wh , elf its ng ti ec rr co method that is capable of
farmers so advise.
. d e t p o d a e se to ke li d l u o w e w s e r u s a e m r e h t r u f Below we list
l a V e m o S . e r u t l u c i r g a e l Waris b k r o w e m a r f l a g e l e h t e r ‘that the e l b a e c r o f n e e L e B O E E s ‘Cost ae y r a p e t u l l o p “ d Sustai
i
ty”
an
x e d n a h c r a e s e r e h t In n a s r e k r o w to e g a s e g a mes s s e m e h t of s s e n e v i t c e f f e e h T . fe li y l i a d of t r a p l a i t n e s s e i n d a e r c be e h t d n a s r e m r a f of n o i t a c u d e of l e v e l e h t n o d n e p e would d . e g n a h c f o s t n e g a d n a s e i t i v i t c a bility of the d e t a l e r y l l a r u t l u c i r g a l al n i n o i t a p i Farmers’ partic . y c i l o p c i l b u p e v i t c e f f e o t y e k e h t e h t is s n o i t a l s i g c le e t — s r e m r a f o t s e i g o l o n h c e t w e n g n i t a c i n u m m Tr o c n I s s e c c u s “ h t i w e b d l u o h s t s e t t s r i f . s e i t i n fer—the u m m o c r i e h t in e g n a h c f o s t n e g a s a t c a l l turn, wi : e d u l c n i d l u o h s n i s s e c . o h r c p r a e s e r r e f l a r u t l u c i r nology trans g a l a c o J r o f t r o p p u s e z i s a d h n p a m e d l u n o h s s e t u t i t s n 1. Coordinatio i h c r a e s e r d f n o a s n e o i i t i t s a r z e i v m i i n n u i m , s i d h n t a g n i o s d e c r u o s e r l a r u t a n f o e s u e the sustainabl e e c e b d l u o h s s e r u s i i n t a c u d a o r p a e 2. ane e e e a a y b m e e h t a e t c a i v e l l a to e t x d e l e i d y n a h g h i c h r the resea p between the i 3. Ce p o d a d n a d e e br
g i h h t i ) w s d i r b hy
e t n i d n a s n o i t a rot
essential for reduction of Government
pr environ agents $
i r t s i d n i e l o r e v e n o y effecti r e v f e
f
y t i l a u q e h t o t h lies bot
stocks.
and th ow gr Population is that the P™ eSS trends
ae
4
mm
d n a y t i l i b a n i a t s u S l a t n e Environm s m e t s y s o c e o r g A f o n the Redesig l l i H . B t r a Stu
y a d t n e s e r p w o h r e d n o w l l i w s t s i m o n o r g a ) , e f o r u t u n f o i s e n h t a p x n i e e t h n t e t a c o d y a y l g At some poi n i w o n k o t d e u n i i m t e n h c o c s a e v h a c h u s d s e c i t c a r p e z i scientists coul s a h p m e t a h t d n s a m e t i s n o y i s s o r e n o l i i t o s c u n d i o r It l p l u s e d r e z i h l c a i h w speci , s e r o u t t l u y c l o g n n o i m w o n p k o r F O c w ; o n T o i t a d n e i m a t n o c d n a cally manag n f o o i t s s s u o y l L a h x , e n o i r t e a t c a i f w i t r d e n s a e d , n d n o a i degradat estation and r o f e d f o e c a f e h t n i y b y l d d i n a d n s a r t e s m r a f f o t n e m e c a l p s i d , y t i s able biodiver
P O e c n e d n e increased dep
, s e i d i s b u s , s c and antibioti e e n c i s a b l a c o l versus s i h t y h w f o n o i t a n a l p x e y M
.
d e n i m a x e y l e rar
tare
i
i
, s e i t i l i b i s n o p res
P y l i r a m i r p s i n o the situati
exactly what ma
g n i f g n i t n i o p e r o f : e b f l e s y m u o r h t change e hat, b caus t s i s i s e h t My e d n u o y w l l a c i cholog
> a , s l a o g e t inappropria s g n i h t ) e l b a n i a t
a e l p o e p h t o b to
i
’ p s e d i w e h t example, o m m o c e h t d societies, an
:
e z i s e d y r u x u l meet distant P r o f : e p a s may be a Ce
W S a s r e d the rea
e W y r o t s i h t Throughou , s n o i t a n r e h t the gods, o , s l a n o i t a n i t l u m and power,
, s e i t i n u m m o c l a r u r f o s s o l s l a c i m e h c c i : t e h t n y s ; s resource : s
v a h y a m s t s e p t including insec r i e h t d n a n e r d l i h c f o tion
n a a e n a a
o e c i u é c e f Be
The Redesign of Agrosystems
49
It ). 87 19 ef ho Sc ; 80 19 r te la (S em th on and of our addictive dependence up
ar ss ce ne st mu ty li bi na ai st su of on ti ni fi de e in nu ge a at th is th om fr s follow r fo es in el id gu e id ov pr d an or vi ha be r ou on ns io ct ri st re t ou ily spell appropriate goals. g: in ow ll fo e th s ie pl im ty Environmental sustainabili
J will
meanin
:
a
is Inth es. liv r ou in th t wi en lm il lf fu R rG av e r fo e : 1 thi t wha s us sc di , ty li bi na ai st su al Sign of nati Onal an t a t h w s e g g u s d , n s a m e t s y s e a e i t s a c h c t u n s to e m e n e o d l p e b im must
Paper
ar
€ systems.
r e v o y t i r o i r p is th g n i v i g d n a , s e l p o e p l al of s d e e n c i s a b e h t g n i t e e M 1, w e f a f o s d e e r g e c a meeting th p a c g n i y r r a c e h t w o l e b , e l b i s s o p if , s e i t i s n e d n o i t a l u p o p 2. Keeping t n e m e g a n ity of the region a m d n a n g i s e d e h t d n a s n r e t t a p n o i t p m u s n o c s e c r u o 3. Adjusting s e r e l b a w e n e r of l a w e n e r e h t t i m of r e p e o s t u e h t s m e t r s y fo s of s e i t i r o i r p g n i h s i l b a t s e d n a , g n i l c y c e r , g n i v ! r e s n o 4. C s e w c o r l u l o a s e o r t e d l e b r a i u w q e r l e v e l nonrene e h t w o l e b t c a p m i l a t n e m n o r i v n e e v l o g v e n i o p t e e e K u n 5. i t n o c d n a r e v o rec o t d e t c e f f a s m the syste
h t i w e l b i t a p m o c s i t a h t e n o s i e r u t l u c i r g a e l b a n i a t s u s y l l a t n e m n o r i v n e An . a i r e t i r c e v o b he a t f o e v i t r o p p u s and
e c n a n e t n i a M e c r u o s e R d n a y t i l i b a n i a t s u S v i t c Deep e r i d e s e h t y h w o t s e t a l e r n o i i t s e u p q l e h t n O a T t . r s e o i p t e j ! c p o e s e d d n d A more ii m a n a s l ) a c u i d l i o v p i d n i t s a o m y b y l s e u s o i r y e t i s l i b a n i a taken t s u s . w l e e w t e b h s i u g tin s i d I s e u s s i l a e r n i a t s u s ) l a t n e m a d n u f , m r (long-te
POnentj
a? th er th ra , h t w o r g e q in d, rl wo f the la. havior g n i s u o r e th Tt that y, d ur e t nt a m ce i t s e en y be g r e S € en USed ij nt
tic ani
mals:
he
o w O N > s u d n i , t fac a Over.d,
S: willin
wo
tld came
from
the
trialized ih Percent comes from 8 to do alm teties have functioned z OS
ding
e r u s n e o t g n i h ae nyt
y c n e i c i f f e focuses on e r p e h t s t p e c c a y l l a u s u t I e m y b s m resources. e l b o r p e v l o s o t s m i s a l a o g d n a s e t a u l , a n questio lity, in contrast, re-ev sustainabi e v l o v n i s m e t s y s e h t s n g i and redes s t i m i l l a c i g o l o c e n i h t i b be done w , n o i t n e v e r p y b s m e l b o r p g n i v sol c i t r a p s i n o i t This distinc p s e r h t i w r a e l especially c ’ n o i t n e v n o c , o s r u e h m T u n . ) s b a 0 h 9 19 t a h t h c a o r p p a e v i t a r plites cu . t n e m n o r i v n e e h t d n a t n e o c peopl l a c i g o l o i b f o n o i t u t i t s o b r u f s n o c the s e h c a o r p p a w o l l a h s e s S e y s h O t e e of r g a e h t f o t n e m e g a n a m be= o d t n a n g desi are s n o i t u l o s p e e d t n e n s a e b o r p if perm m o r f ) s n o i t a n d e e d n i (and ade to
t s u m s t r o f f e systems,
P° m
Environmental As pects Table 41;
The Redesign of Agrosystems
Comparison of Three Approaches to Susta inable Agriculture
U n s u stainable ea ree san ete
;
Efficiency
Substitution
SS
i
--
and Resource Efficient Agriculture
Eco-Agriculture
Physico-chemicial c
(soluble fertilizer, Pesticides, biotechnology)
Imported
input-intensive
Narrow focus, farm as factory (linear
design and
Physical/chemical/
Biologicals and
biological (slow Telease, band)
natural materials
Efficient use
Alternative inputs
ee = a e a time fess ae pest control agents, we can a
Softer factory
Management) Problems TS as enemies
to eliminate and control directly with products and devices
Natural and Ecological Farming
Maximize produc tion
(neglects
maintenance) Create demand, manipulate wants
i Beno
Low power
Bio-ecological
while improving maintenance
Improved
maintenance
ion; that ig Aires i nore lon:lor n,intain the Da on pttioma © illusi nsdumtha co- an souble and untru
be
e s : u a c e b e a J : u m r o f h c u s , o t d e t c a r t t a e r a d i and v o r . P y e h e. T
h c y s p r u o f o s t r a d p e d n u o w
5
be
‘
sty) that we
hon h est y), to cei ve wit (an d re ty Per t We lems that
ive
BON ch bule a let s olutions. fright enin ing to to consider in ic-
=. Really attracted to ee
Optimize production
associated impact oan e o a s su th wi e l b i t a p m inco
controls (pests as indicators)
Meet real needs
eRe ime
deeper into P Ce
omission. Such ia ae nereasingly difficu out of which it
aia
f course, blatantly ur Spore and institution pit
and ecological
(emphasizes maintenance)
arm
compiain
This is reflected in the common
the corner. This 1s, : acd
Bigs d focu n iS Ri s frm as kam
Prevention, select
o i : a“. : a ee US cs mi o on only by ec
rmined ‘ tenance isi * de te e ne ee ah in ma of a p ct Sa assume that our n eg2 le
of current policies;
Knowled ge/skill
:
y t i l i b a n i a t s u S w o l l a h S f o s t o o R l a c i g o l o h c Pssy
ise more for less; tii on, export, and
Goals
Maintain Product ion
degr
, e v e i l e b I T » ” . w o h w o n k I y a w e h t n i i m r a f o t d r o f f a d l u e v o i c t c I e l l h ly, s o i C w s i i w I . “I s t o o r that a l a c i c i g o l o h c y s p r e p e e d s a h t c m e o l g r e p n t a s h i t h t s e i tha , t i a r h g o l o n h c howweevve e t d n a s t n e m n r e v o g , , e e t uc od a pr r e ing e J l o ; t r o r, s ea cr : aes ms by in most of us we eee aim to solve social term and distant effects
and management
Efficient contro l (monitor Pest, Integrated Pest Management)
Renee
and t lec neg h oug thr ces our res a these wl other of ah
intensive actory SEES
ee
agroecosystems to conserve ee
Approaches Conservation
esfor riesI, , |farmers are rewar ded tural capitaj l. In mos t countries
, ay a a m and on ati lit abi reh of d kin this for ae! a a not a wa ps Ha for lly ica nom eco Danae are often penalized farm t por sup to nd fou are s y a w ie il : capa tter. Until way
Shallow Sustainability
Conventional
i
51
; ce our goa Is determ1 Sin
ctions and our
e e e i ed in am ex be e a our goals e
e s n hi be e li ms ai positive a a a be , e a OF ue as our tr
. le ab en to y t i v i t c u d o pr
air returns
ee
20 ) US TH , us ho e lv ce re to s r e c u d o r p for dgpini ng li il lf e fu o d an l u f g i n i mean
, n o i t o m e , al nt me BS teal a e e f a e i iv t s u m productivity, quantitative implica
xi
ea
a in s al go y e c e o r g a agement of tional supports. Othe < snclude examined in the sae
li1 vestock, and envi 10)
eons - ons determine the
ala
.
‘ak
use goals
dmill of
S2.
Environmental Aspects
The Redesign of Agrosystems
Table 4.2 Implications for the Food System of Having, Sustai nable Versus Unsustain-
Agroecosystem Design and Management
able Goals
Lower Goals
Higher Goals
Productivity Profit Power Competitiveness Growth
Exploitation Market Forces
Nourishment
Human Development Justice Humaneness
Sustainability
Resources
Nonrenewables Imported
Specialized
Diversified
Separated Larger Dependent Disseminator One-Way Products Isolated Res. Stn. Plots Short-Term
Integrated
Smaller Self-Reliant
Extension
Research
Single Discipline Technologies Reactive
Status Quo Defensive
Competitiveness Subsidies
Conservation Priorities Solar/Renewables Local
Programs & Policies
Facilitator Two-Way Service, Skills Participatory On-Farm Long-Term Holistic Knowledge, Skills Proactive Evolutionary Visionary Efficiency/Substitution/ Redesign Supports/Rewards/ Penalties
, up d il bu , le mb se as or , fy ti en id to ed ne To achieve the above goals, we first l ra tu ul oc ci so d an l, ca gi lo co oe bi l, ca mi he oc ic ys ph y ar ss ce ne e th and maintain d an s er nt Ce v lo vi Va of on ti ec ot pr e th om fr e ng ra ms is an ch Me resources. a on ti ec ll co to , es gi te ra st on ti va er ns co r te wa d an il so gene pools, to i e e, pl am ex r Fo . lls ski d an om sd wi us no ge di in of preservation e f aa d an , nd la e th ss ro ac nt me ve mo its g in ow capturing water, sl we ne e e d an n io nt te re , ms da of e us e th points of need, through n ig a a e e Wi ance. rt po im t un mo ra pa of e ar swales, and channels © e dg le ow kn nd ou of pr a e ir qu re es ur ct ru rte siting of these st e e i e e d n a l a n o s a e s of e g d e l w o n k l a c o l d e l i a t e cesses, a d ! n i a r t s n o c l a r u t l u c o i c o s e h t f o g n i d n a t s r e d n u n a istics, and . ) 1 9 anic 9 1 y a “ge l S d n i a n o s i org the of (Mollison 1988; Moll n io it os mp co de h ic wh in um di me a il y ; tl an in SO om ed pr r, matte nic orga Soil is of ived : cae nic orga nhen ssuufpp: Jied with n o matter is the primary activity going OD. gy C , ) 9 6 9 ly, L w degrades
ae
e s r e v n o c , ; n n o o i i s o r e o t and isj lost
l l i H y ( t i v i t c u d o r p d n a y t i l i t r e f h t o n b bo n i s e s a : e r c , on n rb i ca l fix i o to s d an s h soil,
sequently, ways must be found to properly mana
io
ervation of energy,
e th is l soi e th in er tt ma .. on to ti di ad In ve it. er ns co d , an il so e th 6 it rn tu re
ni ga or as up dil bu its d an on rb ca the fixation of t :
Nir: [© us to ble availa gy strate primary dioxide in the atmosphere and associa
oO
including more productive and demas ral 1986; (Mollison polycultures in multistory
d
prese our to respect With
$Y agroecosystems, tally impacting ny meee efficiency the through evolution W agement Mac 1985; (Hill Sustainable systems
M3M fertilizer and pesticide integrated
maint fertility i alternativ® and dence on biological 10% required ne Hi and control pest of methods cultural al Meret: methods Special 1986). and Smillie scofield ; as those such areas, of agricologenic
alophytic (Hodge chemicals toxic ination with micro es harvesting and ‘NVolve the planting decom specialist with ‘on of the soil there livestock, to With respect ees vauetee domestic Mi th compatible and a
om \gher ecological efficiency, 4 of sign (Rane former the *Ssociated with de the and capacity carrying to ‘ize
The Redesign of Agrosystems Table 4.3
s gm di ra Pa g n i v l o S m e l b o r P Alternative
c i r t n e c o n h c e T , t s i n o i t c u d Re
) s e i m e n e e t a n i m i l e ( s m o t p m Cure sy
Regulation, Monitoring, and Control
system e oeae destroyed throughout the world partly beEcological AE E Bi cause the long-term resource maintenance
t no d y n t a i v i t c u d o m r r p e t t r o h s
AL
re ar ul ic rt pa a e v a h s t n e m n r e v o g y, tl a t a s n e p m o c to y t i l sponsibi of st si re t s u m d n a , y c n e i c i f e d t e k r a m is th r fo € l l a n r e t x e redesign such ere Ag l a r e n e G e th as h c u s , s l o r t n o c e r e S a l i a d n a s f f ment on Tari of y c a m i r p e th g n i c r o f n i e r y b h c i h w , ) T T A G ( l a n e r of d n a t the marke t0 on ti na a of y it il ab e th s n e k a e w , e d a r t l a n o i t a r e l b a n i a t s u s practice otect its environment r p to d n a t n e m e g a n a m e c r u o Speecsific j
(Shrybman 1992).
penalties (Hill oo ak In the longe
d n , a s d r a w e , r s t r o p p u s e d u l c s n instrument i %? —0 ed ir qu re is ch oa pr ap r a broade
T term
that aims to ee
the pee
e bl na ai st su a of t en em ev hi ac e th O TSit e t a e e S ll wi is Th agriculture. n, io at rm fo in e at ri op pr ap to ss ce ac rs lo ve ae A ME ua e P : resources, and @ of n io is ev ov pr , ls il sk w ne of oe : 5 , a su l na io ut it st in broad range of
t en pm lo ve de , b) 90 19 al. et e Ra ac (M s rt of sustainable visions, higher e po t en rm we po em e th d an s, es en ar aw of s el ev n ns Tequired to take ‘i e iv at rn te Al ). 91 19 a, 90 19 l il (H n io ct e a e a e e L visions for problem
and ara
are ree = Tllog 220
? a t a M we at th e ir qu n re vi ie ly ch al tu en ev r, ve we ho , ll wi & oe ee the of d an , or vi ha be t en rr cu r ou of s ot ro al ic og ol f ¢ widespread ek ys wa nd fi to d an t, rmen zuiiaa yee
we po em d an e ea e Ri 5 to remedy the ez ta 2 o si vi ll sti ve ti ma er ms are de ee
terse pee We hae
at ve cPipent of Geeeetne (1987
Molli
€ 0 een have nd
A ie e a n c n E M OA IF an of s ng di ee oc pr e th . y o S oe n: io nt te at l ia ec sp e rv se de A, EI JL l na ur jo e th d an ), 90 19 al. et a gm 5 ithin Egypt, the work of Ibraheim Abouleish is exem i — ’ on si vi 1 h eH ni t er aw ip d se an s, e es nc en ie ar sc aw of e th e be us ll ya 1 e at s) ri op le pr Ba ap at c te ties atlu of people, and their hnology; ?
y or at ul eg -r lf se pt ru is (d ts Inpu s) on ti lu so y r a r o p m e t , s m s i n a mech
ns
IK
O
tieri
and va
ec W: s. em st sy od fo e bl na ai st su e ev hi ac re re e S e e S that will enable us to r ou ul rf we po r ve howe at th s ve el rs ou edly to remind i be ; ty li bi na ai st su e ev hi ac to le ab be t no ll wi ey th e on al , be ogy might
a, 90 19 l il (H n io ut ol ev al ci so ho yc ps n be realized only through our ow to al du vi di in d re we po em d an e, ar aw , 1991). Indeed, the ability of a single me su As . ed at im st re de un be t no ld ou bring about meaningful change sh ! l a u d i v i d n i t a h t e r a u yo
ow rr na t, an st in , ct re di , le mp si , le ng Si
) ne li ip sc di le ng si t, le ul -b ic ag focus (m
High-power, physicochemical (synthetic), imported product, expert (high-risk, expensive, dependent), centralized control
Technology intensive
Inflexible, ignores freedom of choice, disempowering
Temporary solutions , nt me on ir nv (e s it ef en sb di ed ct pe Unex health, etc.)
Incompatible with higher values
Holistic, Ecocentric
Prevent, respond to multiple causes, stresses (problems regarded as indicators)
Design and management, benign inputs (self-maintaining/regulating systems supported by cultural practices, permanent solutions)
g n o l , t c e r i d n i , x e l p m o c , Multifaceted
s n a r t / i t l u m ( s u c o f d a o term, br d e z i l a r t n e c e d , ) y r a n i l p i c s di
/ rm fa no , l a c i g o l o c e o i Low-power, b n e p e d n i , e v i s n e p local (low-risk, inex dent), decentralized
d e t c e l e s , e v i s n e t n i l l i k s / e g d e l w Kno
technologies
, e c i o h c f o m o d e e r f s t c e p s e r , Flexible empowering
s n o i t u l o s t Permanen
s t i f e n e b d e t Unexpec s e u l a v r e h g i h h t i w e l Compatib
The Redesign of Agrosystems
ae Bare soil
Table 4.5
le nab tai Sus to n tio nsi Tra er Aft and ore Bef s mer Far of ics ist ter rac Some Cha
Agriculture
After
Before
Cover crops, intercrops, nonrow crops,
M onoculture or TOWcrop rotations Unmanaged field borders Exported : nutrie mt s rep synthetic soluble T etine ae Manure — Waste disposal Pesticides and antiibi bioti solutions)
Grain/concentrate
; Hes (curative
feeds
Large , expen ifi machi nery siv ©, unmodified Fossil-fuel based
Specialized Product ion and Marketing
mulches
Rotations including soil-improving
crops
Windbreaks and insectary plants Recycling, soil formation, and N2 fixation
Optimal management, composting
Cultural and biological controls (preventative) Forage included
Smaller, modified, appropriate
Exchangers, generators Developers Stewards (maintenance) Nourishment of people
n o i t a m r o f n i of s t n e i p i c e R Technology users
Exploitersofresources Economic viability emphasis
Experimenting
s e s u a c g n i d n a t s r e d Un ; g n i t a r o b Colla g n i g a n a m d n a g n i n g i Des Diversification
) Waiting for help s on ti lu so e) iv at ur (c x fi kic qu g Seekin Competing Controlling inputs and processes Specialization
Self-reliance
(responsibilities)
Dependence (rights)
Empowerment icators nd i , n o i t a r o p i Ga e, t a t i l i c a f , y f i t n (ide
Helplessness
Solar and renewable
Enemy-oriented (identify, attack, eliminate)
Diversified
Problem control
respond)
Health promotion
Altieri, M.A. Agroecology: The:
Boulder, Colorado: Westview
Brown, L.R. et al. State of the Worl
Toward a Sustainable Society. N ee
Demause, L. Foundations of Psy: chohis D. Lairon, a, E. Nikiema, DjigmA., : andy a Sustai and Nutritional Self-sufficlenD oe Pr
Brora His and Man Respects sacar Confer
International
Germany: IFOAM, 1990:
Gershuny Goad J. Smillie.
’
The Sou! of So!
ment. 2nd Ed. Weedon, Quebec:
Qua
il:A
Hill, theound SB. “A Global Food and Agric’ “4990, Health, Nutritional Gens
ae y l l a c i g o l o c E s t s e P g n ~——.. “Controlli —
1984,“R13-15. edesig
ning
12(3/4): 32-36.
the
-
Food
Sys
_a
5 1 : ) 4 8 , 2 9 9 1 : ; e th of e y : e s a e s Sricologenic .DiAgri c. Hort. 1983, 1; 26% »” Biol i
andG.R.
d an e nc ie Sc l ra tu ul ic gr “A . s a y u S h e M h t f o w evie ' s r e i r r a B c i f i t n e i c S e e n e n i t n e and P ot t r o H . c i r g A , l o i B Solutions,”
nd TSB
= Steatiton 10a
ion to Sustainabl
155-198.
d n a s m a r g o r P , s e i c Poli
19900, Oe
ae
in Canads,
5
f o y t i l i b a n i a t s u S l a t n e m Environ s m e l b o r P : e r u t l u c i r g A n Egyptia s e v i t c e p s r e P d an :
f o t f i g e h t is , s u t o d o r e H d i a s , t p e Egy t i p s n i d n a , t i s i v s ’ n a i r o t s i h k e e r G e h t r e t f a an t o n s i l l i t s s i h t , s t developmen w e h t t u o h t i w ic
© n o i t a v r e s b o e h t d firme
: e c h t n e e t h g i e Egypt in the late e t a w f o p o r d e l g n a sin
e v e t o n , t p Egy
n o e l o p a N e l i h W ” . a n e a S e n a r r e t i d e M e l i N e h t f o e g r a h c s i d e m o s g of allowin n e g e h t : s n o s a e r l a t n e m n o r i v n e and other . t c e r r y o l c d e t b u undo to 4
t n i a r t s n o c r o j a m e h t , t p y g E t f o In n o i t c u r t s n o c e h t r e t f a n e v E . d n a l t o P4 n and e s u r e t a w e h t d e r e t l a y l l a c i d a r h c i wh n a h t s s e l s 1 h c i h w , s n a d d e f n o i mill ) a 1 9 9 1 s a w s i B ( t n e s e r p t a d e s l a r cultivat u t l u c i r g a e h t l l a s s u c s i d y l l u f g n i n mea i , r e v e w o H . one chapter o r l p a r u t l u c i r g a e from th irrigation. r o f r e t a w f o on the role
: t n e m p o l e v e d e bl na ai st su The concept of mt e iz gn co re en be s ha it d nd hi phy be e bl na ai st su of on ti ni fi no agreed de ge ey th d an t, is ex . e e hundred definitions ¢ st li mp si at wh me so e ar definitions tion, 4 we
a l u m r o f y c i l actual use in po
59
Problems and Perspectives
61
e iv ss ce ex of e us e ud cl in s e l p m a x e e ac : ! p n o m m o C . d o o g n o m m o c e h e th s n a e m serve t h c i h w , ls na ca of s e h c a e r d a e h e h t n i s r e m r a f y b r e t a w , rn tu in , is Th irrigation . ly pp su r te wa le ab li e r n u r o / d n a t n e i c i f f u s n i nta bs su rs de en il tailenders have ta of s e m o c n i e h t s u h t d n a s d l e i y p o r c e h t to e s a e ed r rg c ha e sc d di d l e ar u o c ry st du n i g n i s s e c o r p o r g a m o r f s e t s a w , . y m l a r a e l r i t m s i n S w o d . y s e tiall s isting water-u , s e x a t , s h r g e u v o i r r h t d , y l l a u t canals an p e c n o c t s a e l t a , d e z i it i , s e i r t n u o c d e +n develop t n a t n o r i o t p a m l i u g e r r u o d f n ities for subsidies, a n i o t y s a e n has not bee f o n o i t a l u c l a c reasons. (1) The p y l l a c i t i l o p , y l t n e u q e r F ) 2 ( cult. s o c l a n o i t i d d a g n i perienc n a c e r e h t s u h t d n a time,
9
e l b a n i a t s u s f o t p e c n o c e h T : s n o i t a , T C B at the ble over the term
co
nsid
9
a i v e b d l u o w soledicd
Issue of what constitutes long-term has neither red much i : ! t c a f in e m i t e h T . s n current discussio
l le y l l a c i s a b n e e b has
o i t a l u g e R ) 4 ( . s real cost e v a h s e i r t n u o c g developin m A : s e i t n i a t r e c 3. Risks and un o d o t s a h t n e m p o l tural deve
, e l p m a x e r o F . s m e t s y s x e compl r e t a w d n a d n a J t a h t n o i is no quest production. The fu
y g E n a c l e v e l t a h w to is, Up a n i a t s s br u s g n i c i f i r sified without sac transition
g n i n n i g e b e h t e t ca
of a
t a p t a h W unsustainable?
amet
ers need to
t u o b a is n o i t i s n a r t a such ' g d e l w o n k t n e s e r p Our ansition.
r t e h t e t a c i d n i that could
4 e ¢ l b a n i a t s s u s n o m o i r f t a n o i t e i s u n a l r t f : e h t r i , © t c e i d h e r T p pensive
w5, on Over th
very ex uch¥ ria! i thers
elon
=t
1s to achievea eesee objective
of
2
to obtain
€rm implic
or signs changes
a c i r o g e t a c € e t a t s o t in order ddition t i l i b a n i a t s u s of un increase th
e h t is e n O . ) 2 9 9 1 s a w s Bi
the problem, is do
c i t of n o i t c e r i d e h t y f i t n e even to id ° P y t is th of s e u s s i Fundamental
omed to fail.
a o F a8 e l b a n i a t s u s of s the concept conceived
ae
x peo oft en
take
actions
which
could
be
beneficial
a
to
th
If they perceive
ronse benefits, they ut are unlikely to
and implemente
MAS
Berit 18
be mos’
s n o i t a q j * e s e r p at t n e m agricultural develop n o c oF l a r e n e g r e h t i e e r a this subject the Jatest tren have
only been
given
y
Jabel,
Problems and Perspectives
63
of ” e t a m i t s e u g “ t s e b y M . ) 6 8 9 1 k h s i K ; 0 9 9 1 s a a H ; 0 9 9 1 k n a B d l r o W data ( e b d l u o w n o i t a z i n a b r u to e u d d n a l l a r u t l u c i r g a f o s s o l l a u n n a t n e r r u , e l b the c a n o s a e r e b to e t a m i t s e is th g n i m u s s A . s n a d d e f 0 0 0 , 0 3 f o l r a e r u t l u c i r g a of the ord e h t d forts have increase
f e n o i t a m a l c e r d n a l t a g h n t i c u s d n e r a e o t m n o i this t n e t t a t n e g r u e v i g t s u m Egypt destly. y l l a u n i t n o c h t i w n—first because
a e Y t d t n o i c e s ; t s o l e e b e p should not d n a l | i t s i x e e s o l n o o t i t a t o l n u p o e p l b a increasing acess, it is desir i y b n o i t e a t m a a s l n c e e p r m o d c n o t y r t n because la e h t d m a e v i t c u d o r p y d e a r e o r m l a n e e t r f a o is t a h t n o i t a z i n a b r u land areas o t e u d t s o l d n a l e s u a c e b d r i h t d n a reclamation; . d n a l d e m i a l c e r e h t n a h t e v i t c u prod s e c r u o s e R r e t a W
m i l a c i t i r c e h t In spite of
: e t a m i t s e l a n o i t a n reliable t n e r r u c f o s e t a m i t reliable es
a p i c i n u m , y r t s u d agriculture, in a n o i t a r , s e t a m i t s e Without such e h t r o f e s u t n e i c ity and its effi r a f y b s r o t c e s l a r u t l u c i r g a e h T f o y t i t n a u q e h t f o have a clear idea and t. , e r u t u f e h t n i r o this sect ) (0 y r t s i n i M e h t estimates from
wa a3
n u o c r o c a e r u t l u c i r g a t a h t e t a c i d n i -use ) (MPWWR ™ billion 2 of water total which is 84 percent of the i loss 5
on ti ra po ya d te ma ti es al nu an an e 9 to © not includ lateral, and sublateral, mainly due are estimate use: 1 watertranspiration losses 10 Egypt: accounts for the bulk of ag" ie
” en er ff di e th is it y l l a e R . g n i d mislea
ale The net area of cultiy ated land can o agricultural census wa Sin 1961. 2. Land reclamatio n stat are not available on unproductive and/or aba ndoned. 3. Information
is not bs availabl. € on |
betwee
outflows and usages, S°
but also “unaccounted for
Ee
: hes for very specific ye ars. eo gsesidlie to.urban a e - Current estimates of landloss due to waterlog ging and salinity are SO vague as to be meanin
gless.
The environmental literature on E £ypt is fu ll of anecdotal cial estimates on Jand-loss and these h ave been m asqueradin
or superfi-
g as realistic
Water Availability for Agriculture © nt ou am e th in d en tr rd wa wn do e Th likely to accelerate in increasing demand fro industrial water-use in 19: ”
™ n io ll bi 7 4. s wa , 80 19 in ey surv m® by the year 2000. In water-use in Egypt, 2"
i
65
Problems and Perspectives
ns io at ic pl im c mi no co oe ci so l ia potent e h t e l i h W . y l l a c i m o n o c e n w a r d e b r e g n o l o n n a c r e t a w n e h w a e y l r a e l c o for the ar n is e r e h t , t p y g E in d e t r a t s y d a e r l a s a h r e t a w d n u o r g y c i l o p t n e use of fossil m n r e v o g r a e l c a t a h t l a i t n e s s e s i t I . t n e s e r p at y c enunciated poli . d e p o l e v e d e b r e t a w e t s a W d e t a e r T
toe
e h t f o s e t a m i t Reliable es
€ would declin
8y lor Egypt must be based mana
0 0 0 2 r a e y e h t y available b n a c s e t a m i t s e preliminary r o f t n e m t a e wastewater tr
e b o t y l e k i l r e t a w e t s a w d e t a amount of t re t u b , e l b a l i a v a t o n e r a s r a e y g n i d e e c c u s n i d an r o f n a l p t n e r r u c e h t f 0 s i s a b e h t n o e d a m e g a be r e v a n a g n i m u s s A . a e r a o r i a C r e t a e r t n u o the G m a l a t o t e h t , y a d r e p ita
p a c r e p s r e t i l 0 4 3 f o n o i t c u d o © e b d wastewater pr l u o c a e r a o r i a C r e t a e r G e h t m o r f r e t a w e t a e r T of waste . 0 1 0 ar 2 billion m*
must be a : priority y ite j m in
se La:
.
an
olicy po
:
li stry:ategy. Major eaeff eicienc wate fn
ae i
e€ and rehabiliijlitati
alc
options
oe!
n o i t c u d e r , s m e t s y s n o i t a g i r r i f o n o i t SS of s e i t e i r a v f o t n crops Substi2tution of e m g p n o i v l r e e v s e n d o , c s € r e t a w 3 PS; . Th: water-i Intens of t i n u r e p s s e l g n Output ° i s u e s o h t y e b s p o r c e v i b p e d b l u o h s l l a y j v d e s u a , s r r o : t r u c o e g l s i a v r u j t a l m u c i r g the a s t n e v e e s u e i ajor of water, naturally T ! e t a w r o f . l a Saavviing i t n e t o p t s ighe Groundwater
:
t a p m o c s e i r a ty il ab ll va wa e a eeraegeneral rule, information 0? Egypt D that o dies of
TO
ble than
s te ma ti es t n e r r u C . r e t a w e v e l e th a d an r ey e ll t Va a w e Ny | ground e GL NN ne it eet eae
e c s e m Th a e . b tegion fo rdaay aeae industrial, rel pcea 2.6 billion can
is th in n o i t c a r t x e ck rau:te of : 5
ura
: a m i F o e t0 a e s si d ie ba e s a e r c n le i ab be y in l b a b o r p ; 5 9 . 4 t u o ab : . 3 : o i l l i i b h -9 l a u n n mm’, w a e h t o t t n e l a v i u q e rech: e b o t d e t a m i t s e s t i x e s a w s b i B ( ate se rpolic aiD rhe 1s
\*
s l a o i F y e s o e c40,000 ebislliosn m?, with ates eee y
issues
i, Weste: tm Desert New Valley, and Sina , e n e r inal, a not ¢ reso tha’
‘wable
are
mo Te
si
Cc 0} mpl €. x
Co} for
ti r £ TOU. ndw ate.
si s o f s i s i h t since
use
G in
annually
by the ye
1
0 y n a n i d e r e d i s n o c d properly n a t n e m n viro
s r o t c a f s i h t d n a , y ce of water g e t a r t s t men
| develop
esource in i
n e e h t r Fo ’ O C s a l l e w s a s t i f e n e b e m o s s a h r e t a w e t s a nitrogen w
potassium (K)—and s of agricultural productivity, tt¢ cial than irrigation
s n o i t r o p o r p l a m i t p o nutrients in
, on ti di ad In ). 88 19 r a r A d an s a w s i (B
it appears that waste developed countries.
tains less
given at present, the P
t. yp Eg in s t n e g r e t e d of synthetic Wa d te ea tr of e us As to constraints, i it d an s m e l b o r p th al he and P ap at th d an , ly er op pr function
a w e t s a w d te ea tr of e us Experience in the e e t t i m m o c l a t partmen
ago, an interde
m e d a c A e h t f o p i h s r e d a e l e h t under
t he
of thee, oirnddericeof
i y r a v s l ppm. e v betwde a Per e e l a g n y i t y i r n i l a 5 water would depen of 3 this or Parnny) age of t s o c , y t i x i f a r e v o i n s r pumping, and n u o t C e r . d o c i i r e m sidp o n d o e c : e
Water Quality Issues e su is ly on r de si n o c i o t h g u o n e t o It is n a u q r e t a W . y t i l a qu s it to e nc re any refe
base, Ue , e d i s t i f e n e p
Problems and Perspectives
n o i t u l l o P r e t a W of s e c r Control of Sou
l a i r t s u d n i , c i t s e m o d : t p y g E in n o i t u l l o p f o s e c r u o s r o j a m e e r h t ) d l o h e s There are u o h ( c i t s e m o D . l a r u t l u c i r g a d n a , ) g n i s s e c o r p o r , y r a s s e c e n e (including ag r e h w d n a , t n e m t a e r t y r a m i r p t s a e l at s e r i , s e i t i l i c a f t n e m t a e r wastewater requ t l a n o i t c n u f t u o h t i W . s t n e m t a e r t y r a i t r e t d n a y r . a d d e n l o l c o e r s t n o c e b t o n n a c s e c r u o s c i t s e m o d is m o s r t f n e u n l f o f i e t u l l a l i o r p t s u d n i water m o r f s n i a r d d n a , s l a n a c , e l i N l e a h r t u t f l o u c i r g n a o i r t o u l l c o i t s e m o d The p r e h t i e n a h t ex l l i c a f l a p i m r o t s c u d n i 7 6 3 s e t a r e p o probably more d n a s n w o y l t n e r r u c h g u t o n h e t m n , r r o e t v c e o s g l a e r u h t T l u c . i n r o g i a t u e l h l t o p o t d e t a l e r e r a se e h t f o t s o M ities in Egypt.
d e n w o e b y a m s e i t i l i c a f l a u d i v i ind e w o l l o f , ) t n e c r e p 2 7 ( r e n w o r o j a m
n e c r e p 8 ( s e i l p and sup , y t i c i r t c e l e , e s n e f ministries of de
& e g r a h c s i d t n e c r e p 5 3 e m o s , s e i r t indus e g r a h c s i d t n e c r e p 5 1 ; s n i a r d l agricultura ' n a ; g n i k n i r d d n for irrigation a n a l h g u o r h t , T O nean Sea,
e l t t i l y r e v , r o t c e private s
l a i t n e t o p n o i t u l l quantity. The po d at present.
e t a m i t s e r e d n u sector—is
—
, n o i t a r o f n i e l b a i l e r f o e c n e e n a S In the abs t p y g E 0 1 n o i t u l l o p r te
: o c s m e t s y e s e t n e m e e e g a e s e c en used by Se Wate and s ee en )ater pollutio 4 a be : w s ’ y r t n u o c e h t e n e t u , n e r S o l b a l i e a b v a e r e w a t a en if the d With out si: gnifi s m e n t o s i y t s c o e i l t l i o d a c d t a a d e t h . n T k a r c i o t w l i a u n i. n in e e e b e ha ve : c e r y l n o d e t a s m e t initi s y s e h t f o sho y t i l i b i t a p m o c e e e
i t n e g r u s t e e sevai i m o c t r o h s s u o i T
Z mingsin the
sam:
:
e e e n a c d tinited, suerlectteed canal a A f wales
n o m a Ee prep along the
Or two
:
pres
Nile and e Even the l n a a n i l p m a s r u o f o t d it n e t x e o t s e i n y r e v f o would be a e p s n u t s t i l a u q r e t a w r e p o r p r o f e s u d e t Any usable wat er qiuality monitoring program Hee Wee to) flexible—wi i i ‘with regard t o frequency of noe taken, and parameters lee ial pempling, sites where sail Much
pro; ZIesSs
i is needed
q ualit y assuran SU: ice.
Proper
i in
the
area
training
of
of an
wate. r qua. ual. it y adequate
control
an d
numb. er of Ww. ater t
; P l a n a y i l y t n e t s i quali it s n e o c c u ysts is d o s r e p i o r t o t a r o b a l l r a o i f t n e s . s s e e reliable analys
a w l a i r t s u d n i . m e l about b o r p e n i w o r g y l d i p a r 2 s i n o i t u l l o p r e t a w l a tri é n i m a t n o c y l s u o i r e s y d a e r l a r o s of water are e n i l e d i u g ) O H W ( n o i t a z i n a g r O h Healt a 1 n o i t u l o s l a m i t p o e h 2 T eratio: d i s n o c r o t c e s l agricultura
e n a M t s e p d e t a r g e t n i g n i d u l c n i ( s a pesticides r e t a w g n of controlli s i s a b l a g e l The d n a e l i N r e v i R e h t f o n o i t c e t 1982, “Pro
Wate
f C t n e g n i r t s d e h s i l b a t s e w a l Act).” The llutants. It also provide stric o p c i n a g r o n i
the law was poorly
and rigid, with no Pp l a i t n e t o p e h t to determine
’ , c c e t i m o n o s c ’ e y r t the coun
e n i a r t , s d n u e f t a u ability of adeq r o f s e i t i l i c a f n o i t a t r o p s and tran , y l g n i s i r p r u s t o a enforcements. N c e s c i l b pu the f o e m o s Tronically,
; ? t a g l u m o r p s a w w a l e h t r e t f a y l Short
ze
ee Part 3 d n a l a r u t a N f o t n e m p o l e Dev
s e c r u o s e R n a m u H
till do not know e n o u g h on how all Peet fa ™ should be handl e ed and coordinated sol
Abu-Zeid, M. , and As
Water Internati. f L - Climatic Fluct uations : Heinemann, 1992. and Biswas, Asit K. “Land and Water : Devel
it a Impacts of Agriculture on Water Quality. - 3: 160-167. Water Management. Oxford: thButterwor
Man agem j oppmieent in Egyp a l e n f o t r S u s t: Opportunit t a i n a A b g l r e i c u l t Analysis Divisio ur i e s a n d C o n straints,” Repor n, FAO, Rome, t to Polly 1991a. - “A Holistic Ap Pro ach to Environ ment Projects,” In ternational at G
lobal and Regi
Biswas, Asit K. an d A. Butterworth, 1988.
” Ambio, 1986. 15, no. 4:
Bef -B., Naon.d 16J.9,R. ECcoyle. “Urbani i i onomic Resezaartcihon SearnvdiceAgrici ultural Poli . . U.S. Dept. of cyAgrinicuElgtypt, ” ure, Wald
hington, D.C., 1981.
al
ee
Environmental
Bank, Washington, D.C., 1990.
Issues,
4
Draft Discussion Pap er, World
6
e o e c r u o s e R r e t a W s Egypt' s e i c i l o P d n a t n e m e g a Man ee
e h t , r e v e w o H . y t i v ducti
ue
: s t n e s e r p e t — y annuall e H e t a c : p i c n i r p e e h a t 5 is 9 e l i n a N h t r e v e r o m h The Ri t i w t p y g E g n i y l p p u s n a , e m o e c r a h s o t s ' s t p y g E f o for year n o i t a t limi e h t h t i W . s t n e m e r i u q e r water , w o l f n i r e t a w d n u o b h t r o n s t i g developin t importance, s o m t u s e r i u q c a r e t uses of wa
R w W w P M ( s e c r u o s e R r e t a W d n a s k Wor
m a D n a w s A h g The Hi ; re d n a t n a t s n o c a e r u s n e o t d r e i l o i a v e r reserv p t a h t d o i r e p t h g u o r d e h t , r e v e How e e f f a y l s u o i r e s d ears has
y e t p u r r e t n i n u o c e h t for nine un d e t a v i t o m t a h t t c a f of suc servoir—a Lake Re
e c n e r r u c e r a f o y t i l i b a b o r p e h t e c a f to
t g n i r u d y t i c i r t c e l e generate
, r e t a w h s e r f g n i r o ing ways of st
a in it g n i s u e r and
‘culture. Li
m ™ e v o g at th s n o i t a l u g e r d n a s w a l e th and water 4
:
uP
, s n er o ist i min t a z i n a g r o , s e i r minist er nc co e bi bY ed ad he ed, tut sti con en be water has esentatives p : re
a e g n i d u l c n i d n a sources
d r e t p a h c s i h T . s e i c i water pol
: y t n u o c d i r a y r Egypt is a ve n r e h t r o n e h t g n mm alo
with thosePO
Water Resource Management and Policies
mal nor a in m’ n lio bil 0 14. ut abo is u) tea pla l ria ato equ the sub-basin of year, of which only 0.6 billion m’ reaches the White Nile at Lake Noo and er wat the g vin ser con for s eme sch ed os op Pr . ps am sw the in t the rest is los
ly ual ann m’ n lio bil 12 of ing sav a ld yie to ed ct pe ex of Bahr El-Ghazal are
the in lost er wat The an. Asw at r yea m’/ n lio bil at Malakal or roughly 10
no are re The r. yea h eac m’ n lio bil 5 s che rea Sobat and tributaries basin . zal Gha Elr Bah of se tho to r ila sim er wat s definite plans for conserving thi
Groundwater Supply e e t rs fi e Th . es ri go te ca o tw to in d de vi di be n ca t p y g E in Groundwater i d e ty ci pa ca e ag or st l ta to e h T . em st sy a t l e D e th the Nile Valley and pp average salinity 0 an th wi , m’ n io ll bi 0 20 Valley aquifer is about
e a e e e a lt De e th in ty ci pa ca e ag or st e th is m’ n io ll bi Another 300 r e t a ie ee Ar a a a e dwates i .
n u o r g of on ti ac tr ex of te ra annual
ual ann fe sa a to d se ea cr in be m’. This can orp
Sy
.
3
. m’ n io ll bi 9 4. at d e t a m i t s e y system, currentl Groundwater also exists in
¢
d e t a c i d n i e v a h s ie ud st t n e c e r depths. Most
l ve de l ra ve se ed in tl ou s ha e te it mm Co se ne Suda le ng Jo e th of on ti uc tr ns co e th is h ic wh of first
resource. Preliminary estimates 1m , % ol r e d r o e th of is a e r a age in this is th of e s U . m p p 0 0 7 d n a 0 0 2 between e, ag or st of n o i t e l p e d , pumping period. Investigations in the N' a d e s u be n a c r e t a w d n of grou w. of s, re ac 0 0 0 , 0 5 1 of irrigation
re ac 0 0 0 , 0 9 1 l a n o i t i d d a n A vated. e W e th of rt pa n r e h t u o s ( area e r o M r. fe ui aq e n o t s d n a S Nubian
me re is th n i h t i w l a i t n e t o p groundwater
n a d u S th wi n o i t a r e p o o c in t carried ou Groundwater is availa
Swamps by evapotr ion vat ser Con m?. n lio bil 10 ut abo is on ati pir ans schemes in this sub 44 of in ga e ag er av an d el yi to ed ct pe ex e ar n si ba billion m* at the or about 4.0 billion m? at Aswan. The above e Nil White er sa ti d conservation pro U , ivings from the proposed projejects in the aon nee adds to a minimum of 18 billion m’. However, Fite n of these schemes depends on agreements between the Nile ntries and the investment requirements. A
total of 7 billion m
ees expected after the completion of phase two of the Jonglei Canal. Joint z si are Tequired to resume the work on the first phase of construction
of the canal, in which over 70 percent of the work was completed.
The water discharge in the streams from Bahr El-Ghazal (another
=
;
Capacities and qualities, but 1 i ca rt no e th in s r e f i u q a e quantities. Shal
by the seasonal rainfall. The thickness ».000
e e m o f s se ea cr in ty ni li sa s it d n a m 0 15 and
aquifer varie ppm to
:
wb , i a r g ap in ll fa e g a r l a p ra nt ce d n h a t r o n n: e Si Co med In duthe to recharge by the rain a water exis foasrt. BG Valleys, Deep aquifers with nonrenew™ ply water
n e e M a ¥ l l a s a h i a r e T m 0 e t 00 1, of h t p e tl d ma a te ua to Gq d le ? il n o dr n e ttEL-Arish-Rafaa coastal area in t a n 1S ea ar e a e W ae Present extraction is em y a d / m 0 0 0 , 2 5 at Imated st sy e h T . me ti d an e c a p s in n o i t *teriora
a
it
Water Resource Management and Policies
75
to gh ou en t no e ar r, ve we ho y, ar nu Ja to r be to Oc om fr s d n a m e d on ti ga Irri t is ur to ak pe e th is od ri pe is Th r. ve ri e th in l ve le al on ti ga vi na a in ta main d an n wa As n ee tw be gs in il sa r la gu re ke ma s at bo t is ur to n e h w season, od ri pe is th ng ri du ed as le re be to s ha r te wa of m’ n io ll bi 8 1. Luxor. Some rrage is being rebuilt, Ba na Es e Th l. ve le al on ti ga vi na e th in ta in ma to , 00 20 ar ye e th By l. ve le r te wa le Ni e th of l ro nt co which will provide better 3 0. y l n o to d e c u d e r e b d l u o c s t n e m e r i u q e r r e t a w l a n o i t a g i v a n l a u of n an t n e m h s i l b a t s e e th d n a l e v e l r e t a w of l o r t n o c r e t t e b h g u o r h t billion m’ . s e k a l n r e h t r o n e h t storage in t p y g E n i y l t c e r i d n i d e s u e r n e e b s a h r e t a w e t s a W : r e t 5 a 1 9 w 1 d n i e t a d e e r t t a i t f i o n i e s a w r Re-us e t a w e t s a w f o rmal use o f t s r i f e h t t for centuries, bu
r e t f A . o r i a C a f o t s a e h t r o n , r a f s A l E l a b a J f o a e r a t r e s e d g n n i r g e n t i r s b a e , e e h r t u t n l i u c i r g a used for desert
very substantially. by 50
s a w r e t a w e s t t n s a a l p w , t n t e n m e t m a t e a r t e r t r e t a w e t s a primary w w e n s A . s e r c a 0 0 5 , 2 f o a an are
d e t a e r t f o s t n u o m a e h t , s a e r a n a b r r u u d r e h t y o l i d d n a a e o t r s i a C se ea n cr i in e r e n c i n l i n o l l i e l i w w m s co e i t i v e i ie ct t c a l a r u r t e l t u a c e i r G a e 1 r h o t f e m l o b r a f l i e a l v b a a l r i avai r e t a w e t wastewate e th in m’ n io ll bi 7 1. to 90 19 « t a iing the next thr; ee decades. 7 Total wastew sei 3
into cultivation
10 m n o i l l i b 9 . 0 m o r f e s a e r c n i l l i w a e r a Cairo
° 1 g n i d r o c c a , 0 1 0 2 r a e y e h t Y P y l l a u n n a ? m n o i l l i b 3 9 . 1 d n a 0 0 0 2 r yea e s u e r r e t a w e ce with was t son
estimates.
n ea Cr s pt' Egy t tha ed ess str It should be s sh
ep st , t n i o p w e i v cy li po a m o is limited, Fr e. ur lt cu ri ag in e us s it r fo major pilot projects to convince the general populatio
be taken to establish
jects would help
carried out, impose no tisk to he
” a d a in , t n e m t a e r t Proper sewage on ti toeee bu ri nt r co o j a m e t e e k a t m r a c ter, r. ne io it nd co il so 4 as used can be effectively
dried sludge was produced and sold to fee
Jabal Al-Asfar and Abu-Rawas r e t a w e t s a w o r i a C r e t a e r the G
r
es
3,410 tons per day of dry solids.
:
use: Annual
d te ma ti es s a w 0 9 9 1 r fo e s u Iti S also estidmomestic water1S es ss lo on ti bu ri st di of l ve le e th at th e h p at th assumed omestic water-use could be held at 3-1 A ao © year 2000 b Y reduci percent. 20 to es ss lo on ti bu ri st di ng ci Industrial water. i It was est : use 4 StL 1990. This estim. i if m’ n lio bil 4.6 d use ry ust ind t tha d te ma on d se ba is ate = n of the 1980 survey carried out for the Wa er Master Plan th € extrapolatio t Navigational Watey
F, m o r F : e s u irrigation a re suffici ruary to September, water releases for b e €nt to Mmaintai Ww: 1
n
Viels water lev
i in
the
Nil e
for
nav: igation
market demand of sludge is 719, Oo r e t a w e g a n i a . " s a m a r i d Re-us e of agricultural
” n i k c a b d e g r a h c s i d is Upper Egypt ¢ n y t i n i l a s s it : r e t a w lity of the Nile qua
the
! s n e t x e =e ? e l a w e g a n i a r d 350 ppm in Cairo. Theollected throus is c
and accordingly
disposal into the M
discharged to the sea deP released at Aswan, Cropping at s rs cha dis e? Wat ge ina dra amount of
ic tha
Water Resource Management and Policies Table 6.2
Nile Water
Downstream of HAD (billion m?)
Vise 1984-85
56.40
19 85 -8 6 198687
19.
Drainage Water
de Quantity (billion
55.52
87-88
m? ae
14.12
a7
Total (million feddans)
11.2
14.2 15.9
55 5358
26.1 33.2
5.9 6.0
3.68
53.24
11.82 11.12
6.15 4.63
3,64
Per Capita Land (in feddans) 0.51
5.4
12.8
371
Arableland aaa
49
9.7
ae
13.86 13.03
wh
Population (million)
Salinity
55.19
52.86
19 88-89
Changing Patterns of Population and Arable Land in Egypt 1897-1990
0.48
53
19.0
421
0.41
Uy ues 0.31
0.23
ae
6.1
013
12
55.0
Y
:
pre-and post-High Aswan Dam periods. Fora
increased and more
of this dam, and
reliable water that was made possible by eee fat been possible both to
ricultural activities
assisted by technological developmen’; ‘
intensify cultivation in the ol
;
in the new lands. Construction of H
the fact that
s s e c e n not }s the supply of arable land in Egypt f l a t o t a f o t u o s ' W assumed in the past. Nearly 650,000 acre o t e u d y directl e l b i s s land reclaimed in the 1960s was made po HAD. The changes in Egypt’s arable
Shown in Table 6.2. It should be noted th
The
amount
e Delta. of dra inage
wat er gatonion 1SiS ’ 4.7 ae presently re-- used in irrigati : billion m’ annually, of which 2.6 bil lion m’ is in the Nile Delta, 0.95 billion 3. m
in Fayoum,
and ale
arable area increased by only about
Population increased nearly fourfold,
700,
fom? d by
of arable land available per perso deat
Seventy-three-year period. _
The most detailed analysis of Jan
in 1986 under the Land Master Plan (L
Million acres of land could be reclaimed be ie acres 570,000 another Addition,
De
PY
Water in Sinai and the New Valley. .
of drainage water is likely to be in Egypt’s long-term interest
For an arid country like Egypt, the prime factor which makes land productive is water. Thus
an analysis of arable land can be best divided as
est
reclaimed, subject to water available irrigate ere Tee, The LMP study considered Jand 0} ‘idlife hab av a
Ses of land like fisheries, forestty»® the Porat
Cred. The LMP
Land Resources
usin
study divided
“ategories depending on one OF Ole ae
ea
:
RES Options considered cropP nee of the Jand prop =
ig? 2nd farm types. More than
jy sands:
“Onsidered to be coarse to grave y darea in EgyP
The present estimate of cultivate
tis 7.49
Water Resource Management and Policies
on their investments. The potential impact of this policy on market prices . ated stig inve be to s need s fruit of In Egypt, land can be productive only if water is available for irrigaand g livin of dard stan r bette a eves achi and s grow on tion. As populati trial indus and l cipa muni the for nds dema r wate n, more industrializatio
r highe have to y likel most are rs secto two e thes e Sinc sectors will increase. for y suppl water ble relia of e futur the r, secto priority than the agricultural share the so, Even tion. atten us serio the reclaimed areas should receive
effigly, rdin Acco ily. stead ne decli will of water available to agriculture that all the
e ensur to d ease incr be to has t Egyp ciency of water-use in . share their ive rece to inue cont reclaimed lands will
cme
e es a new lands in a ao
inability to { ado pt new farmini g prac :
lack of development of new farming systems more conditions. A policy decision was taken to allocat? § ratio of 60:40—three-fifths to investors with adequx ate capital t disadvantag o develop theiri own farms; two-fift hs to economically ed grou groups, unemployed graduates, and retired government Personnel], The total inv j estment cost for land reclamation has been significant. For example > Sinae a , over £E (Egyptian pound) : Ge: Dates Revol ution billion has b en e and recla mation. The Land Master Plan study estimated t 3,000 to £F 7 roe nves tment cost for land reclamation varied from £E fixe incren , per acre. In the remote areas, the high cost of infrastruc di : ents cropse pidngthe isis to £E 8,000. The government has pledged not tO
Wighivale aoe patterns in these areas, and many farmers are planting » probably perennial fruit crops, to get attractive returns
i, n a m u H , s s e c o r P h c r a e s Re
r o f t s e u Q e h t d n a , s e c r u o s e R
y t i l i b Sustaina oe
r e l p p e t S . A d r a w Ho T U O n i t p e c new con 1 t n e m p o ce devel
s t n e n o p m o c l a i t n e s es
n o i t n e t t a e d i w d l r o w d e n i a g y t i l i b a n i ta Future. Thist
n o m m o C r u O UN report, n a t n e m p o l e v e d e l b a n i a t s u s tal need for wi © n e p o , y t i l i b a in seeking that sustain s ’ n o i t a n h c a E ” . t o n is d l r o w e h t but v e d e l b a n i a t s u S expressed: “
size and growth are i the ecosystem.”
Y m n o n o i First, a digress n a c y c n e i c i f f u s d o growth. Fo n e h w s t s i x e y c n e i c i f food suf . s t i n u d n a l l a t o t land unit x
concer Wi r pe 1 be attain , r o l a c n o r l popu ] hav
g n i t i m i l “ e h t e s u d l u o c e n o y l r Clea
a u t i s l a n o i t a n c i f i c e sp
i
essentially fixed, namely, n. ca e t t a l e h t e of land units, wher a i r a v g n i n i a m e r e h T . or world basis e l b a i r a v e r a , d n a l per unit of
t e Z i m i x a m to is as agriculturists si ft le e h t n o t n i a r t s e r o n with
e th e c n a l a b to increasingly difficult t e r 1 , n o i s s e r g i d With this e e p s e r h t i w r a l u c i t r a p in equation, cap s t n e m e t a t s e l b a t s e t n o c n i e e Thr c! so in e r u t l u c i r g a of e l o r primary B e r u t l u c i r g a l al , d n o c e S animals. ther!
e h w s e c r u o s e r tably consumes
Research, Human Resources, and Sustainability
83
ng gi an ch , ts en on mp co of s ic st ri te ac ar ch e th ng gi an ch om fr e m o c t migh is ge an ch t en on mp co en wh em st sy e th g in fy di mo , se r pe the components at th s ow ll fo so al It s. on ti ac e es th of n io at in mb co a om fr ineffective, or san tr or e bl ea ll ma ss le me co be ts en on mp co as t ul ic ff di change is more ). le ab st e or (m le ab port se e th g in er id ns co by d pe lo ve de be st be n ca da The research agen can effect a change
Sustainability for agriculture, The ical AAdvisory Committee (TAC)
y ar ss ce ne s on ti ac of quence e th g in ud cl in in the system, e th in es ag st ve fi following
at th da en ag e th at ve ri ar to e Th . gy lo no ch te w ne of e us d an t en pm lo deve process are suggested:
f o s m e l b o r p e h t f o t n e m e t a t s s u o u g i b m a n u d n a s u o r o g i y r l e k a i l p s o ‘ s l i e h T v e D . s t 1. c e p s a l al f o s i s y l a n a h g u o r o h t a g n i d u . s l e c i n t i i r o i r , p m f e o t s y g s n i t t e s the e h t d n a m e d t ha t s m e l b o r p f r o o t e y s g o a l o n h h c s e i t l b w e n f o to esta e r u t a n e h t y f i c e p s , s t n i onstra
c e h t y f i t n e d 2. I : sy e h t o t n i y r t n e f o t n i o p e h t d n a intervention ¢ T g n i t s i x e g n o m a m o r f y g o l o n h c e t 3. Seek new
n a n g i s e d T O ; e s u l a c o l r o f y r a s s e c e n if it : y modify g o l o n h c e t w e n p o l e v e d o t y r a s research neces
s s e n e t a i r p o r p p a / y c a c i f f e e h t e n 4. Determi y g o l o n . s h n o c i t e i d t n o c d n l e e i f v r o e r d n p u it e h t testing f o r e f s n a r t e h t e k a t r e d n u d n a r o f 5. Arrange to the ultimate user.
! m r e t e d t a e l c a ne e pa b ld ou sh e er th , me © At the same ti n io at iz il ut l ma ti OP e th te ta li ci fa to e r u t infrastruc
r u t c u r t s a r f n i e th e v a h to d e r a p e r p s n a Pl in d e t a l e r e th d n a s e g a t s ve fi time. These
The Research Agenda question,
Tesear
I
wi
e h t g n i n i m r e t e d f o the question ces
s e e h t . d e n m a e r i , u a q d e n r e t e n a a n 9 for fis s ancemen l a r u t l u c i de r g e h a f t t e o t u h o t p t n i n o i Hion System which th
1. Climata ic co Q
e€ agenda
add
ee A
cl assified. be ca n resses
3
, h d t n g a , n e e l r y u a t d a r e i p m , e r t e t e a w g i s , e y h t i i s n e a a pe ? s n o c a s a r o t c a f a e m e t e e s n o i t c u d e r e a s e a 2a, mponents:
l a c L i m e h c h l a a A c i s y h p h t : j ze Biologo ical compmpopono:ennetnsts:bo plant m o c e t a i c o s s a r i e h t d n a plex a n i b a e s f pests, including ce
to their stability, Th € analysis; de transferabiliility, and malleability or ease of manipulation. monstrated that enhancement of a system’s performance
n e d j i ! s r o t c a f e h t f o e r o m r o e n o h t i w ei beatcegoonrcyernofedinputs. Further, it is 1 mportant ivtito yewh
c
ace ch ar se re 4 to e l b a n e m a e ar e constraints nstrument 1
i / y t i v i t c a f o aacdtiifofnesreisnt, itn ypmey judgement,
he t o t l a i t n e s s e : ] 0 e v i t c e p s e r r i m a r g o r p n o i t a s r e e g n g e u g s o s y l a g o d l l o u n o h w c e I t . n e k a t r de ng ticular
r i n a z u , p i t t i s l u i a e o e c h h r c n t r e i a u w tSeesqe s e i d a h t i w ) t a e h w e l p m a x e A r o f ( e h t s n o i ea t a u t i s : x ° © e l p s m e m o o c c e e b r o h m c a o r p utili p a s i h t n f i o a t n s o u i s t a e Z h I t r t o f s d n a m e d : y t i x e l p m o e c at h th t T bi hi ex y.early ‘eycshtneomlsogcl i o a t s r i f e h t o t d i a p n o i t n e t t a s n y o s i t c u d o ‘ The r p e h t n . s I search proces
Cc
.
9
Research, Human
Resources, and Sustainability
85
conthe her whet e rmin dete ld shou It gy. nolo tech new e h t system for other some for call they her whet or arch rese by d ove rem e b n a c s t n i a r st in ges chan y, polic nt rnme gove in ges chan ple, exam for as , n o i t c a f o type units. on ucti prod seed of t hmen blis esta or t; credi of n o i s i v o r p ; e r land tenu ed ider cons be d shoul ture struc infra of n isio prov he t r o f s h t a p e m i t l Critica at this stage. e t a i r p o r p p a k e e s r e h t i e — 3 e g a t s in n o i t c a r o f s e u n e There are two av . tu si in h c r a e s e r y b s n o i t u l o s n w o r u o y p o l e v e d r o e r e h w e s l e s n o i e h t solut k e e s to is e s r u o c l a m r o n e h T . e v i s u l c x e y l l a u t u m t o n e r n a w o r u o y These g n i p o l e v e d e l i h w e r e h w e s l e m o r f n o i t u l o s m r e t t r h c i h W . y g stop-gap, sho o l o n h c e t e t a i r p o r p p a t s o m e h t e t a r e n e g o t m a r n g i s e d to d e d e research prog e n e b l l i w s t s i t n e i c s l u f l l i k s t s o m e h t n e k a x e l p m o c a h t i w g ever path is t n i l a e d e r a e W . s s e c c u s f o y t i l i b a b o r p h g o i p h m a o c h t o t i w d h e c t r c a e e r s i d re e b l l i w h c r a e s e r t a h t e l b a b o r y p r a m i t r s p o m e s i e r h t i t e h t o t n i system, but n io t a c i f i s s a l c e h t e a e e nents or factors recognizing es th n ee tw be s ip sh on ti la re e th e g rt n pa i d n a a t s r e d be n U y sl ou vi ob ll components. Wi s or fact t n e m e g a n a m n o i t c u d o r p nents and
e e e ih r fo s es oc pr gn si de e th , y r a m m u e s a In e . ty vi ti ac d, ne fi ch de ar se re the clearly to up ks ea br system, e th th wi ns gi agenda be
e n e th e in am ex to em st sy © e th s le mb se cy ca as fi re ef en th e th , ms able proble e in rm te de d an s t n e n o p m o c ed fi di mo e th n ee tw be
r u o y e d i s t u o s n o i t u l o or s
new system. te ch no lo gy ap pr op ri at fi e nd to The ability as su mp ti on s: e e r h t n o d e t a c i d e r p own program is °
c a r a h c e d e r i s e e d e : t e b i r c s e d o t e l b a n e be s ha r e h c r a e s e r e th t a h T shoul these
the hi used by the researcher ° That there be a sense of where one has l a i r e t a m d e r i s e d e h locating t th is It 4, . ‘
d e t a r e n e g e h t of 7 e r u g i F of e l c r i c r e n n i e h t s e t e l p m o y l c r e p 4 o r e g a s a St w g n i t s e t ' o r o g i r — m a r g o pr h c r a e s e r e h t f o ‘ene the first sta soci al scii ences must be represente disaggregated to a set of sub
ioriti whi to problems The executi sssigaey Pe may a ie a perfect imperfect— requires though ven analysis st the i of Without second sustainability. the of definitio n pa tit, : ; beco will problem the of statement age w i rigor of illusion an me , the capacity for experi without mentation. ' i i and the points of entry Ty into i i the constraints Sta ge 2 identifies the
t a h t g n i m u s s e e w o t peenoloey, A t n e s e r p d l u o h s e g a t s h t r u o f e h t m a r a haa p e h t e m a to d e n g i s e d s a w y g o _ ich the technol u m t ) g n a r a e l c e b d l u o h s t s e t e v r e s e R © e h n t o i > t y e a g d o i l l o a n v h c e y P r ted, hteabnlc a s s e c e n fi e h T . s n o i t i e h . T d e i f i c e p s n o p i e ac0)c e solut e h t : d n o c «station ec © He under the ultimate user’s eats re are int We the to that ‘or etl pr 2 inferen™ by stage and in for acceptance, Tia have been established ‘ sh ould Figure from be clear
should It process. 8eneration
Research,
Human
y t i l i b a n i a t s u S d an , s e Resourc
87
t s i m o n o c e e th r fo e u r t is e m a s e h t ; t s i t n e i c s e h t as e r e h e b o t t h g i r h muc at , er us e t a m i t l u e th to n o i t n e t t a r i e h t t c e r i d t s u m l l A . t s i g o l o i c and the so . y t e i c o s m o r f s e r u s s e r p l a n r e t x e g n i z i n e th e n i f e d ll the same time recog wi m e l b o r p e th of n o i t i n i f e d s u o r o g i r d n a ch te e Identification th e c n i S . e c n a v e l e r t s e t a e r g e h t s a h n o i t u l o s e h t e nc h c si i h w d n a to s, er n us i a m do e t a m i t l u of t se c i f i c e p s a r o f d e p o l e v e d n e t x e n e e e b th s of a h y y t i l i nolog b i s n o p s e r e h t 1s y g o l o n h c e t d e t a d i in l a v m a e e t h t e f th o of r e f s r e b m e m the tran a e b d l u o h s t n e g a e h t t y a h t t i l i b i s s n w o o l p l s o f e r it e h t s a h h c a E sion agent, . 1 e g a t s f o m a e t e h t l from gy pet
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of educati:on should each have to better fit them for theif
i the is 3 e Stag But what wich
. agent n nsio exte the for is 5 e stag ae the scientist;
the ably prob is 1 e Stag . clear so not is mOst exitical in the oe ,2, and 3? It any of in doma e usiv excl the not is It ole process. one group—a grou lem prob in ne ipli disc own its ct refle then p that might identification Z ateam aad ees
B A : 5 e g a t until s e l l , i l w a n v o o i r t p p a a d i e t a m i t and val l u n e p s i h t e n h i T . d e e t v a l m o i t l u n e p be inv m r e a t u l a e v h e t d n e a s u , y m l e e t t s a y s e h t f deliber o t e outpu edback. e h t h t i w n i a g a — y t ie
W O H e o l a e i F w e s n ’ n f o n o i t r a i r e w n e h g t i w e h d t e k n s i a d e b t d a l e u p o h s s g i n o i a t t s r e o u p q m t ;ivn—t™ervetwnotioin in th n e s . a ? h r w e c f e n s n f o n o i a t r d a t n r a € gene Howd 0 the two
I . e r u t c u r t s a r f n i e h t n i d e t c e e c a l refl p e k a t not
h t f o e c acceptan
Hum an Resource Development
n o i t n e v r e t n i s ’ n a m r o f d e e n e h t t u o b a u d o r p l a r u t l u c of agri
©
l o a l o h n t h c i e w t g w n e o n l e h t g n i stage 4, a t a r o p r o c n i m e t s y s d e s i v e r e h t t a h t to ensure t a , r . e s n v o e i t w a o t H c e p , 1 x e e r i g e a h t t s o t s a p u m s m e r l fo b o r p e m a s e t h a t h t t e a t a h i w r e p o m r o p s p a s t s n m e e e s s e r t i : d 0 e m r o Stage 2 p f n o i t g a p n f i o e b s i n o a i t d a n p e i c g i a t r a h p c r a ! e W e v i s t e , c e r a l o r e e h h t t d a e t l h n t i i o e p h t s i h t this a l p 0 1 d s l n u i o g e w b e t a s i t n e e r i u c t s c u r t s the a r f n i © f t n e . m s p n o o i l s s e u v c s e i d d e h e h t t r f o o f g t r n a i p m i t e b e d l u o ord h s others. Th t s ha n a r th e c n o c m e t s y s d e t e a th l e r of : h s t t r i a p w e s e o h l t p o e p e t a d d i n l a a v a e stage y l e e t a o m i t a i g e l y a y l m n o s t n a n c i 4 a r t g s n n a o Stage h c c n l i a d n e r it exte a st in d e t a r e n e g n e e b e ) v a 2 h d n a 1 s e g a t s n i ( d c e i f s i a t , n e e s d a i c e h t s i s i h f t
g actin p, grou y inar cipl idis mult a is ae i hat is needed as has t agen n nsio exte The t. poin view ncing each other’s
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a s m a i m e l a d b a v d n a g n i t s e t l l u f e h us o u n i t n mand t o c f o a process o t n w a r d wSeign aroef the system.
r o f d e e n e h t o t ® n o t i n t n e e m t p t o a l e v e d w f o e r d e l c I y c e h T . y sustainabilit such @
t a h t n o i t p m u s s a e h t e e r h t n o t s a e l t a Predicated e c a r b m e d l u {4 o w e m i t n 4 o definiti ; t u p t u o fiable i t n a u q a mney. n a ; d e r u s a e m is l u o performance w definition e h T . e s a b ® bc su the surce e l b i t a p m o c f o p u o r g u o w a o i t ni m o i t i n i f e d c i t s i l o h e h T e g a t s , n n i W o y l p p a o t ould begin ain in stages 4,5, an g a e Precedenc
Develo pment
of Natural ang Ha
an
Resoy rces
Human
Research,
Research Educa tion
Resources, and Sustainability
References . ty li bi na ai st Su d n a y r t s e r o f o r g A n o s e u s s I d n a s t n i o p w e i V . or t i d E . A Huxley, P. . 9 8 9 1 , r e p a P g c e n j b i O k an r o as y W t i l i . b a F n i A a t s u S ICR : y t i l i b a n i a t s u S d n a e s n e S . t d r r e e l H l e f . e W k . c R o R d P n I a C , e . h t r o f r e p a P Lynam, J.K . h c r a e s e R l a r u t l u c i r g A l a n in Internatio. tive
Peru, 1988.
i
Problems,” in
Bloomington:
Steppler, H.A. a r u t l u c i r g A f o s n o i t Distor 6. 6 9 4 c u d , o 8 7 r 9 P 1 l , a s r s u e r t P l u c i y r t g i A s r e e l v b i n U a n i a t a s n u a S i Ind . R A I G C . ) C A T ( e e t t i m m o C . 9 8 9 y 1 r o s 4, i v d r A e p a P l a l a c i Technic n h c e T d n a h c r a e m s o e C R r u O . O A F . t : n e e m m p o l e v e D tion. Ro d n a t n e m n o r i v n E n o n o i s s i m m o C d l . 7 Wor 8 9 1 , s s e r P y t i vers i n U d r o f x O London:
interrelated
th
© Nestea Glee 2
/ e ur ig i d se es pr ex s ne li ip sc m; ni mi 0©€s not the e n o e th bs d e e s r fo ed ne e th n. re te se i te si as ph em es do e Ee It . ce oi e ch th @ KE e re ofinits relati wae 2 a e h t t e ta iz as ph st l sy al er ov e th p to hi ns 1o d ae
cycle. This d a
aes
meee
onal
ness
of
stem.
e th of t en pm lo ve de al tu ec ll te in r fo ea pl a is that there Be ent in the curticu” Proposition
Ze The student must be
i
strong educational compon
y it os ri cu al tu ec ll te in an p lo ve de to e g a e e e i e to eae goes beyond th ed os ex be ld ou sh ts en ud St . ne li ip sc di €n j d an ng ki in th ve ti nova
e n e p e th n ve gi g in be as ch su allenge group in a case stud
g— in lv so m le ob pr to approacheswith a multidiscipli
of working a ip sc di ei ul t en pm lo ve de of e cl cy e , th f de e o I know of no mi e a e e th in rm te de to ed us : be n ca at th es in el id gu Be best mix of these ee to one-half of the fn
ee m
d ir th eon t ou ab t, in po ng ti ar st a nciples. As
Miophats ee
be devoted to the third principle. The
that it responds to the alee
pe
ie!
eae
pita
a S
e c i R e l b a n i a t s u S a Toward t p y g E r o f m e t s y S n o i t c u d o Pr l a l a B d e y a S d e m a h o M
, 2 8 9 1 n i d e h c n u a l s a w n a l P t n e : m p o l e e h v t e D n i r y a t i e r Y o j e t v p i F p t o s r t i F s d ’ t e p v y g i e c e r Since E e v a h e v i F n o i t c d u d n o o r p c e S d o e o f h t e s a e r g c n n i i ). Dur efforts to
(ADP
P D A e h t f o in objectives e d i v o r p o t n o i t c u d o n r e p m p o l a r u t l u c i r g a Year Devel ; y n c o n i e t i p c i o f d f a u s f l e h s g u o r d h o t o f e y s t a i e v r i c t c u d o r p m r a f were to in ; t r o p x e d n a . y e r r t a s f u l e d w n i d r n o a f -acome materials
raw
? 4 ; y g o l o n h c e t d e v o r p of im , s 0 8 9 1 e h t g Durin . u t l u c i r g a e h t d n a , y m o n o o t c e s l a r u national ec t l he agricu
t f o t n n o e i l m l e i v m e 8 i h t c u a o b a m o r f , A major s l a e r e c f o t u p t u o e b l s a r t o o t t c a f e y h e t k in 1. The
n o t c i r t e m n o i l l i m 4 1 t u o b a
sin 199
ment were:
: t n e m t i m m o c d n a y t i l i b e Political sta on al leaders, i t a n e h t y b shown
g a n a m p o r c , ment * : y g o l o n h c e t f o n o i t a t p s © Ada S W y g o l o n h c e t d ove impr
; n o i t a c i f i ver
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Toward
Table 8.1
Sustainable Rice Production
1 9 9 1 4 8 9 1 t, yp Eg in d el Yi d Rice Area, Production, an
Area Index Hectares 1,000
Year
Production Index Tons 1,000
e s a e 1984-86
420
100
2,400
Yield Tons/ha Index
100
bs
100
5.83
100
7.28
435 454
142
l a n o i t a n e h t d n a s d | e i f n o i t a r t s n o m e d e t e a h i t r p n o i r p p d a l n e i i y ; y l t a i i t n n e t o i p l a e k h l t a n e d n a betwe y t i n i l a s i d a r l t i o s o t o t d e d t e n t a l u p b i ) r t t t a n e e b c r n a e c p 0 6 average t u o b a ( n a m a e t r s a e p e g e r t a a i l r p e h t o r ; p t p n a e n m i e g a n ; e s a e s i water ma d t s a l b f o d a e r p s ; s : e i t . e i s r e a v s s o a c l i n o p a j t l s a e n o v i t r a h t s o p f o e g a t n e c r e p h g i h d a agement; an
arch Program
With limited land a d l e i y e s a e r c n i we must
. h c a o r p p a m a e t interdisciplinary tries with average Yl
e p x e n o d e d l e i y tons/ha, as
Were achieved by: Releasin1 g and sp readin Giz a 176; CGG:iza 181; and ree
e
e
Transferring ap
°
! t e y at it ri un op mm pr co g in rm fa e th to im Prove crop man angina echnology Monitori Oring producti Production constraints and i nd farmers’ problems, with Prompt 5 follow.
Campaign
St
F h-yi:elding varieties: Giza 1 5; hig
-u
cé Ri al on ti Na e th of la el br um P action under the i
eR
showed
dies conducted to d eter . th
at yields of . Resid
mi
5
ine the yield potential or the “yield gap” de monstration i 5 fields—using the best-recomeponit) varieties—averaged 10.3 lemonstration fields exceeded the By aueut 4s
epotential yield
percent.
Results in the 1991
season
ranged between 7.7—13.0 tons/ha. The gap
t p o d a to s r e m r a f encourage more e t a e s e r y r a n i l p i c s i d r e t in program includes:
e a stature IP e n i t r u P — n o i t c e Seed produ s d n a h ’ s r e m r a f
F ? a g i p n i d u l c , n y i m o e Agron y ® 2 i 2 i m i x a m — s e c i t c a r ds iI-sca ee tural p p 9 against WeS"” n o i t c ym. e t o r p i t an Pl e a E C I n o i t a s ed in ta in ma d an d e r f t t a z e Mechani locally manufac
97
Toward Sustainable Rice Production
i , y t i 30 r d fo i e t n u o c c a , it y t t i p l e a u c q c n a i a r g d e n l a b a t , t o s o a l b 2 to e c i v e c n l a t W s i t s e h rc i ee oes
i iv e v i t a l e r e h t , s n o s a e s 1 9 9 1 d n a 0 9 9 1 e h t In e R e R t a h t w o h s s t l u s e r e h t varieties was tested and
s e r P s. ie et ri va a c i n o p a j l a n o i t i d a r t e h t n a h t s l e v e l d l percent higher yie e i e h t of t n e c r e p 40 t u o b a n o n w o r g e r a s e i t e i r a v d e v o r p m i e s e h t , y s entl e i t e i r a v d e v o r p m i e th to d e t n a l p a e r a e h t t a h t d e t c e p x e s i t I . t p y g E in . area 4 9 9 1 y b a e r a ce ri e th of t n e c r e p 80 n a h t e r o m r e v o c d n a d n a p x will e
w
of
ll fu shed a s a h r e t n e c e h T e i a a e t n a d h c resear s a h it , a h k a S o t n o es. In additi
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e
5
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ee Were
a z i G ( 5 7 1 2 Z G 175; and
e g o r t i n e h t f o e s u through efficient
ee
e
.
Giza
;
i r t u n r e t t e ° B a m t n e i r t u r a f s r e z i l i t r e f e
s e i r e s r u n . e c i r to e t a f sul c n i z f o e e t ont c l a c i m e h c f o a e h t f o ae oiSn 1 a m r e n a i B D E E N O T A e i r ee ie € seed nt in 1981 to about
©
eee
. ee
in 1990
e c r e p 0 5 m o r f e t a r l a renew
: d e t a ’ r e g c e n t a t n s i n s e a r m of i t s c e i p t e n e g ed at s e t a r u t l cu Sree TO d n a e n n a a a : i s n n e t x e , h c r relati a e s e r g n o m a e e e h t — s r e w gro on ational Rice producti
l i mproved t n e c e R r u o f Yy i Z on: I
cultivati oe
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: its IRear28ly waos m
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e reds ba Pwie t n
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Canes aiiga
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eeroved
t e m e b s a d h l u o ) h 0 s 9 9 1 n ( o i t d c o u o d w r pro a H . ) 0 9 9 1 a t t a D e D ( s d n e p e d d r a w e o r t u t l y u l c e i t r i g n a i f e d n i which e v l o v e n a c e as one that
r u t l u c i r g a e l b e sustaina c r u o s e r f o y c n e i c i f f e r e t a e r g , y t i l i t u n huma d n i n k a m o t e l b a r o v a f s i t a h t t s environmen e m e h t n o m m o c l a r e v e s d e z i r a m m u s further
for gener
e i a e c n a t s i s e r 4 last indic
ee p s e e f d n a rity u t a m y r a c e si t varie . Because
y, was released in 1989
M
DE
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GERD)
and
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defined
greater e h t h t i w e c n a l use; and a ba s a h e t H c e . s p e i s r and othe : s w o l l o f s a t n for developme
t n o c t s u m n o i t c r e p 2 e Food produc t u o b a ( s n o i t a l u p o p g n i d n a p x e d y n l i s a rapid l l e w s a t n e m y o l p m e l a r u t l u c i r g a e Total d greatly
C08 the''sh
s
y g o l o n h c e T f o n o i t a t p a d A f o e l o The R . s y a w y n a m n i d e b i r c s e d d n a d e n i f e d n e e b s a h y t i l l i a b r a u n t i l a u c t i s r u g s a r l o a f r u s t d e e n g n Agricul i w o r g e h t : t p e c n o c c i m n a o n y d e s a e b n o e o t c r u o t s n e i r l a r u t a But all po n e h t g n without degradi
oe.
n a p x e t s u m agriculture
t u p n i n o i t c u d o r p d n a , d n a l , l a t i p a c f o e s u f o ° Efficiency y t i l i b a n i a t s u s e s increa s u m s m e t s y s n o i t © Produc of pesticides
, 1 . 8 e r u g i F n e i s o l n c w o y h r s e v s h it w @ d n a s , r ) 0 o 9 t 9 1 c ( a f n a ; w t a r M r o o j p a p u m According to s l a r n u o f r e t n o x e : y s d g n e o p l e d o n m e t h s y s c n o i e t d able product e v o r p m i ; y c i l o p t n e m n r e v o of the g : s p i t h n s e n m o t i i t m m rela ia . n o i t a p i c i t r a p s a h — s t s e ’ g r e m r a f b and ting : 4 y it il ab st l ca ti li po r, ie rl ea im 1s It d e n o . i on t ti n e m fe As ie 2° country’s
es ti li ci fa g n i leaders—establish
agricult
al Pr
oals and objec
n ni ai st su 1p le ro t n a t r o p m i an d e y a e pl m a P r ea cl th wi gy y te g o ra l o st n h c e t d l an a n o i t a n n o a i t a m for portant to hcahvecommodity. ch te n o i tives for ea t c u d o r p : ts ec sp 0" m r o f e th in hig -yieldbe could ; Research output n a , c i i m o n js o c e s , a n h o p i t c u d o i m & related to the pr e r o m h t i w © 0 1 e e v e o c n r a p t m s i e b nology shouladturing varieties with Tes aeximize ing, early-m 1 t n e m e g a n a m p o r c n o ; s t s insect pe
O1
eeding . d n a s e s a e s i d r o j a
© yield oft
Toward
Sustainable Rice Production
m ra og Pr on ti ta ap Ad gy lo no ch Te ce Ri the of me he Sc Figure 8.2
EXTERNAL SUPPORT Marketing inpat and output,
institution,
credit, extention, and ownership
‘ARMER’S
PARTICIPATION Farmer’s goal, income,
preference, resource
constraints, land, labor,
capital, and organization
: Varieti s; er d 0 iz an il rt d fe r on an te ti wa ga cy ri ir en of ci d fi se ef ea cr e in e e a _ s. ct se in d an , es as se di s, ed we l ro nt co to t n e Mark a managem i ! na ai st su g in ct fe af s or ct fa t an rt po im e ar s ut tp systems ae inputs and ou e bl la ai av be ld ou sh s er iz il rt fe d an ed farmers at a peoee OES such as se ; ld ou sh es ic pr g in il ce d an r oo fl e th , so determined © appropriate time. Al ey rn Fo . ng ti es rv ha re fo be me ti y rl ea Participati and announced at an
ORY adap
Sea
adaptation
l no ch te e th of m i a e th is gy lo no ch te w and acceptance of the ne affecting sustainable
or ct fa t an rt po im st mo e th is It m. ra ye prog t en pm lo ve De d an ch ar se Re our Rice
Program the technology
. es as ph ur fo in t ou d ie rr ca is 2) 8. component (Figure
e e r h T : n o i t a c i f i r e v y g o l o n h c e 1. T indings
fie!
in farmers’
2. Teche
dissemination:
s e r a t c e h o about tw isa s e c i t c a r p recommended
o m e d t h g i e y t r o f f o s d l yie 13.0 tons/ha Ww
percent higher t
Y
3. Mass guidance (Nate
Toward Sustainable Rice Production
101
on ti la pu po al nu an t en rc pe 7 2. ly ar ne th wi 4991 (Table 8.1). To keep pace s ha on ti uc od pr ce ri , ly al nu an ns to 0 00 0, 25 t ou ab g in rt po ex e il wh , th grow
e th by ns to n io ll mi 4 t ou ab to ns to n io ll mi 1 3. t en es pr e th om fr toincrease ed ng ro ip lt mu a , al go is th e ev hi 30 percent. To ac year 2000—an increase of
t en pm lo ve De r ea -Y ve Fi d ir Th e th of rt pa as d pe lo ve de strategy has been g productivity per unit
n i s a e r c n i at d e m i a , y g e t a r t s e h T . ) 7 9 9 1 2 9 9 1 ( Plan : ll wi , e m o c n i ’ s r e m r a f g in i s a e r i c n i d n a , r o b a l d n nd, water, a of la
e u n i t n o c to m a r g o r P h c r a e s e R e c i R y r a n i l p i c s i d i t l u m e h t t r o p : p s u a e S r a 1. r u o f n o e b l l i w s i s a h p m E . y g o l o n h c e t d e v o r p m i g n w i t e a n r p o l gene e v e d to m a r g o r p t n e m e v o r p m i l a t e i r a v e h t g u n t a m y l r a e accelerati d n a t s a l b to e c n a t s i s e r e l b a r u d h t i w s e i t e o r p e z i m i x a m japonica vari to t n e m e g a n a m p o r c n o h c r a e s e r d n a r e z i l i t r e f rity; intensifying e s a e r c n i d n a s e i t e i r a v d e v o r p m i t s e e p h t f o d e t a r g e y t t n i i v i t c n du o h c r a e s e r g n i y f i s n e t n i ; s e i c n m e u i m c i i f n f i e m h t i w e s u s r t e c e t s n i wa d n a , s e s a e s i d , s d e e w e l h o t r t n o c h t i o w t n t io t a r o b a l l o c managemen e h t g n i n e h t g n e r t s d a n n a r e t n i ; s e r d e i c h i t t o d n a ) use of pes I R R I ( search Institute e R e c i R l a n o i t Interna
. s n o i t a z i n a g r o tional o n h c e t e h t t r o p p u 2. S a c i f i r e v y g o l o n h tec
¢ g n i m r a f e c i r vation of the
Production
constraine t Sa
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ae farmers’ problems in the season, from a, ing, and various agencies act to alleviate
these sp.robl
Paign is active in all rice-growing gover:
norate
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e D l a r u R d n n a o i s n e t l x a E r u t l u c i r g A e h t , ar e e l e a m t n e m p velo ” ? o C h c r a e s e R l a r u t l u c i r g A e h t f o e t u t i t s n I e o i t s e v n i ) C e c R i A R l ( a n o i ter t a N e h t f o s t c e f f l e a n o i t a c u d e e h t e l a e n o t n Campaig to d n a n o i t a p i c i t r a p ’ s r e m r a f f o e e r g e d e h t e n t n i a r t s n o c e z i n g o c g Te hi a d e w o h s y d u t s e h t , n o s a e s 1 9 9 1 e h t r o F S. ’ s r e m rs (89 per degree of far o t a r t s n o m e d h t o b r o f n o i t a p i c i t r a P r a f r e h t o d n a cent)
showed that far i
y d u t s e h t , k c a b d e e f g n mers (70 percent). Givi © k c a l 6 h c u s , s t n i a r t s n o c n s faced ninetee
mieer
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Natio mal Strategy for Improved
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:
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) 1 4 6 . 8 3 o 9 t 1 4 8 9 d 1 o ( i r e e p s a b e g h n t i r u s d n o t s e t r , o 1 n o i t million tons in 199 c u d o r e p c i e r s n i a e r c n e i g r a s l . i t h T n e c r e p 2 4 reflected a 32 perc ee y n d i e v e i h c ) a a h / s n o t 1 5 y . t 7 ( i v i t c u d o r p n e i s a e r inc
a p x e y b y t i v i t c u d o r p e v o r p m I 3. t r o h s d n a g n h-yieldi
proved hig
. s e i g o l o n h c e t w e n of t c u d o r p s s e l e h t 4. Identify a t l a s e r a s l i o s e of ric percent
. s l i o s l a m r o n n a h t s s e l t n e 40 perc of irrigat
y t i l i b a l i a v a e h 5. Assure t t l e D e l i N e h t n rice i
o r p m I l a t e i r a V e Balal, M.S. Ric S Y S g n i m r a F e c i R “ Conference, an s u t a t S n o i ct _ “Rice Produ h c r a e s e R e c i R l Seventh Nationa
r g A g n i k a M “ . C . N Brady, ional Conference,
CO!
Internat : y t e i c o S n o i t a v r e Water Cons r P e c i R e l b a n i a t s DeDatta, S.K. “Su International Rice Session of the ‘ o O ’ e l b ary 1990. a n i a t s u s f o y r o t s i H A “ . Ag) R R le , d a n n i e a i st u em S « , e c n e r e f n national Co
9e
e e f o n o i t p o d A d n a r e f s n a r T : y g o l o n h c e T l a r u t l u c i t r Ho w e i v r e v O l a b o A Gl a s i E . M Hamdy U s u — s p o r c l a r Horticultu 1 y l g n i s a e r c n i n a ing d l u o h s s i h T . s e i r t coun are highly pe
m u s s a e r a — s p o r c e u l a v h g i h s a g o n t i p d o e l r e r v e e d ref y n a m f o y m o n o c e s p o he r c e s e h ft
way and markete 0 e c r u o s t n a t r o p m i ing their income n i a h c g n i t e k r a m tion, and , y g o l o n h c e t l a r horticultu
s a O t e c n a t r o p m i t n u o m o b of para e r a t a h t s e c i products at pr
horticultural
. s r e m u s n o c o t reasonable
uae
f fruits an! y vean;
l p p u s y R e C s n o i t u b i r t n o c e h t , y l t n e ec o c e r n e e b e v a h h healt nd
jcarcino| to reduce
het ae an
n i m d n a , s n i m a t i v , ) s r e e g b r o fi c c a k e e o r e h T . s t e i d s ’ e l p o e g n i e b carcinogens in p 1 s e s a e s i d t r a e h d n a r e c n a c f o s k s i r the 4 s e i t i n u m m o c the medical e c n u o n o r p e r o m trend is
% 0 1 , s e i r t n u o c developing
€ e r o ; : s e l b a t e g e v d n a s t i u r f f o e c n a t r po ns ®
o i t u b i r t n o c l a i c i f e n e aware of the b P ’ a r u r d n a n a b r u h t o p o t n e v i g e b should . ) 0 9 9 1 x u a d e b e u Q d n a a s i B poor ( s y a w l a ? v a h s e Herbs and spic : d o o f f o e c n a t p e ability and acc
Transfer and Adoption of Horticultural Technology
105
d an its fru of ly pp su ly me ti d an te ua eq ad improvement by providing vegetables.
y m o n o c E d l r o W e th in Horticultural Crops
ve ha s st li ia ec sp t n e m p o l e v e d d an , ts ys al an , s r e k a m y c i l o p s, ar ye In recent l ra tu ul ic rt ho of on ti bu ri nt co l ia nt te po e th in st re te in expressed broad rfo d n a , n o i t a r e n e g t n e m y o l p m e , n o i t a c i f i s r e v i d l products to agricultura h c r a e s e r le tt li , r e v e w o H . s e i r t n u o c g n i p o l e v e d in eign exchange earnings ly rt pa be y a m is Th . s t c u d o r p l a r u t l u c i t r o h in e d a r t d l r o w n o e n o d n e e of s m has b r o f d e s s e c o r p d n a , d e s s e c o r p i m e s , y r a m i r p f o y t i c i l p i t l u m e h t d o o t m m o c due a n o a t a d e h t g n i t a g e r g g a in y t l u c i f f i d e h t d n a s p o r c l a horticultur . ) s t c u d o r p l oi r o , k c o t s e v i l , s l a e r e c , . g rom . F € . t e k r a m ity basis ( t r o p m i la e h t e d i v o r p s e i r t n u o c d l e u p c o i t l r e o h v e d of s t r The o p m i d l r o w f o t n e c r e p 5 8 r o f d e t n u o c c a e h y T e h t . 0 5 9 8 9 9 1 1 5 8 o 9 t 1 3 d 8 o 9 i 1 r e p e h t r o f d e t r o p e r e r e w s d n e r t r 17 a l i m i t S u o b a ( . s t c u 5 d 8 o 9 r 1 p 3 8 tural in 19 s t r o p m i d l r o w f o e r a h s ’ e s r e e i h r T t n u o . c 0 0 0 2 g r a n e i y e h t develop in t n e c r e p 3 2 0 2 to e s a e r c n n i i o t e i d e l t c e e p x e e a s f percent) is o s t r o p x e l a r u t l u c i t r o h e f th o s n t i c e p y s l o t r s p o m e r u t u n f a m e d fore, t r o p m i f o l a h r t u w t l u c i t r o h e g r a l ( i l r a a m g i u r p t r o P : d d deOnpende n ai Sp bof ri nt ce co s ha C) ; e e e P e h an T tr E en E e ( s.s Th iec trc uni y t peBdico i n u m m o ec C c i m o n o c E an
e p v o r u d n E a s e t h i t u r f o t f o y c n e i c i f f u s producers) f l e s n a e p o r u E 1 W d e s e a p e o r r c u n E i d e t i n u uted to a f o n o i t a m r o f e h T . t n e exceeding 80 perc . s e i r t n u o c r e h t o h t i w © affect trade n o i t p m u s n o fi c a t i p a c gh per
Given the hi
Global Role of Horticulture Most of th e studi dies o mn the duis
to population Sr
crops, and livesto ck produ i tural crops. This ne
relatively
sma
ie
io
demand food increased of meeting
ave concentrated on cereals, Jeguminovs . : : attention has been paid to horticul: ae
he percepti
ake 4
of n a o e in i e c e d y e p f r e u c l o u o human Paice eg of ” os rp pu te ma ti ul e th es rv se et di e th e e M c si ba e th g n i t é e me me su as ld ou sh s op cr l ra tu ul ic rt ho s, rd da an st in n o i t u b i r t n o c larger es ia er it cr th al he ) m u m i n i m ( c si ba e tablished by the intern providing th : rs ne an pl s on ti za ni ga or th al he al on ti na d an s a e ea . s r e k a m y c i l o p and at d ul wo s op cr l ra tu ul ic rt ho of d n a m e d in h wt oO a : least be comparable to de wi drl wo s te ra h t w o r g n o i t a l average popu Additional factors of pas of contributions to RAE
with high income and awareness
: ? o i t p m u s n o c d e s a e r c n i to d a e l d l u o w th i r t n u o c l a r u t l u c i t r o h r ei th Therefore, developing e s a b t only o n d l u o h s s e i r t m production and i tte persona fees 2 on economic grounds and generation pe ds NEE
oa
Didcthigéhe badictizad
ee © On improving the health and nutrition stan-
strategies of poverty alleviation and eae needs should include balanced nutrition and health
f o h t w o r g of s e t a r w o l s d e t c e j o r p e h t d n a e a t: oday te ra l a u n n a untries, the in developed co y l b a b o r p s 0 9 9 domestic demand in the 1 4 t e g e v r o 8 f 0 . 1 d n s t a i for fru 1.6 to 3.4 percent
a y
1983-1985 prices by the WEE
OAM
with en tak be uld sho gate forecasts
duction of open market
n a e p o r u E n r e t s a E former USSR, in ly chang
d e t b u o d n u l l many. This wi # s p o r c l a r : u t l u c i e for hort
pains thos eveloped
ries mayemerse:
a e v i t a r a p m o c e e in Connie Tie a c i s a p to n o i t i d d a n I . trade performance
f r e t a w d n a , d n a l , r o b a l are differences in ° 7 © t n e m p o l e v e d research and m p o l e v e d l a r u t l u c i t r o h successful
iesin131 a
ountri
percent
Transfer and Adoption of Horticultural Technology
g in et rk ma d an , ng si es oc pr , on ti uc od pr in serious consideration
Innovative Technologies an t ar of n o i t u b i r t n o c d e t a The integr e l b a r a p e s n i is Th . n o l y b a B of s n e d r a g g n i g n a h e th e r o f e b dates back to even ll wi d an t n e m p o l e v e d l ra tu ul ic rt ho of ts ce fa l al of c i t s i r e t c integration is chara , n o i t a v o n n i , on ti ia ec pr ap e, st ta , on si vi s e v l o v n i e r u p o remain so. Art in horticult l e v e d to n o i t a z i l a u t p e c n o c d an s n o i t p e c r e p of e d u t i t l u m a — y t i v i al de sensit , re he t, no ll wi [ . gs in man be u h of e r a f l e w e th r fo plants and utilize them
The National Rese
i
with the artistic sid
l a r u t l u c i t r o h in t n a n basic determi
agriculture as
it is a major and a
, s n o i t a v o n n i y g o l o n h horticultural tec
Production Advances
en be y el iv ss progre s ha s n a e m c ti ne ge . as h pe ug ro th n o i n t e a d v r o a n g n i y g on o l Techno studies
c ti ne ge r ’s fo el nd Me e nc si ks oc d bl te la cu ti e basic: th explored and ar d e r e d i s n o e c on e ar s m e o r l f u g a 2 p o r p ) e c v i i m t s a a t l e p o t y c Of ic Seeds and veg en (g s r e t genetic charac transferring innate e e n n, io at iz id br hy of nt ve ad e th generation to the next. With heterosis, uniformity, disease on d ze li ta pi ca ve breeders ha , s d l e i y h g . i h s n a , e t n m e m e l v a o u r p x m e i s a y t i d l a n u a q , e c n a a u t m s e i s res h g u o r h t s e p o s r a c e s i l d a r u t , l u g c i € t ( r o h s c i e t u s q i i r n u ‘ d e develop ral charac
The and
u t l u c i t r o h l a i c i f e n e b f o n o i t incorpora ) y P r a c o n e h t r a , p e f i l f l e h s g n o , l e c n a t s i s e r t c e e n ins s a h c u s , s e l riet
a v e u q i n u f o t n e m p o l e v e d e h to t
s r e b m u c n u a c e p o r u (E by count.
by weight but
are willing to pay for
economic returns are higher
7, sunshine, wind velocity, sources is gaining increas? n huma for As maa
availability of labor (skilled and unskilled) uc od pr e th of 2 n es ai as tr 9 ph ly all te : ua in ma €q ed l ia nt se es is D s e t n. ai ch g in et rk ma otion-t cl
2
Ti sources,
eee linked to human r
ui
4°? ce an st si as l ca ni ch te d an cation, training, 4
.
.
esource development. The level of farmers’
education is extremely Y im i portant in A accelerating the adoption of knowlive horticu 5 ? me wo of e rol e Th . ms ra og pr t en pm lo deve in development in oe should receiv ral, and horticulture in particular,
hybri
i
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a
s. This does not
and result
e v e d d i r b y h y r e v e t a h t n a me
in financial rewards.
‘os ha tries. Most of these innova their adoption in developing counties m
modifications to maximize benefits slehing an n ou am ar m s: se ou nh ee gr in cs sti pla of op use the imnoye technology + } technologies :
.
}
2
integration of these
2
.
examination of the separate phes? .
.
to formulate sound recomm
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and
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.
owevel the ult
109
Transfer and Adoption of Horticultural Technology
ivdel ly te ra cu ac t tha em st sy n io at ig rr -i ip dr ce fa ur bs su California, using a Betables treatment, Coatin g, pal.
rilling have contributed
2). 199 al. et ne he (P s nt ie tr nu d an ers water
rma d an n, io at ic pl ap n, io at ul rm fo r ize til fer in ts Recent developmen
iagr in s ie om on ec et rk ma en op of n io ot om pr e Th . us ro me nu e ar ng ti ke e vat pri r the fur d an , ies sid sub r ize til fer d an e id ic st pe of l va mo re culture, d an on ti uc od pr r ize til fer ge an ch y dl te ub do un l wil t en em lv vo in sector
in e rol ir the on ct pa im ve iti pos a ve ha l wil ly al tu en ev marketing and eldev l ura ult tic hor of t par g in ow gr r he ot An t. en pm lo ve horticultural de er um ns co d ze li ia ec sp d an g in rm fa c ni ga or of opment is the promotion . es bl ta ge ve and its fru ly ar ul ic rt pa e, uc od pr n ow gr demand for organically d pe lo ve de in ed nd pa ex have e uc od pr c ni ga or for Marketing opportunities . s e i g o l o n h c e t e s e h t e r o l p x e d l u o h s s r e c u d countries and pro Production Practices
been obtained un der co
The introducti
4 s!4 be co is mi ng cu lt ur e ti ss ue of adoption
dard technique er
ttt? so me an d pla nts , or na me nt al ve ge ta bl Be es , bo th crops (oil palm) in and developing countries. The produc tion of virus-free Leas pla nts he al th y pr od uc in in g im po rt is an t in gs su ch cr op s Particularly orc hid s: and ba na na s, potatoes, Shoot-tip grafting which has ee
i ee as strawberries, ve
ie
OS
tec hni que im pr ov an ed is cit rus ) (e.g.,
'® Ho we ve r, Eg yp t. an d Br az il , Ch il e, Ch in a, nd ia , use has to be linked mot her -tt e* bu dw oo in d pr og ra m ef fe ct iv an e ae a vi ru s Ad va nc es maintenance, re gi st ra ti on . bu dw oo d an d in de xi ng , ev rootstock aluatio degre’
Be
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eee
inc lud ing bi ot ec hn in ol og y, ad va nc es Re ce nt e n e inc or genetic engine ma ke un do ub te dl wil y l fu si on , pr ot op la st aa poration of the wee fea sib le mo re pr og ra m br ee a di ng in ch ar ac te rs a a and faster tha n present conventional means (backcrossing).
Irrigation and Fertilization The
impr
® o i t a z i l i t r e f l a c i m e h c d n a n o i t a g i r r i in combining saving of wate! .
Le., fete
;
Pia
“
e v i t c e f f e in n o i t u l o v e r a to m e h H d n a X E Tesources . ts an pl e th to s t n e m e l e l a i t n e s s e OF of ct fe ef r ) ei Y th E d n a Be s d o h t e m d n n o u i o t b a g a i t r e s f e t l n p e m i c a i f e e p Hist eyes n sa , s c i n o p o r d y h in s n o i t u l o s t n e i r t u n of e i a l culture nutri-fi y l e v i s n e t x e d e s u g n i e b is a i d e m r e h t o d n a , e r u t l u ly ve ti la many aig ats sates c re (a n o i t a g i r r i p i r d e c a f r u s b u S e p s e new method ie a y l t n e n a m r e p d e i r u b e ar s l a r e t a l n o i t a g i r r i p i a 20-60 cm below th 4 ated in production of c o y d a h a / s g n n o i t e b 0 0 2 is of ) s d l d e i a y e l a i e c t r e i ineg tomato es. It is claimed that comm se ceesa potroa d e San Joaquin Valley of
ing tomatoes could be achieve
in th
s e L so al e ar g n i t s e v r a h d n a , n o i t a v i t l u c , s e u q i n h c e t g n i n u o r r p p in n e s e n b o i t s a v ha o n In es ri t n u o c d e p o l e v e d in s e n i h c a m f o e s u e developing. Th
e h g i h e h t d n a s e g a t r o h s r o b a l r o f e t a s n e p m o c o t d e t o m 1n s n o i t a r e p o g n i m r a f l a r u t l u c i t r Large-scale ho e
e e p g n i t p a d a e r a , e l i h C d n a in Mexico : e n d l e i f of n o i t and reduc
, e g n e i l d n e a g h a m d a l d e i f e z i ing, m i n i m o t d e t a r g e t n i y l i s a e e b c e r is , s e l that should b a t e g e v y f a e l r o f y l r a l u c i t r a p , g n i l o o c of vacuum attention.
Crop Protection The judicious use of agro , rs to la gu re th ow gr d an , herbicides
p ou gr l ta en nm ro vi en d an s er um ns co the Integrated Pest Managem
g in be is s em st sy tion and marketing
i " v i s n e t n i e g d e l w o n k ing countries. These in g n i n i a r t d n a y c a r e t i l r e m r a f degree of of SP
e us e h T : e g a m a d t s e p thresholds for orchard sprayers) and its ™ i commercial promotion.
l o n h c e T g n i p p i h S d n a Marketing Recent
lp
advances in technolopt
ww s t n e m n o r i v n e of n o i Promot
.
a
es
Transfer and Adoption of Horticultural Technology
111
e th in ad le e th ke ta to e il Ch d we lo al industry and export work force, ). 90 19 ie yl (W s rt po ex r fo es bl ta ge ve d an ts ui fr ue al -v gh hi of production e ar st mo y: el os lo rm te e th e us (I s er rm fa d an s er uc od pr Chilean is g in rm fa h ic wh g on am s, st re te in ss ne si bu s ou ri va ve ha investors who to re si de ng ro st d an s es gn in ll wi th bo ed at tr ns merely one) have demo horticultural ed nc va ad t ap ad d an , er sf an tr , th wi nt me ri pe ex t, ou search t No e. il Ch of ns io it nd co ic at im cl ro ag e th to ia rn ac technologies from Califo pr l ra tu ul ic rt ho s, ie et ri va th wi ed nt me ri pe ex s er rm fa e es th ve , nt me only ha ge na ma e as se di d an st pe d an , es qu ni ch te e ag or st d an g in ol co n io at er op co tices, in es lv se em th g on am ly ee fr e dg le ow kn r ei th ed ar sh they have to research as well s te bu ri nt co h ic wh e, ut it st In ch ar se Re with the National (Wylie 1990).
Chile, China, and Egypt Several develo
r s fo e h c i t n e k r a i l m r a t i c n e u p o s c t u o d e g n v i r p a c e v a : h s e i r t n 5 . their horticult ural ex : i cif spe in on ti ta pu re d un so a d he is bl ta es commodities. This st and y efl l bri s, wil t I rt bu fo e ef es r th all ve ot co nn ca er pt Teport on thr : : : ee countries S: an established industry (the Chilean expert e u d th n i to in k o g o l n i g a r d e n m a e ; an ) e c n e ; i ) r e p ence x e e s e n i h C e h t ( y r t s future for Egypt.
: i u r f l a i c r Comme ” e e p e n o e l d an
s 30 19 e th in n a g e b ) 2 9 9 in Chile (Gnaegy 1
ch su s e c n a v d a l a c i g o l o n h tec f o t n e v d a e h t h t i w Us of irrigatio?: Gov"
s d o h t e m d e z i m o t s u c d n a a i S e e s s e i c i l g i emment po t e k r a m d n a n o i t c u d o r p to d e t n e plem
m o c e m i t a a for export. iBcuutltuinre ais fas and early against agr
e n u t s e i c i l o p t n e m 1970s, govern
® Z i l a n o i t a p e h t d n a n o i t a x a t t i c i l p m i d e s a e r c n i h it d ' i o¢ bl h t i s w e i r d t e s n u i d n b i m o c — s t r o tion of p x e n o s n o i t c i r t s e r h t i w a > b d e s o p m i c# ades ti li po l a n o i t a n r e t n i y l p p a to y a w a as s n o i t a n T i ie 2 e h t — e ™ r l b u a s t s s n j pre l a c i t i l o p , y l l a n r e t n I . d e t a n g a t s r o t c e s e n e a e s m a o c y t r e p c o i r m p o e n t o a v c i e ity, ing ieee eee tainty, and threats to pr delay ie 1990): l y W ( y r t s u d n i e v i t a r c u l y l l a i t n e t o p s i h t in h t r e v n8 li if st e s With the o e h t of y n a m , t n e m n r e v o g e d n e l l A e h t f o w s ca n i m i l e e d r e w e o w l l a s r o d n a fact p u d e e r f e r e w s t e k r a m l a t i p a c e h t a e i E s n o i E t a l u g e r e to find h t ; e v i t i t compe
m e h t g n i k a m a e ts gh ri d n a L governing investme . d e i f i l p m i s or d e t a n i m i l e n r u t in e i t n e s e s r n o a r m t e d n m a a s c n o be i t a c i n u m m o c as h c u s s e c i v r e s y e d e ai
portation were Ben
r g o e r u p l a ” v k c a d b r w a a r o d b “ n o e e r f e s o h created an export w s e l b a t e g e v d n a s e s t t a i b u r e f r e e h u t l a 4 v , s h e g s i a e h r c n f o i s e t u l r a o v p x e e h t s A . r a e y r a a l u c n i o t i r l a l p i m t a 5 h t . 2 $ f o S U n e a u h l a t v s s e e l h t s l a e u c q n e o d e t a n i m i l e e ar y e h T . k c a b d ae scale
S A F ( e r o m r o n o i l l i m 8 1 $ S U s l a u q e commodity y r t s u d n i e t a v i r p For its part, d t r o p x e t i u r f y r a t n u l o v a n i a t n i a The producers m ries’ regulations: t n u o c g n i t r o p m i h t compliance wi , n a p a J , s e t a t S d e t are the Uni
The Chilean Experience n a r t d e t a r e g i r f e r as
gy lo no ch te is th of n on ti en rv te in as to the extensio nt me rn ve go of e nc se ab e th e il Ch in at e th Th r ea cl . ry st du in e it qu is th is of It s es cc su ic at am dr e th r fo on as re bta es y ar im en pr be e th ve ha t is ex do was itself at th s on ti la gu re or t n e ms m ra n og r pr e v o g e h t nt 5 8 9 1 n i , few governme e l p m a x e r o F . y r t s u d n i e h t e g a r u o c n e to o d t e r e f f o e r a lished s e t a b e r am, whereby
” a n r e t n i h t i w e l b a r a p m o c e m a c e b s t s o c r i e h t t d a c s d o tional costs, enabli o g r i e h t of t i f o r p l a i t n e t o p e h t h g i e w to s r e c u on the world m ee .ee These measures, combined with a highly-educated
. s d r a d n a t s y r high phytosanita t s r i a f f A n g i e r o F f Ministry o t s u d n i e h t , y l b i d ments. Incre
p a t i u r f n i a m e h t running from
n o i t a k r a b m e f o t r to the main po China—Emerging
t c u d o r p t i u r f e h t , In China ; s d r a h c r o ( s p o r c l a i r t land used for indus
e s a e r c n i ; ) s p o r c g n i r a silk, tea, and oil-be e n n o i t c u d o r P . 8 8 9 1 in a h 5.1 million tons in 1988. Y:
a w e r n o i l l i m 7 . Fis that they 8 ; in: 1978 to 16 e t a m i t s e h g u o r a : y l t n a c i signif e e e . d o i n r o e i p t c s i h t g e n j i a r u 6 e annum d B fruit
f o n o i s n a p x e This rapid ich improve?
P
fruit mar
h w s m r o f e r fe) c econo: mi ayity ystem, Cees s duction responsibil
l l a i c e p s a n o i g e r of encouragement
(Eisa an
Transfer and Adoption of Horticultural Technology
113
1 /8 80 19 in t en rc pe 5 om fr d se ea cr in s rt po ex al of onions in total agricultur
t. en rc pe 15 to 10 om fr , es to ta po for 0; /9 89 19 to 9 percent in
into d te bu ri nt co has ds lan w ne the in on ti Horticultural produc as are d me ai cl re y wl ne e Th s. he ac pe d an es ap gr of ty li bi la ai av d se crea h suc y an but l, era gen in on ti uc od pr l ra tu ul ic rt ho for l ia nt te po t ea gr offer nd ma de the of nt me ss se as te ra cu ac an on d se ba be ld ou sh development ievar ed ov pr im d an ed uc od tr in y wl Ne s. et rk ma n ig re fo in domestic and orp co in be ld ou sh r) le nk ri sp d an ip (dr es gi lo no ch te ties and irrigation the y, tl en es Pr . em st sy g in et rk ma o-t on ti uc od pr ed at gr te rated into an in of production and processing, ts en on mp co te ra pa se on emphasis is mostly . e r u t c i p l a t o t e h t of t n e m s s e s s a e t a r u c c a t R u S o h S t U wi r e m r o f e th d n a e p o r u E n r e t s a E in s t e k r a m w e n g n i g r a r e t m e e n e p y The l r a e d n a , y g e t a r t s m r e t g n o l , h c a o r p p a t e k r a m t o n n e o r c e e f f i t d e k a r a m d e e n n e p o f o t n e m p o l e v e d e h t h t i w w o r g d l u o r e h t o s i v a s i v e tion. Exports sh g a t ve advan i t a r a p m o c s ’ t p y g E . s e i r t n u o C c E E e e s h t e h t o n i t — o s c e c o mi r o M , s u r p y C , y e k r srael, Tu
I — s r d e e i r l o p v p a u f s n i a n t a b o e n a to r r e s t r o f f e Medit y t i s n e t n i d l u o h s t p y g E . d e s s e s s a e b o s l a d l u o sh . C E E e h t h t i w s u t a t s country References
Pera
ayes
F a : 8 0 8 s 9 ’ 1 e t h t d in e n Egyp i l t c l e u s c d t i r l o gr a p r x u e t l u c i r g a n o n d n a l ura Q > m fro 1 , During tha t decade ed in cl de so al s rt po ex l ta to in e ar sh s e c n o s c in t 22.5 percen t? en rc pe 24 of ak pe a th wi , 89 19 in t en rc pe .3 20 o , on tt 1984. Co »
s: rt po ex al ur lt cu ri ag r jo ma e th e ar es to ta Oranges, and po
These three commoditi
a ot of e lu va e th of t en rc pe 90 t ou ab s a in s rt po ex commodity in e in cl de dy ea st a of e it sp in , on tt Co 0. /9 89 y it od mm export, still constitut co al ur lt cu ri ag l ta to of t en rc pe 60 t ou ab ae 2 exports, or US$22 me ! pe 15 ly on , ES NE e e n D, IE SI LE tn r o n © a th ve ti ca of di in , on ed ti rt uc po od ex pr en of be s ha s e i t i d o m m o c pi increased domesti
end e e B the rapi
ae
m co in d an ay la pu po (aveon toarabinlecrealasendd and water resources; an
e c a e p oin i limitations
crops, primarily Re
t? tu ul ic rt ho of on ti uc od pr d se ea cr in , on populati oduction of cereals a0
pr e th th wi d e r a p m o c as oil crops, will a au , es ic pr l na io at rn te in ve ti la re by d de ci de x e a s: rt whatever value-add po ex l ra tu ul ic rt ho r fo be t gh mi e er benefits th Simcaiove. 1s ed e ad tr t an rt po im of r e b m u n a d te op ad s ha r e e B n al ig ur re lt fo cu ri ag e and th g in ct fe af es ci li po n io at iz al er ib en ee li pe e es Th . or ct se er Th s. rt po ex al ur lt cu ri ag ed lp he A a e s e ee ek pe b su rt po im on ct pa im s rt po Ex l. ia nt ta bs su en be so al s ha ns ai gr of Otddtes toniaason stitution 5: 80 19 e th in ed pl ru ad qu an th re mo s me li d an s, on em 2 ns io on of s Export high rates: the share ly ir fa at d se ea cr in so al es to ta po d an ms
(CH
try.
e a us tr Ci ,” us tr Ci r fo s n o i t a c i l p p A : e r u t l u c i r g A ” e l s, b ie a n i a t s u S “ A. J. , s m ‘ a Ad s e i g e t a r y t S e r u t l u c 33. International Agri
1991: Eisa, aS
Eisa,
(Oe
earns
View of
. t r o p e r d e h s i l b pu n l U » . 1 8 3 8 7 3 Hortscience, 21(3): . “Horticultural Crops in China. d r a a s i a J . R d n and Human Health: H.M., a
. 0 9 9 1 , k n a B d l r o W e h Washington, D.C.: T editors).
( x u a d e b e u Q . Eisa, H.M., and B n a s t i u r F f o s n o i t Contribu 25(12) 1474. ; ) S A F ( e c i v r e S l a r u t l u c i r g A n g . S U Forei : e l i h C ; o g a i t n a S . 2 0 0 2 1 C No. c i t a n r e t n I d n a n o i t a v o n n I “ . S Gnaegy, orts.” Unpub
ie.
;
p x E e u l a V of High
Bank, 1992.
: o p x E l a r u t l u c i t r Islam, N. Ho ues. s s I y c i l o P d n a Prospects, e R y c i l o P d o o F l a Internation d n a , r e h c a m t u H . B . R , . J . C , e n e Ph " 4 C — s e o t a m o T of Processing
1(1) 16-22.
Sha in » * Development “Agricultural A. Wylie, Fruit and Vegetable EXE
Spectives on Food, Agne
s : C . D , n o t g n i h s a W , r e Kotl
ai
an
sonian Ins! u
: 0 9 9 1 . e c n e i c s t r o H ” . -m
0 1 y
y 8
d n a y c i l o P l a r u t l u c i r g A n Egyptia s 0 9 9 1 e h t f o s e g n e l l a h C the i l e u o G . A d Ahme
e h t n i s e g n a h c l a r e v e s h g u o r h t e n o g s a h t p y g E f ; o c i y t c a i l m o a p r d l , a s r r u t a l e u 5 ncremental in some y The agric i e r e w s e g n o a c e h c e e h t s e d n h e a T r . u s t l u c i r g a n i e l o s r Pe aswe year ent'
m n r e v o g e h t t c e l f e r y m a e r h g o T r . p s er m r o f e r c i m o n o c e e h T . d e t p o d a y g o l 4 s a nomic ideo e r u t l u c i r g a g n i d u l c n i , t n e c s a p e r @ p — e t a g a k c a p e v i s n e Bares h e r p m o c a s a d e n g i s onomy, is de l u f s . s s e e g n c a c h c u s l a n o i n t u e t e i t b s n i r d a n f a o c s i m o s n a o c e f o t g o r p m i r d o n f e e r p x e e h t f c o i l b n u o p i t a f o t n e l m o e r l t p n m o i c , e The t a r t s e 3 r 0 2 e t n i w a , L e t a , r r e h e t g r u n F a h c . s x n e o i t e r h o t t s i d g n e i c t i c ! e t h e p t r f o n i n o i t in cor a W n O i D m i l is e t n e h t c x i e h w e m , o s s e s i r p r e t n e ture, and to a d n e i n m w i l o E e t . a m t r s o f e e r h t l h a t n i o i w t u t g i n t s i n l i a e d t n s 1 a i 9 t — 9 r s o t p e m k of 1 i r a m n a f s o i n o i , t n a z o i i l t a t n e m a e r l e p b i m l i — m e f t o s y s of the s process distortions in the economic | n i v e i h c a r o f tg of n o i t i d n o c t n e i c i f f u s t o n t u b e g n a h c l necessary a n o i t u t i t s n I . m a r g o r p m g r n o i f g n e e r l l a c h c i m o n e o r c o e m e h t s i , r o t c e s e r u t l u t c o i b r g is a it e e h s t u a c n e i b , as m r o f e r f o s s e c o r p e h t n i s r e k decisionma politically sensitive.
This chapter ou y t i l h t i n b i a n i a t s e u v s e i h c a ie ™ r . o s F n o i t i n i f e l d a r e as sev
o i t a n r e t n I r o f p u e o Consultativ Gr Satisfactory, i.e., ~
n a t n e m n o r i v i n l e t m i n e e h m t e g a a n a m e h t n i s e c tae i o h c e l b a l i a v a f o a a e n a n ce e t its main
d n a e ! r r u o t p l m u i k e i r o on m s p a h r e p t u b s u r t o l t u c c a i r s g a o e . h s T r o t c l a a politic f 117
Egyptian Agriculturial Policy and Challenges
119
so al s wa ) rt po ex d an c ti es om (d e ad tr on tt co e th , od ri pe is th During
. nt me rn ve go e th by ly ct re di ed ll ro nt co d an d e z i l a nation
History of Agricultural Policy The geography of Egypt
the strategic wal a oes
centralization and str
agriculture were te
French when th same policy a
:
importance of the River Nile, coupled with
ure, historically created a tendency tovant
from surplu s of Tran sfer s e control of agriculture.
ment developed the eae anadies ett a haan
4 7 9 1 1 6 9 1 : m s i l a i c So
the ambitions of the rulers of Egypt. Gover
gation infrastructure and farmers delivered theit
te by detail in docu ment ed was W price : . This policy The
pee
y: ur nt ce th en te gh ei e th so Egypt at the end of d an y ur nt ce th en te ne ni e th Ali in
d e m m a h o M by d e w i ined by the British colonial government. tata was largely mainin
: e ur lt cu ri ag in After the le ro s ’ t n e m n r e v o g e th , 52 19 of e t n e t ea em increased ev pl im to d te ea cr e r e w ns io ut it st in w e n l ra ve se e e h w s m r o f e nt te ex e rg la a agrarian r to is e ur lt cu ri ag of n o i t a z i n a g r o e a e e n a r c e th of lt su of y ud st the re A . 52 19 e nc changes si
cy li po of s es oc pr e iv at i nt se es is s s e c o r p this la al to s ge an ch cy li po d e r i u q e r e th g in fy ti en id r fo , y; ud a st is e th l b a n of i a t s u s e os rp pu e th r Fo . or ct se al ur lt cu ri ag e th in y rt fo es as ph ve fi the period of to in d de 92 can be divi
19 to 52 19 m o r f e t e (2 d an , m s i l a n o i on ti za li ta (1) Nat vi Re ) (4 , cy li Po r o o D n e p O ) (3 , sm li ia oc s ha e a ch ea t bu c i m o n o c E , ed ) at (5 el rr te in ly gh hi e ar These phases e e u: at fe t en er diff atures with respect to the policy instruments.
s t n e m n r e v o g w e n e h t s a eTh and reform aw of 1952 w
Nationalism: 1952-1961
;
The
e v y l n o t o n s m e t s w a l e h t f o e c n a t r o p m i e h T . e r u t s B t f o e n o i t u a b i r t e s i d e h t d n a d n a l l a r u t l u c i r g a n o e e m : y c ‘a n a n e e t h t f o o t d n n a o l i t a l u g e r excess e h t m o r f o s , but al s s e l n a u t l u w c i r t g n a e f r o e u l a v e l h a t s r e u m t ricuale ASgn as as set in the law at seven ti e b m e h t e d a m t a h e t c n a t i r e h n i f o s t h g i r e h t s e s e M e aes pac é e j b u s d n a J e h t , r e h t r u F . e t a v i t l u c d l u o w y e h t s d n a ms e t R E B the “landr efo
s a n w o n k , s e v i t a r e p o o c o t n i 4 d d e n z a i s e n c a i g f r f o t c i r t s i d d n cooperatives,”,” and administered by the village a central agency. These regulations and institutions are still an integral P@ of Egyptian agriculture.
eee, system of agricultural cooperatives was expanded to include the nt's rnme gove The land. t credi as wn kno rm, refo land in lved not invo ag ire a land reclamation also started in this phase, when around oP d base was cy poli ion amat recl land The eddans were reclaimed. ; : e land resource: th of n o i t a z i l i t u r e t t e b r fo s m r a f l l a m s of p i h s r e the own
v o G e. as ph is th g n i r u d d e r r u c c o cy li po l a r u t l u c i r g a in Dramatic changes es ic pr al ur lt cu ri ag w lo of cy li po A . x a m i l c r ei th d e h c a e ernment controls r e c n a n i f to d e t p o d a s a w or ct se l a r u t l u c i r g a e th of t s to transfer the surplus o m n ru to d e t a e r c e r e w s e i c n e g a c i l b u P . or ct se l a i r t s u d n i n d an the urba c i t s e m o d th bo , r e m u s n o c to e t a g m r a f m o r f , es ti vi ti ac l a r d e z i n a g r o agricultu e r e w s nd la w e n e th of n o i t a v i t l u c d n a n o i t a m a l c e r d n a L . d e t c u r t s foreign. n o c s wa ) D A H ( m a D n a w s A h g i H e h T . s m r a f m i e s at a st w n o i t a m around a l c e r d n a l r o f s m a r g o r p t s e g r a l e h t f o e e r n u o t l u c , i y r g l a g n i in d r h o t c w c o A r g f o e t a r e h T . s n a d d e f 0 0 0 , 0 0 5 n g i n s i a v b l o e v h n t i f o , n d o e i t t n a pleme o the transform t e u d r a e y t e p t n s e n c o r s e a p e s 4 g s a n i w h o g s i e h t n i t was as h f i h s a d n a n o i t a g i r r i t n e n a the
, l e a r s I h t i w r a w 7 6 9 1 e n u J e h t g n i w o l l o F . s p o r c e c i r in d d n e a t a n g a e t z s i t a n m e m t s of e v n i c i l b u p : e m i t t l u c i f f i d y r e v a h g u o r h t country went . r a l u c i t r a p in e r u t l u c i r g a in d n a l a r e n e g the economy in
m r e p o t d n a l irrigation
Open Door: 1974-1982
y g E , t a w 3 7 9 1 r e After the Octob
1 . t n e m t s e v n i n g i e r o f t c a r t t a to policy t a v i r p e h T . d e s i a r e ion” wer
“sreen revolut
c e r to , n o i h s a f d e z i unorgan c n i e h t to e u D . n o i t a l u c e sp
a o r c n e n a b r u , s 0 7 9 1 e t a l to d mi
0 0 s 0 6 9 1 e h t of s e i c i l o p e m a s e h t t u B . y l d i p a r , s e i c i l o p e s e h t to e u D prevailed. in l a n o i t a n of t n e less than 8 perc n i a t s u s e b t o n d l u o c growth S Y D e g a l l i v e h t was the creation of 0 s e v i t a r e p o o c t i d e r c e g a l l i v of s function 1 " 0 r e b m u n e h t in e s a e r c n i d e t n e unpreced : (6 e t a r d e z i d i s b u s y l h g i h at a h T . s m r a f y r t l u o p of number m
o r f y l r a l u c i t r a p ( d i a Start of foreign agricultural technology-
Revitalization: 1982-1990
r
Ths tog70. widens’ The food it gapwas in tenEgypthad times the size of in 1980
Egyptian Agriculturial Policy and Challenges
121
6 of el lev ed) diz bsi (su low a m fro sed rea inc e rat st ere int e e Th
©
The Private pri : sector permi Was ake fertilizers, in trade and import to permitted Pesticides, and feeds ° Adminiinistered co Ns mer pric: es for several ' foods were eliminated u and left to the m d an , s e l b a t e g e v , t a e m g n i d u l c n i ( e a en epsk e fruits); further star to reduce consumer subsidies ere tak
= , several In this period the establishment of the
:
institut
ing lud inc en, tak o als e wer ps ste l ona instituti
al ur lt cu ri ag d n a e r u t l u c a u q A r o f y c n e g A l a r e a s n o i t a t s n o i t e a al z st i n a a h c to me in d e m r o f s n a r t r e t a l e r e w r e t t a l e a w o s l a al ur company. There lt cu ri ag t c e t o r p to ) 3 8 9 1 ge of Law 116 ( a s s a p as c n e n a b r u m land fro g a e e e s a w r o t Private sec
oagce
technical high sch:
In the area
of land reclamation, the
of s e t a u d a r g h t u o y r fo m a r A new prog
of s ea ar l l a m s e g a n a m d n a n w o s e to i t i s r e v i n u d n a s l o o : teclaimed |], the of cy li po ed ar cl de e Th d. te en em pl im ly ve ti ac ee cimcnt. oa new lands was its responsibility for building the infra 5
Structure and
n. io at iz il ut nd ty la r li fo bi si on sp : ’s re or the private sect e, iz By th ma , t a e h w — s p o r c r o j a m of y t i 5 v i t c u d o r p , s 0 8 9 1 e h t of d n e the ‘ y the th wi : ed ar mp d co an , ts ui fr y , ce tl Ti Vv etables—increased significan
1 970s.
Credi:
eg
d an on ti za li ra be li e ic pr on es ci li po to nt we s se ea cr in e e A e o of high-yielding
the ne on ti uc od tr in e th ly al ci pe es y, og ol hn ec Var iets ies. But cotton productivi ee i ty declined sharply in the 1980s due f° actors, including government controls.
Economic Reform: 1986-1992
om the IMF and the World Bank, in 1991 Egypt began 4 al es li be r tr ad e em ph as iz in g pr og ra m, re fo ce rm m a li st be of ru ra ct li an u: za d ti pr o® ti oc on th es e s ag ri In . cu lt ur e, a a oo a Si Beati ath n
Wi th a s
cp ae
[7 a ae
tiaet
pia
iv atpt mo st th e no is w Ag ri 19 cu in 86 lt . ur e started
re ac hi n& la nd ow pr ne iv rs wi at th hi e p ec on om gy y, : ptian fas re form, ec on om cu ic rr th en e t Wi th arming community.
as been directly affected in a number of ways:
t cen per 20 of e rat st ere int t) rke (ma toa percent the es sid (be tor sec e vat pri the of n tio ipa tic par There was active ral ltu icu agr of ion but tri dis and de tra Agricultural Bank) in the rs ize til fer al mic che rly ula tic inputs, par new the to ed err nsf tra e wer es ris erp ent n tio duc pro d ge na ma eStat 1) 199 of 203 w (La s ie an mp co system of holding vat pri was ton cot ept exc ps cro all for tem sys g in et The state mark ized ral ltu icu agr of unt amo and pe sco the of n tio ita lim There was import subsidies f o e l o r e h t s t n e m t s u j d a d e t a p i c i t n a r e h t r u f d n a s e g n a h c e s Due to the . s e g n a h c c i t s a r d g n i s s e n t i w is e r u t l u c i r g a n i t n e m n r e v o g e h t s e g n e l l a h C r o j Ma
r o j a m l a r e v e s , s r a e y g n i m o c n i d n a t n e s e l r u p c i t r a g a , s e e fa c l e b ur lt a n e o t Egyptian agricu d e t a l u m r o f e r e b to s ha cy li po al ur lt cu ri Ag c challenges. i m o n o c e s a e na h c su es iv ct je ob ture to achieve societal n ca es ng le al ch e Th . ty , li se bi ba na ai st su ce d ur an so re ) (3 n, io alleviat l, na io at rn te in ) (2 , mestic do ) (1 : ps ou gr interrelated
(4) technological.
Domestic Challenges
gt n o i t a l u p o p h g i h The present len l a h t c n a t r o p m i t s o m e h t d e er
i ll mi 65 to e s i r to d e t c e p is ex
i m 0 7 d n u o r a to d n a 1997,
h
e e g hi e h T . s a e r a l a r u r in s e v i l n o i t a l u p po
a r e p n e m p o l e v e d constraint for sustainableemployment, and deter n u g n i s a e r c n i food gap,
y é c i t a m a r d d e s a e r c n i s a h p a g ment. The food
n e c r h d e e r a p m o c , 0 8 9 1 in n about US$1.9 billio ie e a 22 to d e n i l c e d s d o o f c i s a b in af y a g Self-sufficienc u s percent for 2 5 , ls oi r fo t n for corn, 30 perce
4. e a h g u o r h t d e c n a n i Food imports had tohibceh f was positive up 0 jtural im orts ce, w the trade balanover only 20 percent of agricu tural exports c m i l a r u t l u c i r g a r fo ll the average annual bi
c i r g a r fo n o i l l i m 0 pared with US$70
Egyptian Agriculturial Policy and Challenges
e s a B e c r u o s e R l a r The Natu
. le Ni r ve Ri e th in ow fl rte wa w lo of od ri pe The decade of the 1980s was a ce ar sc a as r te wa of s es en ar aw s y’ et This low flow increased the soci , 00 20 ar ye e th r fo set n io at am cl re nd la of s et rg ta s ou ti bi am th Wi resource. at th n io at tu si a d— he tc re st y tl ea gr be ll wi s ce ur so re r te wa the available is r te wa on ti ga ri Ir y. tl en ci fi ef r te wa e us to w ho of raises the question ar be ly ct re di t no do ey th as ng lo as s er rm fa by ” od treated as a “free go to l ia nt se es is It . em st sy on ti ga ri ir e th om fr ry ve li de its t as le at of st co e th e th ge an ch d an e st wa ge ra ou sc di to em st sy g in ic pr r te wa a e uc e ar od tr in ) ne ca ar ug (s s op cr r-intensive ns er tt pa ng pi op cr ng ti is ex t ge to rs he ot by replaced s ad le so al r te wa irrigation e us e th es ud cl in water plan
in which wate of ty ci ar sc e Th . nt me st ve in on rn tu re er a bett an ti yp Eg e Th r. te wa y it al qu wlo of e us e th to l na ca th wi d xe mi r te wa of agricultural drainage of pro-
ty li bi na ai st Su r. te wa d un ro rg de un d an , er at ew st wa d te ea of tr e s u e r, h t wate in e r a c high degree of
a s e r i u q e r e e r r e u v t e l u S c i r . g s a p o r in c y d n a d ductivit n a l n o t c a p m i e s r e v d a s t i o t e u d r e t a w y t low-quali a e e E AM e {it of rec on ti ec ot t pr cos e th A r fo ed measures are also requir of the irrigation system.
Qualyobia
982
S
:
persons
pe:
and Sohag. nore
2
ively, for
“a oP
ea
e a B c i a t a e s h g ng The hi si ea cr in r fo e l b i s n o p s e r is a t l e D d n a y e l l a V e i v n e e th of deterioration x hie
land to urban uses
Sr n o i t u l l o p y l l a i c e p s e
nea
al ur lt cu ri ag st be e th d e It has transform
m e l b o r p l a t n e m n o r i v n e of e d u t i t l u m a n o a ae
p: lo ve de e bl na ai st su e th t ns ai ag s k r o w n o i t a u t i s a G ; s a ment of rural are ve ha y a m n o i t a l u p o p of n o i t u b i r t s i d e r l a c i h p a r g o e la a on e n o d to be e th be y a m s e r u s a e m e iv ct fe ef t s o m e h T s, al co e me establishment of ning:
an al pl on gi re d an s nd la w e n e s e th i in t i n u of comm
International Challen ges
5
e’ gn si s a h d n a t b e d n g i e r o f Egypt s it g n i r e w o l in d e e a S a a g u o h in t l A . ) F M I ( an La d n u F ary t e n o M l a n o i t a n r e t n I e l b a r o v a f e r t a wi e , g n thes i g r e m e is n o i t a u t i s l a n o i t a n r e t n i w e n a , s t n e v e e l b a e s n o c . s e i r t n u o c Serious g n i p o l e v e d
has
Egypt
and
other
st co s ha e p o r u E n r e t s a E in n o i t a z i l a r e b i l e h t d n a R l a e n s o e h i T t . s d o o g l Egypt tradi a r u t l u c ri g a r fo s t e l t u o y l l a i espec a t a r o f R i d S n a v a d h ai d o o f of countries s t n e i p i c e r r o j a m e m o c e b E E P s it d n a C E E e th eign capital 3 olution of
n e i B s t of e s p a coll
ad
v e e h t d e d d a be t s u . m s t r o p is x e th © n a i t p fc y g E s n d o e i n t i i a r t s cond n o c r e h t r u f s a h is th : y r t n e ; a d e t r e w o e l ai a be t r s u p m r Fo n on food aid
mobilization t
gh
Sea
e th of g n i n e h t g n e r t s d n a ; d e d e e n is domestic savings l. To achieve these goals, Egypt will
IG
agricuilctauirael Rofeg redt quickly
a
A
sector is essentia
d n a y l t n e i c i f f e t s u j d a to y m o n o c e e h t in y t i l i b degree of flexi tional marketplace-
a n r e t n i e th in s e g n a h c st fa d n a c i t a m a r d e h t y to
e nc na te in ma er op pr d an pollution . s m a r g o r p e s e h t e c n a n i f o t d e d e e n is a l u ery form gy
Technolo
cult Agri lture gricu
. the hi; 2 Egypt has rece. ived t fforts is reflected in in
the ; was e e s e h t of t fer trans c a p m i e h T . s ology r a e y t n e c e r in . h c r a e s e y r t l i b a n i a a c o t h t r e o s o p r e u p th n i a m e . h y s T t e i d s i r c e v i i t l d e a t e e e i r a Mi v d an s
m e c n o c ss le s a w it ; h t w o r g of n o i t a r e accel f l a c i m e h c of e s u e v i s n e t n i e h t Accordingly, r utilizing
fo l a i t n e s s e s a w — insecticide treadmill of e Us e th g n i y f i s n e t n i e Moreover, farmers ar n e e b s a h n o i t a t o r p o r c l year traditiona ,
de e rg la a o t e l b a n i a t s u s n u e m o c e b s a h m syste rs t© in e v i t c e j b o y t i l i sustainab
must now take the s at e a vi le r fo y t i r o i r p h g i h n g i s s a t s u m e t S at th programs d e t o n e b so al d l u o h s It . y t i v i t c u d o r p
and
isin jeopardy
d n e p e d h g i h e th h t i W . g n i k long-run underta ? n i a t s u s . D W O s it d, ai n g i e r o f n o m e Tesearch syst g” le re fo of n o z i r o h e m i t e h t t u o b a the question : e c n a i l e r f l e s d e s a e r c of a system for in
e G ° f w o H d n a s Goal
Fae is the ™ in y t i v i t c u d o r p of n o i t a r e Accel a m s of y t i v i t c u d o r p e th Increasing
goa
Egyptian Agriculturial Policy and Challenges
and quality l a r u t l u c i r s g u a o i r g a n v r i fo t n u o c c i c a m o Introduce water into econ uses igation r r i e th n i a t n i a m to y r e v o c e r Establish a system of cost system s nd la w e n e th in g in ic pr Introduce water n io at or ri te de e th t mi li to s on gi re g n o m a n o i t a l u p o p e Redistribut nd la al ur lt cu ri ag on t n e m h c a o r c n e n a b r u d n a t n of environme , ls na ca r, te wa of n io ut ll po e th t mi li to y g o l o n h c e Use low-input t and soils
s n o i t u t i t s n i e g a ill Vi
on government support s n o c e r d e e n s institution
Fa aus Cae ole of popes
, g n i t e k r a m , e d a r ut t
e d e e n is s e s i r p r private ente exports, and processing.
Agricultural Legislation : law ral Itu ° 1 s ge an ch e uc od tr in to is te sta the The role of t ee agr the of me was: so t, en w es pr a At 1 s. law w m ne ‘ eI introduce T e1f0 d n a l s ( h ic1
econom
n. T io t i a z i l i a r liibe
e s e in d e d n e m a be to s ha gated in 1952 and change
Policy cy DesDeisign and Admi nistration
ri ag an 5 ti Egyp l ra tu ul ic gr he in the following ae ation
u sit al ur lt cu ri ag s y’ tr un co e th t ec fl re should
Portance as an export oe
one
Teli lance
shou
given i to
Id be placed on
:
cotton! so|that 1s : ic st dome
ins
its i si
5 of cereal es li supp
:
ae
Integrati 10n of the o di st ri bu th e to re ga rd 4 la nd s— wi th ne w an d Id tion of resource Ss and marketing—shou ld be increased Imbalan ce between crops and livestock should be redressed
D evelopment and Conse rvation
ben 4 The wat €r and land re: S : maintain to improved be must ources of Egypt
sustainable ©
agri
agriculture by focusing on the following actions:
5 ty of water resources in terms of quantity Increase t he sustaiénabili
the direction of
ws la r he ot y, rl la mi d an ed in am ex be ld ou sh . Si w la e Th s. tion ; al q u a r s a ' n n t e 2 i m n e e g . n a r r y a c n a 4 n e t d n a l a t n e a r r g e r r i i a a c f n u ltura’ of seeds d flexible and a l e s s e u m t n e e p Muctbelexamined Creation of Markets
Greate: 5 must st be be attention T : ar More
;
:Pp romu. I
m a¢ from The process of transition 4 e t a t s h t o b of e c n e s b a m in the a vacuu
me: st e: inv tor has to support the private sec
. e l b a u l a v e b ll wi a e r a is th Training in co mp e ir fa n i a t n i issue regulations that will ma
io at rn te in th wi n o i t a r g e t n I tendencies. . ns io ut it st in ic bl pu d n a e t a v i r p flexible Rural Development
Rural development should be reas
das an
o
for Egypt. Rural roads are inne ee ifer ac! ” Smal l-sc ale inte grat ion. Tegional
11 L
d n a t n e m t s u j d Structural A e m o S : e r u t l u c i r g A n a i t p y Eg e h t f o s n o i t a c i d n I y r Prelimina s m r o f e R c i m o n o c E f o Impact
L
Seer
va au!
gic
i reliant finance is important, and
2 porting the national research effort € time horizon of its support.
WwW alsh, Jon. “Present in
in Aggrriiculture
2.
nada
e : » r t o s t i H p T i c e s 4 trade, , pripvriavtatiizziing public r o t c e s e t a v i r p r o f t n e m n o r i v n le e more favorab
e s s e n k a e w 1 a r u t c u r t s n i a m e h t s s aims to addre
References
: n o i t p O e h t g Washington ere
e v i s n e h e r p m o c a n o d e k r a b m e t p y g E f o t n e m n m r i a e v e o h G T e . h k t n a B , 0 9 d l r o W e h t In May 19 y b d e t r o p p u s m a r g o r p t n e m t y l s i u r j a m d i a r p l e a n r o u t m c o r f stru y m o n o c e e h t e v o m o t , is ore m d n a a , 0 s o t a w m ortions, t s i d e r of this progra e v e s h t i w , r o t c p e O s c i s l n b o u i p t c i r e t h s t e r y b g n d : i e v t o a m n e r i m do , s e c i @ r p g n g i n z i i t l a a e r r e c b i l y l l y a b r , e n o d e t n e i r o m : a t r e g k o r r p ma e h T " s e s i r nterp
ish >
Issues ” , y t i l i b a n i a t s u S d n a
aus
supported by t
e am rn ve go e th of s tu pe im
o gr c i m o n o c e d e w e n e r for s4 ne e th ng zi mi ni mi same time
s in s t n e m e v o r p poor through im en be s ha or ct se The agricultural
ps o r c t s o ™ r fo es ic pr , 86 19 as y Starting as earl
for cotton and sugarca co d an ns io ct ri st re marketing r we s rm fo re y rl ea These
removed. an e ur lt cu ri Ag of out by the Ministry rious 1™
te le de e th d te ca di in which
u lt cu ri ag on s on Sectoral distorti macroeconomic an m r o f e r l a r u t c u r t areas of s form:
chapter outlines, © ct pa im e m o s to have
a or ct se r he rt fu r fo agenda
W°
Economic Aspects 129
Structural Adjustment and Egyptian Agriculture
The Prereform Period
is as ph em an g in ud cl in , rs to ec bs su al ur lt cu ri ag n e e w t e b on ti ca lo al mum vestment in ic bl pu in e ar sh s e’ ur lt cu ri ag e, pl am ex r Fo n. io at am cl re nd la on an Pl r ea -Y ve Fi t rs Fi e th ng ri du es total expenditur
fell from 7.9 percent of is, It ). 92 19 898 (1 an Pl nd co Se e th ng ri du t en rc pe 9 6. (1983-1987) to ). 97 19 399 (1 an Pl d ir Th e th in t en rc pe .8 15 to se ri to however, expected e ur lt cu ri ag in nt me st ve in ic bl pu of on ti or op pr e th , At the same time
& countries. Even today, the ver one-half of GDP and 75 percent of manu-
financed by large foreign exchange in-
borrowing, l o c a l b i i exports, oil borrowing, local g, : of ism, and di workers in the Gulf countries, Suez Canal rev. » and direct: foreign investm ; by ted initia y polic ” door n “ope ent.eThe President Anw A oa ar Sadat in 1974 mee the economy, which brought with it the seeds ofRchange economy: toiaemarket AG O s i c o peters co ibese favorable circumstances, the Egyptian economy 1985 period
-
se
rate of 8.5 percent per annum during the 1974
gl expense the at achieved was however, Srowth, ae fiscal mounting elicits, high inflation, and expansionary monetary policy; a arate ae characterized
.
Bot f proportionate increase in employment.
by gener.
= centrally. Eeypaay i econ incenti ions of Planned distort catttion ia of misallo and entives ; Tesourc by and tion; competi ted restric that es through state monopolies
conto he ris of prods nator markets le a ice
e aa
eer
ee
ree eee
c
ed
rade. This Policy, however, was not sustainable in t
g oe mounting
fiscal and current account deficits, high
» and a significant decline in oil-related foreign exchans é
mestic
oil production
and workers’
remittances), and 19
foreign borrowing. This in turn led to rising foreign debt, reduced
imports and investment, and a sharp slowdown of economic activity that
peeansl tr staat ted edinte into low rates of
g growth of GDP at about 2.5 to 3.0 pere
one
The Agricultural Sector Agriculture has been a major source of economic growth in Egypt. His© it 1974, In econo my. Egypt ian the domin ated agricu lture torically, counted for 30 percent of GDP in real terms, 25 percent of exports, and
about 47 percent of employment. However, by 1990, its contribution 12 percent ° the economy had declined to 20 percent of GDP and 20 commodity exports. The sector employed about 33 percent of the labot
force. This decline was compounded by sectoral distortions and by # declining share of agriculture in public investment, with a less than opti-
e e ea ar ed at iv lt cu e th g in as re nc (i n io ns pa ex al nt allocated for horizo n co Se d an t rs Fi e th in t about 40 percen
om fr d se ea cr in n) land reclamatio . n a l P d r i h T e h t in t n 5 perce e e p e e e at s m r e t al re in w e r g e r u t l u c i r g a y b d e d d a e a s e B : Sea e a e a d e h t y l n i a m g n i t c e l f e r , s 0 7 9 1 e h t in t n e c r e p 7 A . 2 , e e : rates of e y t i s n e t n i g n i p p o r c in s n i a g e h t e c n O . m a D n a w s e a the High A e a e t s e r e w m a d e h t m o r f s e s a e l e r d e n l l e o r a t e n a by con E Te s n a s e s a e r c n i d l e i y n e e b e v a h e r u t l u c i r g a , growth in k c o t s e v i l d n a s p o r lue c a v r e h g i h to r e w o l patterns from
share of public
;
tous? pee activities not controlled by the state. Ipjne th e , n . i o gc i t a m t a n I ecl d n a investm e l o t ing g i e e d te bu ri nt co it gh ou th al , th source of grow . reclaimed
ame land bec
estimated 1.9 million feddans have so ,fabur t
i
anc oth 1€1
Co y) ne nd la le ab iv lt cu e around 24 percent of th jon. Despi to due 1980s he pia ural agricult of ercent int value : gross the of percent low and , tor sec the of e ai z 1g ed lin dec re ltu icu agr the growth rate in t it lic imp , ion ent erv int nt me rn ve go ive extens s. nd la d e m i a l c e r e th of y t i v producti production, and prices © market prices); government mono
and distribution of the main inputs;
! po ex ti an to se ri ve ga at th me gi re te ra 0D ns io ct ri st re e ad tr ; or ct se e privat
eure
commodities; subsidies for the ma certain kinds of agricultural mac tive interest rates in real terms: Anot
equi
s ae ge na ai dr d an r te wa on ti ga ri ir of sion
farmers, hence the absence of incent bi
of water used and ensuring the sustaind short on water and land ene
sae protect
!¢ er gh hi e a rd wa in an ed ow Egypt has foll
es ti di mo om Te to on ut it st ub -s rt po promoted im
re
The exports and imports of sever? included citrus Cue is Th . al ov pr ap r io pr or to quotas markets. The consumption
wheat, corn, sugar, and vegetab!
t ic tr es /r ns ba rt po Im trade gap.
e r u t l u c i r g A n a i t p y g E d an t n e Structural Adjustm 0) 10 0= 98 (1 d el Yi d an , on ti uc od Pr , ea Ar d pe Indices of Crop
Table 11.1 Crop
1985
Area
1990
Sugarcane Gardens Vegetables
99 127 105
108 183 107
Long Berseem
112
%
Beans
123
125
Rice
95
107
83
78
Wheat
Short Berseem
89
147
93
80
100
Corn
Cotton
Sorghum Potatoes
1985
Yield
1990
104
87
80
106
113
. k o o b r a e Y l ca ti is at St , S A M P Source: CA
to berseem ro
i
Se rapidly
on ti ec ot pr of t un co ac on s 70 19 d an b u s s 60 on ti 19 t la u pu p r; po n € gh i to hi ec k bs oc o su st ve li e and th © y e w es di si . g 2 n i s i r 3 wth,
d e e th t to u b i r t s n e i o t c i c i t s a l e e m o c n i h g i n $ h t r d o f n a m d e e s d a e incr of s d l e i y e h t , r e h t r u F . s e i t i d o m m o ; c r o j a m e wheat and cornr. ose thr. es to the adoption
gr o S
income,
an
i t i s n a r t e h t g n i r u d s t c e f f e e h t e t a g i (SED), to mit : t a s m i a P A S R E , e g a t s t s r i f e h t n i , y l l Specifica u c e h t d n a n o i t a l f 1. Reducing in
due : peri od 197 0-1 985 the tu sh vari e hig of h-yielding The Reform Program (ERSAP) The
unsust
e:
«1°
1990 of a ‘aH mn
i=
g n e r t s d n a , s k n a b f o y c solven
,
vision i n a e r u t l u c i r g a ! in s e c i r p t s o m P. 4. Liberalization of l a n o i t a n r e t n i OF
g n i t s o c l a n i g r a m long-term
u j d a l a r u t c u r t s e v ensi
B t a J a s a y m o n o c e n a i t p y g E e h t f o s e g a t n a v d a (2 ) ; 4 t ( e k ; r n o a i m t a g i r r i l domestic a i n n e r e p ) 3 ( ; e t a m i l c e l b a r o v a f e h t ) 2 ( ity to majiog overseas markets; (5) a diversified industrial base; (6 roximi pe tial. This n e t o p m s i r u o t e h t ) 7 ( d n a ; r o b a l p a e h c d n a i F m s a o h c m r o a n r o g d o e h pr t m o r f e c n a t s i s s a l a i c n a n i f y b d e t r o p p u s n e e i munity, . f e i l e r t b e s d u o r e n e g g n i ne includ : c u r t S d n m a r o f c e i R m o n e o h c t E P—
A S R e E v f i o t c e j b o e e iced M o t n i g n i k a t , h t w o r g c i m o n o c e e l b a n i a t s u s s i — m a at s m i a P Cpnaideratio oe Progr A S . R t E n e m t s u j l d a a r u t c u r t s f o s t s o c l a i c o s e ne th EE r o j a m a f t o n e m t s u j tural ad c u r t s d n a e c n a l a b eae i f f e we GT n o i t a c o l l a e c r u o s e r e v o r p m i o t y m o n o c e . n e a d i a t r p t y d n g n o E a i t c u e d o n r o p i f o t d a n n a i ciency cy and move toward market determ d se es dr ad g in be is or po e th on of structural adjustment eee t en pm lo ve De r fo nd Fu al ci So e th by d te or pp su t, ne gh a social safety
, s t i c i f e d t e g and bud
© n o i t a z i l a r e b i l unification and credit worthiness t s e r r o / d n n a o i t a z i t a v i r P 2. s to m r o f e r r o t c l e a s i c n a n i F 3.
© n o i t p o d a e h t o t d e l s e r u s a e m c i m o n o cu pnactoee stment program that
e h t ) 1 ( t i o l p x e o t s m ai
. d o i r e p t n e onal adjustm
energy prices n o i t a z i l a r e b i l e d a r T 5.
b y d a e r l a e v a h s m r o f e r t n a c i f i n g i S _ l c n i e s e h T . P A S R E f o t x e t n o c within the
ra be li ) (2 ; es ic pr on tt co d an i l b u p f o e e f o n o i t a z i l a r e b i l ) 3 ( ; t e k r a m e g n a ch ! t a z i l a t i p i a c e t e , M s l o @ r t n o of c t i n d o e r i c t c u d ceilings and o r t n i ) (4 ; et k r a m r O l f l i t b p e y c r x u s e a s e t r n t e a f o ae BS e r i u q e r g n i s n e c i l t n e \bolishding (6)invaepsptrmoval of a new public enterp™ st; an
li
E c i l b u P e h t t f n o e m h s i l b esta
u m ® e v e w o H . m a r g Privatization pro
g n i r o t s e r d n a
uleearly
j In
y
e ee difficult
the
’
:
metimes faltering,
133
Structural Adjustment and Egyptian Agriculture
t cen per 30 the ow bel was 1 199 r yea cal fis for e rat ion lat inf t cen 20 per
e rat ge han exc and t ici def al fisc the in s ion forecast rate due to reduct
stability. y l n , r i d e a i e m l t r c a e e j o r n r a p e h t t t s h e c t b u n is m The balance of payme h , c s i e h i w r t n u o b c u l s C i r a P e g h t n o t t i b d e d due to the reduction in outstan s i h ; t 2 9 9 1 n n o i i l l 0 i . b 9 3 $ S U o t 1 9 9 1 n n o i i l l 1 i . b 1 5 $ S m U d o e r s f a e r dec a z i t r o m a d t n s a e r e t n i r n o o f i l l 5 i b . 1 $ S s U f t o n e m y a l p a u n n t saves Egyp a 6 . 2 $ S U t u o b a f t o i c i f e d a m o r d f e t f i h e s c n a l a t b n u o c c t tion. The curren a e u d y l n i a m , 1 9 9 1 n n i o i l l i b 4 . 2 $ S U f s o u l p r u s a o t 0 9 9 1 r a billion in fiscal ye d n a ; 2 9 9 1 n i n o i l l i b 2 . 1 $ S U f o s u l p r u d s e t c e j o r p a h to official grants, wit f o d n e y b n o i l l i b 0 . 9 $ S U d e e c x e o t d e t c e p x e e r e w s e v r e s e l r a n o i t a n r inte . ) s t r o p m i of s h t n o m 8 6. e c n a n i f to t n e i c i f f u s ( t s n i a g fiscal year 1992 a as , P D G of t n e c r e p 7 to ll fa to d e t c e j o r p is t i c i f e d l a c s The fi al sc fi y r a n o i s n a p x e ss le to e u d y l e g r a l s 1 s i h t ; t n e c r e p 9 f o e t a m i t s e l a i t i s n i i r a P an e h t g n i w o l l o f s t n e m y a p t s e r e t n i d e c u d e r , ) s e i d i s b u s t p e : c x e ( i e e policy e o e h t t n e t x e e m o s o t d n a , t n e m e e r g a f e i l e r Club debt s ve ha to s s k n a b l ‘a . u s a e r t w e n n o s e t a r t s e r e t n s h T ) is percent sales tax. I as e a C of s e t a r t s e r e t n i d e s u a c e v a h d n a , t n e c r e p 0 e y B around 2 e a N a n a n o ive in real terms
i=ncome t hrough effiicciient resourc asures have been i
i e, several ctiv ie a th in ta ct je ob t : 6 8 9 1 e c n i s d e t n e implem pie 0
mee area allotments with d elivery quotas have been removed for majo pee : meee mee cotton and sugarcane Producer pri 1
e
e@
t a g e n l il st e r a y e h t h g u o rise (alth
Sugarcane, have been Tees es for all products, except cotton and
® a i c e r d p e e g d a r u o c s i d d n s a w o has encouraged capital infl ust adj and on ati us tian currency. ac] and n tio iza bil sta +5 l stil are s rm fo ; re ny ma t yp Eg of s ct pe Despite some delays, most as
nt prices 3 ese procureme ooo been raised to two -thi ds sevesh E : hir of international prices; and subsidies 00
are gn si n d an d, ce du re y tl an ic if gn obese out by the end of 1993. ph y phased
ticides hav
expected to be com pletely Privatization of rec lai
arana Poet prea nies which own ei
a
ane
ci an in t nc na fi d an , cal fis e, ad tr of s ea ar e th in needed
: : g, and a pro” in ss i re og pr is s nd la public
d te ec xp =™ rs rp fe en ect exp ic bl pu of an th n er io tt at be iz at d iv an pr ¢ _ d an restructuring ee g from debt relief santa opportunity favorable circumstances arisin
® mP co on ti uc od pr n ee xt si e of the assei ts of e a igeyht,y-thre € projects has been : initiated.
On input distribution.
Pen
peeee
tegarding
and a
s
thei
y r a n i m i l e r p is is ys al an is Th . or ae on the agricultural sect
ae
Paris
ae
pact of ERSAP and the generous debt relief provided by the or rf pe : c mi no co oe cr ma ed ov pr im ee, Sina have led to an justment
Uae AL
a
er than was anticipated when the Structural Ad
by en ris ve ha to d te ma ti es s wa P GD . Distr seeee a approved in 1991
of e in cl de d te ec oj pr a th wi ed ar mp co A Speccetits eke ec fiscal year 1991, 10 th ow gr d te ec oj pr an th er gh hi tiiteehcsace he mainly attributed to e Th . on ti uc tr ns co d an e, nu ve re l na Ca ez Su s, ers’ remittance >
ses
a b g n o r t s a s a h t p y Eg
vi le e m a s e th at th , r e v howe nity, if needed, may not be commu
I mpact of the Program m r o f e r e e h t d n a P A S R E art wes has elapsed since the start of pe s e n o i s e u v l i c t n i o n c i f e e k d h a g m u to o e n g r n e u o t t l o l n u is c gri :
and prarivatiza-
faces Eg yp t ec on om y, Eg yp ti th e an of performance :
Interest rat es ha le ve ls ba nk in g co mm to er ci al ed closer are being relaxed, including thé e movre Trade and ma TKHe strictions eting monopoly of the Princi and Agricultut? pal Bank for Development Z Credit (PBDAC)
eywelltas “as a result of the
p ; r, ve we ho d; te en em pl im g in be e ar m ra ment prog
. e c n a t s i s s a r o n o d n o demands
|
if
;
INPACt ort Agric
Macroeconomic and sector data distortions and preliminaryreso e a in use e? ur of cy en ci fi ef proveinment
e o er de a and ps Cro me so of on ti in produc to eds me ld yie ly ab ot —n gy lo no ch te in s ge Chan
to the increases in output.
the effects of one from thi
Ny
e
be
one
Structural Adjustment and Egyptian Agriculture
135
short-term dampening effect on the demand for credit. PBDAC report
drop in the demand for credit for purchases of agricultural bachies a
other equipment. In the near term, as markets adjust, interest rate reform in s resource capital scarce of on allocati t efficien more a in should result ion lat inf in p dro ted jec pro The s. orm ref tor sec ial anc fin of t en an environm
nt ita com con the and 2) 199 e lat in t cen per 15 nd ou ar (to nt me rn by gove dit cre the e eas o als uld sho es rat st ere int l rea and fall in the level of nominal situation. a are of on ati liz era lib the t tha ns tio Atthe micro level, there are indica
l ica log hno tec h wit ed in mb co , ces pri and ns, ter pat ng pi op cr ls, tro con s nge cha nt ica nif sig to led e hav or, lab of t cos the in s se ea cr de d changes an for e enu rev m far net in ses rea inc to and ps cro me so to in the area devoted ps cro or maj t mos to d ote dev a are the e il Wh . ons ati rot some cropping and 5 198 n wee bet sed rea inc , rice and n, cor at, whe (Table 11.1), including to ate rel ns ter pat ng ppi cro in ft shi the of s ion rat ust ill st are cle the 1990, by a dramatic 65 sed rea inc at whe for d use area e Th m. ee rs be and wheat ing dur t cen per 38 by sed rea inc 1990, and yields
and 5 198 n ee tw be t en rc pe
e ar of ce pri l rea the in ses rea inc the h wit d le up co s, Thi . iod the same per w o i s mer Far p. cro at whe the of y lit abi fit pro r ate gre * has led to e e 19 ing dur ms ter l rea in ab ard per 31 26. £E of 1 ce pri s ease incr average r rpe Sha 6. 198 to 0 197 during ab ard per 22 £E to compared
the price of wheat failed to world prices of most com c ifi t i r b to ed rv se st ju ls ve le e ic pr Increases in domestic world market levels. At the same time, there was 4 ee es typically make
The reduction in ct 0? the pa im e bl ra vo fa a 1 ve ha ld ou sh es di pudeee thereby entei in ly ie s? rea dec a om fr ses los ing the revenue tt se ff € implicit taxation ion uct red of a r he rt fu a th Wi e. ov ab d te no of the subsidies and t e ur lt cu Ti he fig ler ful a it rm pe d ul wo h ic wh s, rm fo re of Supply response from on ti le mp the get bud the on ct pa im net the tor,
ural sec lt cu ri ag should be considera bly 1 by ed lp he be d ul Proved direct taxation o more favorable. This wo d tax, at an average f a griculture. The present lan of less than £E 20/fedda ? ise rev be to n Pp s ed ne d an w lo e it qu is m, nu an er A Teview of the land ta ew vi re x s a of t ex nt co the take place in the existing tenancy law. hould es tim n ve se at t ren nd la land tax and giving tena ie “ai by fixing } Jan¢ tal ren the use to the right rs hei and ms erpetui The d. lan of use ent ici eff disincentives to a more
Og
Teer
Seeata,
permit a bett
ee ent
ei
Tete ptovite market values Tail
p! ci in Pr the to ies sid sub ing lin dec of ult res a as iv es er e e fe Bank 1 gs lin cei dit cre d an it ed Cr al ur lt cu ri Ag ae t aiEs , interest ratesin agriculture have risen to about the eiit posetod by 20 secs st oe 16
negative
j
armers,
in real terms,
these
and 23 percent
for traders. While still
interest rates appear
to be having 4
d , an ds el yi s i r a e e e Be 2 £E t ou ab to 4 £E om the real wage rate fr up 30 to 50 percent of production costs served to make rotations ine than hitherto.
): These
tively more profitable
In contrast to the
|
om fr t en rc pe 14 t ou ab by declined h y ll ca pi ty o wh s er rm fa many small
™ &™ OP g in rm fa r ei th of integral part
ms fo mm r ee fo rs grow a certain amountotheofr be co r er rm fa by Is also cultivated t si s to r io Pr feed.
to imported livestock re ts uc od pr , es pr ve ti la re e th to e du le ab it of pr en be
eu? r fo es ic pr e th ke li Un , ts uc od pr r he ot hot controlled and imp
Subsidized prices. Berseem
ee th th Wi . ve ti ac tr at therefore very
Profitability of red meat and thus decline in total area planted.
fone
Real net returns per fedda” y:
Structural Adjustment and Egyptian Agriculture
es su Is ty ri io Pr : a d n e g A g n i n i a m Re
d an s, rm fo re al ur lt cu ri ag on ss re og pr dy ea st de The government has ma to ed ne a is e er th r, ve we Ho it. fru ar be these efforts are beginning to te tia ini to d an s ea ar n ai rt ce in n gu be y ad complete reforms that have alre price of the ed is ra far us th s ha nt me rn ve further reforms in others. The go st mo the of e on ng ci du re y eb er th e, ic pr er rd bo its of t en rc pe 66 to cotton uc od pr on tt co of on ti za li ra be li l ful e th r, ve we Ho s. on ti or significant dist on tt co of ce an ic if gn si the n ve gi ty ri io pr gh hi a is e ad tr d an tion, marketing, art po im the w lo al to t an rt po im o als is It . gs in rn ea ge an ch ex in the foreign le ab en to s) on ti la gu re ne ti an ar qu ict str to ct je ub (s tion of pest-free cotton le ap St ng Lo a tr Ex ue al -v gh hi of me lu vo ng si ea cr in an rt po ex to e t h yp t Eg r fo s e i t e i r a v r e p a e h c t r o p m i d n a s n o t t o c ) S L ( e l p a t S g n o L d n a of n o i t (ELS) c u d o r p e h t s e t a n i m o d h c i h w n r a y e u l a v / t n u o c w o l f o n productio on ed vi le be d l u o c ) t n e c r e p 10
d e e c x e to t o n ( x a t t s local mills. A mode
a as t e k r a m d l r o w e ee th in on ti si po s t’ yp ELS cotton exports to exploit Eg te ta li ci fa so al ld ou sh nt me rn ve go e Th . on tt co ne fi a tr ex of major supplier g. in et rk ma d ai to ge an ch ex on tt co a of e a t C en hm en be s ha the establis h ic wh of on ti uc od pr e th e, an rc With regard to suga . e i et rk ma l na io at rn te in e ov ab es ic pr of t n e m y a p e th h ug aged thro e e ze e t a , m on ti uc od pr its ze li ra be li y i l e government should full e e an rc ga su of on ti tu ti bs su e th g in ek se ly us eo an lt while simu oy pl de re 4 se pe ld ou sh s ll mi r ga Su sor other less water-intensive crgaoprbeet, and the retraining ei tee su of ng si es oc pr e th facilitate r he ot d an d a “ i be ld ou sh s rm fo re e th ment of any labor affected by a Soci e th a vi t ne ty fe sa e at ri op pr ap an of development
means. A program is already in pla
Cr
Vaina u“
1970
1972
-
Wheat and Corn Wheat and Rice Long Berseem and Corn Sugarcane
Short Berseem and Cotton
to pri
fertilizer and pesticide subsidies by 1996.
which hasalso begu?
and completed as planned. In addition, d an er iz il rt fe of on ti uc public sector prod
| . er nn ma ic at em st sy a in d ue rs pu be to needs
The most important area in
yet to be initiated is that of water
i
u, ro th em th to d re ve li de r te wa r fo le tt li Very a i ly on e Th . rk wo ge na ai dr r fo d an em syst Pay covers the capital costs of the tile cry
1974
1976
1978
1980
1982
1984
1986
1988
Source: M inistry of Apri griculture and Land Reclamation (MALR), USAID Agriculture Database.
modest since they are spread over 4 twenty pudget, am
Given the competing demands oP the cenit? cept for those © u it nd pe ex nt me st ve in in e ur lt cu ri ag of pansion in the Third Plan," horizontal ex
an n io at er op e th , m u m i n i m at the f;
a
acilities, and preferably, patt of Oe an for ensurin *yece
O n al ic it cr e r a s e g r a Water ch
Pf
Structural Adjustment and Egyptian Agriculture
139
d an ial soc te ca li de yet , ic om on ec t an rt po im s appropriate way on thi political, area. References sh Wa ” e. ur lt cu ri Ag on nt me st ju Ad al ur ct ru Baffes, J. “Egypt—The Impact of St . 92 19 l ri Ap , nk Ba d rl Wo : C. D. , on ingt l. Vo t. yp Eg in es ci li Po g in ic Pr al ur lt cu ri Ag d an , te Ra ge an ch Ex e, ad Tr J. J. Dethier, . 89 19 , C. D. , on gt in sh Wa , rt po Re s ie ud St e iv at ar mp Co nk Ba d rl 1. Wo t af Dr s. 90 19 e th r fo gy te ra St al ur lt cu ri Ag An t: yp Eg of ic bl pu Re World Bank. Arab gin sh Wa .” on ti uc od Pr k oc st ve Li d an op Cr of cs mi no co “E 7, x e Report, Ann ton, D.C., 1992.
. es li pp su r e t a w ce ar sc of on ti ca lo al t n e i c z li ra be li of s s the progre e® fr ly ng si ea cr in e ar s r e m r a f , or ct se e th in n io at f o c i o h c l a n o i t a r e k a m ® to n® se ab e th In s. on ti ta ro d an s Op
References
ity, and Growth: . Egypt a nd
Bent. The Political Economy of a ae yf Rae Neen icy New Yo rk: ? Oxford t (No. PS 5 60-EGT), “A aan un = : rt podey Bank
oO.
Se
Pr ostmen eoicon ‘ ee ety Republic of Ean
ere
canned, or frozen, t re ard o ma tkets that are usually unreceptiv: e. In thisis re8 : fishery products should not be forgo tten, especially the produc ts of aquaculture, and exploiting the immense fisheries wealth that can be tapP: e from the Red Sea and from the Nile on a sustainable basis.
The Price of Water: A Su ggestion : market Finally, a further word on the issue of water priBe cing: with hers of
Orientation of the Egyptian economy, and with ee ommensurate agricultural inputs and outputs, water must carry a oe more productive With its utility and scarcity, since this will direct it to : Bisies gre for uses.
Difficulties,
it is true,
stand
in the way, of i ene
that such 4 Water-use in agriculture. There is first the emotional r aS vital commodity should not be marketed—water pong ing 2a “gift God” 4 ee ofof meterinB
the argument goes. Second, there is the difficulty ZA
Wwater—a
€. E ntation of land-
problem made doubly difficult by the ree holdings Me the topography of aorr ule al :ici je i the sen ndence among farms inin : pean ee
Egypt creates
a
mayi
laced farme:
drained water already used by piphee i in agricultun e, paves the f oe this resistance to the pricing of Bere osing a levy on the a way me cick be to go back to the eee ‘A tual a cach Taise Sipe enough
re:
ee
is
Gd.
Mf Of water charges tO : least the variable costs of provi iding
neede
york
eas a vironment and age
Oxon University Press, 1987.
99
vember
°
Ae Common Future.
13 EE
: s n o m m o C e h t f o y g e t Stra r fo s e g n e l l a h C d n a s e i t i n u t r o p Op e r u t l u c i r g A Egyptian n i v t o P . R h p e s Jo
in d n a , r e t a w is m s i n a g r o g n i v i l y r e v e f o s s a m e h t f o t n e c r e e r c e S , i l a h About 70 p G s o r t u o B . r D . e l i N e h t m o r f s e m o c r e t a w t a h t f national Egypt most o e h T “ at th d o i t a N d e t i n U e h t tary-General of security of Egypt, of eight other African countries”
0 se the of st Mo . 20) 1: 199 ts er ob flows (R , i e r o f h t i w , s m a d of hydroelectric
construction n a s e i r t n u o c g n i d n e l l a i t n e t o p e v i f y t some twen n e e r g e h t n i d e n entwi
o s l a is t p y g E of
m s n o i t a n e h t f o e n o is t p y g E n a r r r o F e t i d e M e h t ( l e v e l a e s n i e s i r a of
:
. s e i r t n u o c r e h t o of 165
diby btahle wparrosmpiencgt glo
includ
:
n o e c n e u l f n i s ’ y t i n a m u 6 h " y b m l a b d o e l c g u a d s t in c e p x e ) C C P I ( e g n a h C e t a m i l C n o l e n a P l u c i r g a mental cm per decade over the next century (Houghdtopnroda r g e v i t c u n a d evels of 6 e t a l u p o p y l e s n e d t s o m s ’ t p y g E f o h t f i f a s p a h r Pe from the Nubian ter
)
t ural areas could be flooded wit © n o i t r o p a n i a t b Egyptians o
d
-
phoring coun-
ee ie are
n a t p y g E r e d n u t f i r d t a h t d s r a r w e o f t i u s q l a a s o e t a w a e h d 10 poun s s e c c a t c e r i d h t i w s e i r t n u o c e h t f o t u B . ) 9 8 9 ties, In each e e s s i d a n o i t a g i r o f s m e t s y s l l e w r e t a w d Bike groun s n o i t a l l a t s n i r e h t r u f f o e e h T y l l a c i t s a r d d l u o c s n o i t c a r t x e e e ronda 1 9 9 1 ts e a q e n u d n a h s i k c a r b e c r u o s e r n e e file e i . e g r a h c e r o t s r a e y d n a s u o h t y t r i nt oblems ca? Coe
r p r e t a w e e r h t e s ‘Ther; as the n e m e g a n a m r o viron f n e s e t h c e p s l o i r a p ers realistic oe.
s e t c r u o s e r s n o i of t u t i t s n i n o i d t a v r e s n o c i e h t a i i , s d r o c c a Several l a n o tence i t a n secure existing inter help t© can furnj that mechanisms practical Thish Orati
for
. e c n a i l p m o c r e t s o f d n a tion
155
Opportunities and Challenges for Agriculture
157
the e ot om pr y ma y the h ic wh by ce er mm co of es pl sensitive to princi com l ona ati ern int the of sts ere int the d an interests of their own people, ce our res and ion vat ser con l ica log eco to rd ga re munity as a whole. With the ly imp ld wou on ti za ni mo ar “h t tha efficiency, some have tried to argue
ive lat imi ass the of s les ard reg . . . s rd da an introduction of identical st ers
greater environm e nta 1 awar eness and acti : v i ™m among consumers, work leaders aroun d the world
Oth ). 183 2: 199 r he sc au (R s” ce en er ef pr capacity of nature and of social rds nda sta y enc ici eff and on ti va er ns co y pl ap to ve mo the d ye ra rt po have ss cla any er ev en Wh . ers duc pro ed ish abl est by m is on ti ec ot pr as disguised ues iss e mat iti leg of k ris is re the , lly era lat uni d de el wi is ns of trade restrictio
2). 199 l ke un (D ts” nis tio tec pro de tra by ed pp na id “k being TT GA the by sed res exp ng currently bei
ns er nc co l ra nt ce o tw The de tra to d lie app rds nda sta y enc ici eff and on ti officials are that conserva not (2) and , hoe ad and l era lat uni not l, era gen d an on mm co be (1) should Penor s, ort imp and ds goo d ce du ro -p me ho the n ee l tw e be k n u D ( discriminate s r e n t r a p g in ad tr t n e r e f f i d to s t r o p x e d n a tween imports from ti : ns co s a m m e l i d o w t e s e h t s e v l o s t a h t d r o c c a n a h t i w p u e m o ' c an o e T d a r . t ) 2 9 nk 19 li to t r o f f e e h t h c i h w n o p u m e l b o r p n g i s e d c i g e t cee tutes the stra oe challenge real “The fail. or succeed to i a tra environment is apt between constructive alliance ”
a forge to “is observes Dunkel,
‘r on system trading multilateral the alization and strengthening on on the other. a n o i t c e t o r p l a t n e m n hand, and enviro
T
A
rends in International Comme rce
In Febru. ary 1992, Arth Telease of a discussion eat calling it the sremiottone>
and concerns about
GATT director general, announced the
Trade and the Environment
(GATT 19%)
s “first authoritative attempt” to address issues
y enc ici eff ce ur so re of rmalization fo ad el re P d an st environmental month: Gere the administration of international trade W lations. A few
28 es ur as Me l ta en nm ro vi En on p ou Gr the r, lie ear International Trade : also reconvened after two decades :
inactivity to assess wa the GATT ee t! ula reg ng ti is Ex s. on ti op e at ul rm fo d an ts ec sp ts “at TT GA under the Ge f dif y pl ap to ty ili xib fle the s ie tr un co ee a e to t en tm ea tr ential
necessary “to serpers A b) or, » f LOr reasons
Tesources”
s thi if es ur as me g in ct ri st re ead tr s and invoke
human, animal or plant life or health” (Article xk, “ i na tu ra l ex ha of us ti bl e co ns er th e va to ti on relating 1&8" ct
al ic hn ec “t es on nd co r he rt fu T T A G e Th . g) e e B e o ulations ; ty fe sa or th al he n a m u h “ of on ti animal or plant Pk s” for the protec
0 ic at im cl l ta en am nd fu t, en nm ro vi en e th , th al he or o ct fa geographical e GATT Standards Code), and allows subsidies is
(Article 2:2 of th
d oi av to r de or in ry st du “redeployment of in
congestion and envorirothnemental problems” (Article 11:1, f of the GATT
efficiency standards to impose with lessal stringent tarts standard s countries from goods of costs
see Inside U.S. Trade 20.9.91). Haavelmo and Hansen©
st
policy national ! a w efficient an protect to “Tariffs that g n ? h i t c u d e r as e d o e l u r e b t d o l n u ) o y h r s t s t u n d e n i i c i f f e n i n a t o n ( u s e r a « s t s o c l a t n e m n o r i v n e d i a p n U ’ . m s i Protection
t n u o m a t n a t . g — n s i t p r m o u o d t Price of exp s p a h r e ° p — ) P P P e ( l p i c rin the Polluter Pays P
ae
re
trator Pays Principle” —will be formally and fore’ r ; perational precepts and procedures ofmoss oe
and legal entities. Included among ¢ In ternational Finance
a teckonings about the hu
: va™ a scale, At the smallest Nike ara nd the world have demon ments in sound financial mana
ie
Opportunities and Challenges for Agriculture
159
are t tha e! rk ma om fr i o n a H as (2) d an s; se es oc of their production pr in the midst of structural reforms to implement
full-cost pricing” accord-
y da to e lif rt po im d an rt po ex s t’ yp Eg of t en rc pe 40 t fi to the PPP. Abou t ges lar gle sin o tw s t’ yp Eg 88 19 In y. it un mm Jed to the European Co
ee
1 11. h wit ly, Ita d an t, en rc pe 2 12. th wi , — destinations were the USSR ed it Un the re we s rt po im its of s ce ur so t es pee of the total. The two larg eae
e se A t. en rc pe 1 11. th wi y, an rm Ge d an lying 11.9 percent,
a aa the d an s, ort exp the of t en rc pe 27 erent of the imports (United Nations ovrc e eod n ee te a ce na most fo alt 18r pe 19 : i i i oa particule i self among the ee at a duced foods
ze): oject Support to adopt and comply “use conditions and practices. The World
published a three-volume Environmental
higher then
ae
ne
con l ica log eco d an cy en ci fi ef ce ur so i e e st mu ts uc od pr a for Egyptian e e e B of ns er nc co strategic economic command premium pnvél ee aie labor
conventionally produced foods) and they “intel eo 8D financial and employment adi
ae ost important
S OO are s er ag an on am t tha t ub do Bo ked, There is little e, uc od pr and y bu y the is We a s, er rk wo s, trading partners, consumer t © s es dn un so al ic og ol ec ing to weigh the . ee gr de t an ic if gn si a to t bu ly te lu so not ab
re u t l u c i i ™ g n A a i t p y g E g n i c Challenges Fa
country of $4 billion, the r € remains a US$3 billion current account er US$2 billion of which is deve mul and til ate for ral eig thr n up oug mad h e Opmen
t assistance (Wor Id Bank 1991b: 231). - on: The private sector fi nancial instit utions are also changing as cna mental standards take On increasing importance in appraisal of Gee s creditworthiness. This has been variously referred to as the Valdez be
or the Bhopal Effect.
This can seriously affect cash flow for indiv! al
firms, as well as for en tire industrial sectors and countries (Conklin oe :
1991: 112). In this eve nt, the borrower’ s ability to service debt is jeOP® ized, and sources
of new
credit disappear. The bulk of Egypt's for oe
commercial financing is with German and French banks, wh ich are aM 3 :
the leaders in developing procedures that reflect this new code of acco¥ pt ability. International Market Characteri stics
In addition to weighing current trends in the GA TT and amongie Bi tional financial institutions, Egyptian pr oducers may wish to consider © ing best to position themselves (1) in an ex : port market that is quickly nee 4 to distinguish commodities with regard to the ecological impacts and Ti
It follows from the preceding met
,
ae
nviro:
ae
efficiency standards applied Oe
criteria of international financial insti ete
demand could provide effective an to avert some
Shared freshwater supplies and he Be | “greenhouse B45
pected with continued increases in glo i, environmenta's collaboration in the conservation of al
and transecto
Instance, the strong shift of Egypt s 5; Wi years, toward generation systems i n g A
all co
a package deal, involving many InN/7™"
city supply sels, €0 red b fossil fu
country’s own strategic interests
in; having ris©. e: sea-level
methane, CFC) in the latter 19
a
Minimize the causal influences ©
al eee illio
CO2. The conservation ethic mes and s'
tough challenges for Egypt's &¢0”
jemente
Servation standards come to be a it is im.
More diverse enforcement chann? re in Various facets of the country’s pene conc Tespond, Among the most ubiqut
ae
asi
Opportunities and Challenges for Agriculture
Pesticides: Organochlorine
161
insecticides and fungicides are among the
most persistent and widespread toxic contaminants of water systems biocheminormal the impairing By 4). 1991: al. Canadaet ent (Environm
comand individual their things, living of cal and physiological functions tumors, cancerous deformities, increased for bined effects are responsible behavioral understood poorly as well as and reproductive abnormalities,
Egyptian in poisons on reliance 1980s, and 1970s the During changes. ae to left if been have would it than greater much was agriculture sce a government the 1980s early the in forces: market tional i a nee of peas 83 subsidize to year per US$200 million is i) ‘ a rates highest world’s the of one was This (Repetto 1985). 178) Der Bt spent government Egyptian pesticides: in 1982 the ced ee ra (Postel care health on did it than subsidies pesticide > a eaneer tae pesticide years ten last the Nevertheless, over
erage TTT MBE” active of kilos 7.6 averaging now by 25 percent, Fora tute : a Ore In as same the about is This cropland.
application intensity across Europe is still nee
per hectare (WRI 1990: 280-281). ae
a
and controls over
disposal of pesticide
of monitoring closer 4 os Me pro agricultural for pesticides the use of wastes, licensing and training of pesticide ae ‘ important factors in the Tiver and groundwater quality must be cons! ae and marketing strategies finance, trade, agricultural Egypt’s Positioning of for the 1990s.
Strategic Positioning
a es nu ve re rt po ex e, ns se In the broadest
manures that they ar
ter ; alm have ers farm tian Egyp rtiliZe : of their fe. 2 eal z sity ost doubled the inten ion between applicat
the mid-1970s and the mid-1980s. Now at 347 kilos
per hectare per year, this is 30 percen t more than the European averae” Although it remains comparable with some individual European COU” tries, Egypt neverth eless has the most fertilizer-dependent agriculturé -. status : : System of all the developj This 1). -28 280 : 1990 I (WR s ion nat ng opi p becomes a com ! on# ati ern int and s et rk ma key as ‘ ge ta an dv sa di e tiv eti 4 i Ss ogi ecol ed ciat asso the of nt lera into grow talt trading partners begin to change their ow# capi nce pna i e el and as importan P ee
Production systems. Among trade analysts, it is now considered that far oe farmers find it cheaper to forego sustainable soil conservation min & practices by adding subsidized chemical fertilizers to offset loss of topsoil and depletion of desirable soil properties, the true cost of non-sustainable cultivation practices is not taken into account in the choice of farming technology and input mixes (Hansen 1988: 16).
i a qu e th ng si ea cr in by or , ed rt po volume ex
e o s e n i r ve re fo of y it il ib ss po im l ca si hy biop a qu on ds y et te g in e in th in ta in ma e il s wh e m tion volu Suggests that sustainable develo €Xxports by boosting volume.
Should be to boost the quality oft
Egypt’s principal export markets are
ae
roduction me
to the ecological soundness of hes aed moreatne Processes to reduce pollution make
the e ity. It may be
tute an actual improvement in the date that the, agricultural assistance programs ie Mics, such as
3 ae ble ora fav lly ica log eco discouraging Support programs are tied to output i redom Production for domestic demand, the ae
tional smallholder family farms that PI
Opportunities and Challenges for Agriculture
163
1991. Edited by L.R. Brown et al. New York: W.W. Norton, 1991
; nm Enviro the and tion Integra The mic Econo al ent: Rauscher, M. “Internation . ”» Case of Europe,” in The Greening of World Trade Issues. Edited by K a Anderson and R. Blackhurst. London: Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1992
i ‘Economi nomic Aspects of Groundwater De Inage in the Nile Valley,” in Groundwatr 10 ‘
and A. Gurgui. Amsterdam: Elsevier,
Washe Onritit ing Develop in es Subsidi de Pestici Price: the Repetto, R. Paying : 1985. e, Institut ces Resour ington, D.C.: World 19-20. 1991, August 124, No. South: Still,” Run Waters “Deep Roberts, H. k. Yearboo s Statistic Trade tional Interna 1989 Office. ical Statist United Nations ic Econom ional Internat of ment Depart , Nations Vol I. New York: United and Social Affairs, 1991. Trade. outh North-S of Patterns the and Costs ce Walter, I. Environmental Resour Paper prepared for WCED, 1986. res, Procedu Policies, I: Vol book. Source World Bank. Environmental Assessment for nes Guideli III: Vol nes; Guideli l Sectora II: Vol Issues; l ectora CrossS and ton, Washing . Projects y Industr and Energy of ment Assess Environmental ; a. 91 19 , nt me rt pa De t n e m D.C.: World Bank, Environ b. 91 19 s, es Pr ty si er iv Un s in pk Ho s hn Jo e: or im lt Ba . 91 19 s, World Tables es Pr ty si er iv Un rd fo Ox : New York
s. ce ur so Re d rl Wo e. ut it st In World Resources 1990.
vironment.
2. 199 e, ad Tr H S. and velmo, T., by Expanding rie ae
Economic Developm
o
G
5
9
? Agr l era Gen the of at eneva: Secretari
y lit qua Ine ce du Re to ing Try of “On the Strategy
Human Activity,” in Environmentally ‘Sustainable
# nd, dla Goo R. by ted Edi . nd la dt un Br on ng di il Bu t: en : pm c S_ - El El-Serafy. Washi
? Ps De t en nm ro vi En , nk Ba d rl Wo C: D. n to ng hi as y n n a P e e Hantens» ©s ‘ Structural Adj . ainable Development. P. aper Daly, 2 and
commissioned b:
djustment Programs and Sust
the for P) NE (U m ra og Pr t en nm ro vi En ns io at e e annual session of ae e‘O mmittee of International Development Institutions
1988, June , Bank ld Wor The : D.C. n gto hin Was IE), ip n(c ma Fa on, Hought Scieniaee: - Jenkins, and J.J. Ephraums. Climate Change: The pce j
on the
MacLaren of
Jp
ssment. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990.
stt Mini : ada Can e, dal low Wil 1. Vol. y. Stud a zal os et ntal. Lake Man LF. pme Dev,elo and United Nations Develoa
Communities, Egypt,
opment Bue Matthews , G., and H. Contreras-Manfredi. “Sustainable Development, Credit on
worthi iness, and Qualit< y of Lif2 e.” Washington, D.C., 1989. Mimeographed.
poe 3 n. io at gr te In r fo s ie : it lt un cu ri rt Ag po Op . : CD es ci li Po l ta en nm ro vi Pie CD. a god En 2 “T, ” E. Petersmann, i i Avs Pol “Trade T T,” GAT E. the on, and cy Poli e Te senwirtschaft, 19 S Post el, S., and C. Flavinin. . « “ReshapiBng the Global Economy,” in State of the World
-
14 The Uruguay Round of d an ns io at ti go Ne al er at il Mult Egyptian Agriculture h a t t a F l e d b A n u o m a Mohamed Ma isthe eighth round t on Tariffs and
Trade) came into being in 194
g din tra ld wor the of rge cha in ion zat ani org the r, ve system; it is, howe e th of t n e c r e p 95 r e v o g n i r e v o c s e i r t n u o c r e b m e m 8 0 system. It has now 1 ” s, ie rt pa ng ti ac tr on “c e th ed ll ca e ar T T A G in s r e b e v a h s aed trade. Mem r e b m e m d n a , n o i t a z i n a g r o e th of e r u t f a f n i r l a a u t t c a r f t n o o c e e th l of u d e h ecause c s 4 g n i t t i m b u s ) 1 ( h g u o r h t p i h s r e b m T m e 1 T m A G r e i h g t e n y h i b t d i b a s ) ion and (2 uctr rEPede o i t a i t o g e n of s r a e y t h g i e t u o b a k o o t It . y c i . l 0 po 7 9 1 n i ip
, e d a r t e s i d n a h c r e m f o s e p y t l l a h t i w l a e d o i t a z i s l e a l r c e i b i t l r a e d a r t f y o a i t a n G e t x e l l G u f f o e h althoughi t s t r o d f f e e v i e e c h e t r t o e n t i p s s t i e a D h , s d n . u e o d e r r u s u t o i agricul n i e gricultur
h s r e b m e m gain its
a n i e d a r t problems of
Agriculture remained wit
se t ne ag es of ti xi le mp co e th e of s u a c e , b or he industrial sect : olici ad tr l a n o i t a n r e t n i d n a eee ° n f o s e p y t l al d e r e t n ae s and encou ™ ? an s n o i t r o t s i d e d a r t of y t e i r a v a eg dman c a f y developed and developing countnit affectin
s. lt su re ve ti si Po S ave
n g a t t e h t d e s a e r c n i e v a h s e i r t n u o c d O e H S p : o s l a e v s e e D d o c de : Sidies e re th t las the in the prog> ressively ly in if dles 92 19 12, er mb ce De t, is om on Ec e 1gures, cited in Th
The Uruguay Round and Egyptian Agricu lture
167
engages about 37 percent of the labor force; and contributes about 20
percent of export earnings as well as important inputs to the manufact
ing sector. The importance of agriculture to the Egyptian econom islkel to increase in the future because of the positive effects of fee. adopted by the government since 1986 to restructure the sector, in cooperation with international financial institutions and within the framework of a comprehensive structural reform and economic liberalization program. The new agricultural policy based on decentralization and deregulation has to be viewed in the light of overall macroeconomic policies, where it affects and is affected by the economic reform policies such as liberalization of trade, exchange rate, interest rate, reducing the fiscal
deficit, and privatization. the of fav or in bia sed wer e pas t the in Egy pt Agricultural policies in
of obj ect ive s soci al the on foc usi ng con sum er, industrial sector and the
to led poli cies The se pric es. low at providing the people with foodstuffs beh avi or. con sum er and inv est men t, pro duc in tio n, dramatic changes
pict ure This pop ula its tio n. fee d to foo d eno ugh Until 1970 Egypt grew the of one bec ome has Egy pt and yea rs has changed in the last twenty bill so i : 5 : s 2 major food importing countries. The quite ural import agricultvulnerab © le to international
US$3.7 billion in 1990, and became
e
Im
.
eae
Hee
a
1
access through, inter alia, the reduction of im-
the competitive environment by increasing discipline 0?
1 use of direct and indirect subsidies and other measures affecti"B directly or indirectly agricultural trade, including the phased tedU
ton of their negative effects and dealing with their causes
Minimizing the adverse effects that sanitary and phytosanitary
i t, poultry, fish, : ee com, s and Ms! lentils. It can : be prices. Th e imports covered wheat, ’ wheat flour, d i a S G I e ev d n a , s l i o , s l e i o bl di le ib ed r, ga su su , , s t c u d o dairy pr Sin ae i
t e L r ai si su t o n n a c e r u t l u c i r g a n a i t p y g aporgpuueldatithonat wEhile agricultural resources ate limited: cu these Scarce resources.
The bias against agriculture was Te Measures:
f , The average
no more than 1 percent nee
Punta del Este declaration in September 1986. A draft agreement was submitted to the negotiators for acceptance in December 1991. Some
imports is estimated to be arO products received tariff pro
The exchange rate—on which the
details in this agreement have yet to be finalized. It must be mentioned—
19 percent, W
“
l a u t c a s it of d r i h t e n o was almost rected only in October 1991.
text the pt acce to sion deci l tica poli the t and it is quite well known—tha the of Act l Fina the in ) ent eem agr the of rest the (and on agriculture Uruguay Round is still pending.
0 0 £ r o f s e i d i s b u s r e Consum
© s t r o p m g i n i z i d i s b u s y l p m i s Were
r e m r a f n g i e r o f e h t to s e i d Si
Egypt: Agriculture’s Changing Role its share in the gross domestic product (GDP)
: d y te rl ec fl clea in the
l u c i r g a c i t s e m o d o t _— ale * Very low protection was give n some food products—©-8:» wheat and COM tarif © ona
Negotiations under the Uruguay Round have been held since the
is about 20 percent; i
tilize
a? sc e ar s e c r u o s e r r e t a w ; s teached its limitation p: ca e th ed sh ni mi di d ha s er uc od pr t - bias agains
regulations and barriers can have on trade in agriculture, taking into account the relevant international agreements
ntz sé pre At y. nom Agriculture in Egypt plays an important role in the eco
a
Eey
(Dethiey 1991). According to 4 Wo!
eth
100 perce?
ce
t.
eca
The Uruguay Round and Egyptian Agriculture
169
t or pp su on s nt me it mm co h ug ro th d te ia it in be d e e reform process woul a re mo and ed en th ng re st of t en hm is bl ta es e th d an protection effective GATT
t ia be to are s ive ect obj e es Th s. ne li ip sc di rules and
; ess acc et rk ma (1) as: are r fou in s nt me it mm co ic if ec sp h ug plemented thro
on t en em re ag (4) and n; io it et mp co rt po ex (3) s iou t; var or pp to su en giv be ic to st is me do rd ga (2) re e Du . ues iss y ar it an os yt ph sanitary and nts for: me it mm co me su as ey th en wh groups of countries
mers with inputs, such such as puts, se ecte d seeds, at subsidized prices, but this did negative m easures on farmers’ incomes and
ty ri cu se od fo d an ns er nc co e e Nontrad s ie tr un co ng pi lo ve de to t en tm e Special and differential trea rm fo re e th of s ct fe af ve ti ga ne le ib ss po e th t un co ac to in g n e Taki s ie tr un co g n i p o l e v e d g n i t r o program on net food-imp — d e l t t e s n e e b s ha t n e m e e r g a t f a r d e h t of e g a r e v The product co o m r a H e th of 24 to 1 s r e t p a h c e d u l c n i o t — s n o i s s n ai after prolonged discu rt ce us pl , n o i t a c i f i s s a l C or e r u t a l c n e m o N s m o t s u C f o m e t s y S d e h d n a nized , n o t t o c s, in sk d n a s e d i h , l o o w e k i l , s t c u d o r p l a r u t l u c an i sh fi s e other agr d u l c x e e g a r e v o c e h T . s g n i d a e h f f i r a t r e h t o r c a t e k r a m r e h t o that fall unde of n i a m o d e th in d te a e r t e b l l i w y e h t fish products as cess commitments.
Market Access
: ng wi lo : g in ow ll fo e th to d e t t i m m o c e ar t n e : m e e r g a e th g n i t p e c c a s Countrie
external environ
a
ment
3
:
a
es ci li po d by e t c e f f a be e to u n i t n o c nd will
measures adopte d by other countri es.
be on the level applied in Sep
: t country before 1970 to n e i c i f f u s h c f l g e s n s ’ i a m t e p o b e y r g g f n E a . 5: of the largest importers
Ing one
necessaril:
ci
Ps e n a c ty du at th s n a e m in GATT language le du he sc ei th in d e t t i m b u s s ie what countr a me r he ot to t ec bj su e ar h c i h w s t c u d o r p r . Fo Will be
of foodstuffs in the world, is nol
the of bec aus e also but alo ne pol ici es eines of its domestic ava ila bil ity eco cice Ss Pate at subsidized prices. Developed countries By eee a tes d that their policies have harmed agriculture in many Beatie, aie True, Egyptian consumers have enjoyed che4P Cae
He
i nas
rs ie rr ba e s e h t — s r e i r r a b f nontarif a o t e es Th . es ustoms duti verted into c
ma or sf an tr is Th s. ar ye n ve se percent over s e a h c i h w s e i t i l a d o m by and is calculated
and society in general have paid a high coe
tion” P t r o p m i ) F I C ( e h t ? e e w t e b ce en , t e k r as the differ a m c i t s e m o d ale price in the
pa » Egyptian agricultural exports have been affected by e of barriers, both tariff and nontariff. The potential is greal S : b i t and uc od pr al ur lt port fruits cu ri for Egypt to expo ag r he ot d an tic egetables
sorieiacc
age wholes
1986-1988.
if these barriers are At
e i r t n u g o n c i p o l e v - The de
w o l l a e r a y : e t h n t treatme f o e t a r e h t d n a s r a e y n e t of
The Negotiations
etree
Th
a term objective set out in the draft GATT a
-
.
.
a fair and market-oriented
agreement is t0
agricultural trading system. The
?
a
t A ? ri The ta ffication and reduction com. ‘i
e sp A . on ti uc od pr Jury to agricultural
Economic Aspects
ulated in the te xt to allow co untries to use it if needed.
The Uruguay Round and Egyptian Agriculture
Sanitary Measures
Domestic Support
The draft agreement on agriculture incorporates a separate agreement on
of right the re ensu to gned desi is It es. sur mea y tar ani tos phy and tary sani every country to draft and apply rules for the protection of human, animal, of ns ntio inte uise disg to se misu bit inhi also s rule r, eve How life. t and plan
rnainte ing rict rest for s trie coun n wee bet unjustifiable discrimination tional trade.
e ad Tr al ur lt cu ri Ag s t' yp Eg d an Reform in s su en ns co l na io at rn te in e th to y rt pa ve ti ac an n e e b g n Egypt has lo t e n e Th e. ad tr al ur lt cu ri ag in m r o f e r of s s e c o r p GATT to start the e i s t' yp Eg n ru t or sh e th n ti bu n, ru ng lo e th in s t s e r e t n i would serve its e h t m o r f g in lt su re es ic pr d se ea cr in h g u o r h t y l e s r e v d a bill will be affected sats : : ee ies ie like
support b
countries ee €rcent over seven years from 1993 to 1999. Developing thatthedene ae to reduce two-thirds of that 20 percent. Ifitis found Stic subsidy does not exceed 5 percent of the total value of pr oduction
devel
g Si? it willie notb tor educti i ction commitmen ts J ). e€ subject
eee
Beara
Seay
aes er
a
en! in
(10p ercent
aie of domestic support are subject to reductions. The a
: t of subsidies which are exempt from the reduction
= aes
government general services in the areas of i
nd cisease control, training, transfer of information tg os consumers, infrastructure, and inspection, marketins; ‘a
E otion. They also include payments by governments to improve! ; imcome of producers, but it should not be linked to ty pe oT volute : production (decoupled income support); insurance and relief from natUf disasters; structural adjustment assistance; and environmental progt a Export Competition
Export subsidies are forbidden under the GATT. However, a numbet 2 conflicts and disputes have arisen in past years because “certain prim
Products” were allowed for. This exemption led to all types of expe subsidies in agriculture.
Countries accepting the agreement are committed to reduce ney export subsidies by 36 percent of the 1986-1988 level over a period oi seven years from 1993. Developing countries are allowed ten years an 24 percent (i.e., two-thirds of the 36 percent). A The agreement lists the export subsidies subject to reduction commit ments and defines each measure in a manner designed not to be subject
to misinterpretation in the future.
prod major the in especially subsidies, elimination of ins Research EEC. the of members States and the United t Te 3 : up, butUe estimates 1 ) go will prices that agree tions internat ional organiza io is that the rise will be almost Sr s a e e o t ar en sc le ib ss po differ about how much. A
30 percent. This could a an additional US$1 billion eula ce du re d vo h e L w ne the h ug ho lt —a fs uf bill for the import of foodst
Ge in rs to ia ot eg e re ag ft dra e th in d ne io nt me on ti ec in support and prot ‘ 0 an ti yp Eg e Th n. io ll mi 00 $3 US t ou ab to te this estima neva convinced the GATT negotiating srOue that Egyp
loser from the reform program in agricul ld ou sh ys wa , od ri pe al on ti si an tr e th ng Duri r og pr rm fo re e th of s ct fe ef ve ti ga ne le ib ss Po
be
fen
e o a 0 p to '$ t yp Eg . od fo of s that are net importer
s ie tr un co s te Bi n8 pi lo ve de tas Je d an ng pi lo ve de ht ig ‘wenty-e l Fe an by ns io at ti go ne e es th in ed in jo s wa Egypt the same problems—Jamaica, Mexico,
‘os of theit j
countries worked hard to convince other coumate be imple
They asked for a package of measures thay » velopment org' i oe, d an l ia nc na l fi na io at rn te in th wi n io at oper
blai These measures should have two mainandoba s nt l bil on the import
Increased prices “nhance the capacity to increase agricultura eat
OF) e es Th . wg e th n io at er id ns co to in ng ki ta , Production s: ie tr un co ng pi lo ve de st mo in or ct se al ur lt Cu achieved
through:
an
resources ancial * Provision of increased fin ance a8 bilaterally and multilaterally, 1090
The Uruguay Round and Egyptian Agriculture
173
ture. As regards the financial difficulties, the GATT has referred th
matter to the international financial institutions, to be dealt with tnd
either existing or new facilities. Negotiations between the GATT, the IMF, and the World Bank are continuing to see how best to coordinate this matter. It is also envisaged that these countries will be given market to them help so and earnings export their increase to opportunities access
pay for imports. s, on ti ga li ob me su as ld ou ts sh an ip ic rt pa l al s at The draft stipulate th me su as d ul wo t yp y. Eg it il ib ex fl le tt li s a e i r t n u but gives developing co d n, an io at ic ff ri ta of s es oc pr e th d an s ff ri obligations in the reduction of ta
g in be is is Th n. io it et mp co rt po ex d an t r o p p u s c i t s e m o d of s a e r a e in th t en es pr e th t un co ac to in g n i k a T s. ie it or th au n a i t p y g E e th by d e i stud ct fa e th n ve gi d an , y m o n o c e e th g in ur ct ru st re d n a g n i z i l a r e b i l of es polici y
ma , it h g i h t no is t yp Eg e in ur lt cu ri ag r n fo that support and protectio e th ng ri du t me be ly si ea n ca ed ir qu re s n o i t a g i l b o e th at th said safely be
next ten years.
The Transition It
e
not
1s
ce
7
a
reform the of because up go will prices that Ttain PBra ogl ra : w orld productioi n willi ad ami just to the new market situatio| n may go down and stabilize. : m o The c es do d an s r e t t a m e d a r t to d e t c i r t s e r is T T A G of n e o t s i otego eae ws € domain of other international organizations. nn g n i t r o p m i d o o f t e n “ a of n o i t i n i f e d d e e r g a l ul y l -s l lf a r se e e n m e o g c e B b d n ” a . y e r g han c couent ue y a m y r t n u o c a , s e d i s e ee
b a r A i d u a S ke li s e i r t n u o c h c i r , r e e v o e r 5 o M a i can sua In this group, although they are able to pay increas ices
a
@
pay 11
which countries would pay the cost of this package? .
4 ct fe ef to in t u p to d e t a e r c e S not clear how a mechanism can b ion4
at rn te in of er mb nu a es lv vo in it e package, especially wher organizations. eee es
ra cee
ae
rg de un is h ic wh e, ur lt cu ri ag n a i t Itis clear that Egyp
y ua ug Ur w ne e th by ed changes, will be affect will no longer be available. agriculture. Cheap food
: t n, io pt um ns co , on ti uc od pr n e e w t e b interrelationship agriculture vee n a i t p y g E e. iv ct pe rs pe on a different n. io at tu si t e k r a m l na io the new internat
Ft
uction W:
on e c n e d n e p e d r te ea gr g in lv vo in n io at Situ
On imports.
ju ad ll fu r fo od ri pe on ti si an tr e Th
years. Egyptian policymakers have to
ke ma to d an s rt po ex to prepare for increasing
Competitive.
e disciplines on export subsidies. Finally, a comproms '
orm of a declaration—was included in the draft agr' eemen
ensure that the result of the Uruguay Round does not adverselY ae ect the availability of necessary food aid to the net food-importing countries and the least-developing countries. This would be achiev?
t® opra appr at or t gran full as er eith on, enti Conv Aid Food the through
and l nica tech give to ns isio prov udes incl text The s. term onal essi conc financial assistance to improve agricultural productivity and infrastruc
ye) but
li foreign markets, not only to increase volumes (an diiscnipe ex a e th at th d te no be so al ld ou sh . It ts uc od New pr 4 an ti yp Eg e k a m to lp he ll wi 'n other countries
difficulty came from countries that feared food aid could
ure. The language of the text provides for establishing mecha
oe
ihe
Dethier, Jean-J acques. “Agricultur of Agricultural Pricing Policy.
©
- John!
Wort Alberto Valdés. Vol.3. Baltimor Agricult Bank. “Arab Republic of Egypt: July 1992. A Draft Report. Washington, D.C::
iis The Social Sustainability of Induced Development: Culture and Organization a e n r e C . M Michael s ha ms ra og pr t en pm lo ve de d ce du in of ty li bi na ai st su e th r fo n r e c n o c The al tu ec ll te in e th r, ve we Ho . de ca de st la e th er ov d se ea cr in y e c si ba its of o tw ly on to d te mi li y el rg la ll sti is ty li bi na ai st su t ou ab pe mensions di o tw e es th d, te an Gr nmental. ro vi en d an ic om on ec ~ a irm te de r jo ma ly on e th t no e ar o tw e es th ly te ni fi de e t th bu of e n e io p at nt ie or e s th A te ia ec pr ap I y wh is This e th . ty li bi on na ai st su te ba de oe ed dg le -f ll fu a ed ud cl in ey Th . ce en n er nf a co i t p e th y g E of f o t n e m ganizers p o l a e v e d e l b a n i a t s u s f o s Cc t n s e m a n r o g p o r m p o c t l n a e i m c p o o s l e d v n e a d l a n r e u ult because ev e l b m u t s y l e t i n i f e d y a m d n
o n e r a y e h t f i e l b m u r c y l l k n a B and eventua d l r o W e h t n i s e u g a e my coll
f o e e = ility have made a some e id whethe
Pers
s k o o l t n e m p o l e v e d e l at sustainab m o n o c e e h t m fro
it e t a l p m e t 4 2). Th 9 9 1 Tyou con l a t e y l a D ; 1 9 9 1 y r h s A growth, (El
e m o n o c e pective g n i t a r e l e c c ) ie te a n o ; s e e r c o n t s e u eq s n o more c l a t awa n e m n o r i v n e e s r e v efgea d n a : e e l h t b u i g r ‘ s a s t o a o t p n th w e o e h i n t k y e r s a t s i i m s o Peafnfec’ Econ ? ¥ , n o i t a d a r g e d l a i c o s e , t n a o s i n t e u p l m l o o c p e k i l , h t w o r g of n f thi so forth, SO and UP cleaning for Onrenewable resources, pay Hs abilit surplus f0 ae pro '© growth-generated technology the of of power ment, or through the on the Much
exhau Stible materials. The environmentalist, ; r u o s e r je lim; nonten®
Size the
n i t n e r e h n i s n o i t a e t e i m i l l a t s n e e n m n co o r i v n e l a t n e m e r a h c n i e w f o t a t e tenance ea environmental services = s i B O l e o h i t c o s e ¢ of h t n o i s s u c s i d “4 s i h t 4 n i t a h t i e ° v 0 e 1 i n y l w t i O l i b TVbv e ™ i a t s u s t a h ! t n e m e u g r a o t p o l e v Sice' and e d Pers e l b a n i a t s u s , y l e m a n : e v Pecti 177
The Social Sustainability of Induced Development
179
n ma the e, pl am ex r Fo t. en pm lo ve de of r ge ig tr st mo the fore
i a c er oth or , nk Ba d rl Wo the projects financially assisted by
bilateral donors, are a case in point: they are programs in which the injection of exogenous financial resources is intended to accelerate the
pace of development. ms ra nt og me pr rn ve go ch y su n , a r m at e th v , e d w e o v h r e s b n It has bee o s ce ur so l re ia nc na s u fi o n e g o x e of ow fl in e th hardly survive the day when ue in nt ed co to ct pe t n ex e is at m p th o l e v h e c d n u a g l n to i m i e a l ends. Whi
Recognizing the
not a simple add-on
to ble una ve pro ms ra og pr me so m, ra og pr al gin ori the of e ur os after the cl how is s Thi e. tim d ite lim a nd yo be t, en pm lo ve bring about continuous de
seSub . ion ent att to me ca st fir ty ili nab tai sus the question of long-term tilegi who ts, lis nta nme iro env by ed rc quently, this concern was reinfo nt pme elo dev in up d use are ces our res l ra mately pointed out that if natu ite fin ir the d, ewe ren be can ces our res ter than these programs at a rate fas
are y the t en pm lo ve de y ver the de lu ec pr character will undercut and s, itis ne making
nt me gu ar r he ot d an e es th of possible. As a result
e o e o ds ar gu fe sa c i m o n o c e d an l a t n e m n o r i v n e at being recognized th n lo e th nd te ex to t n e m p o l e v e d g n i c u d n i r fo s m a r g o r p to in built
conference h
:
ad two plenary sessions for them rather than only one made
it possible to discuss the © i Issues more comprehensively. Under the rubric ‘ social Sustainabi lity,” the aspects most frequently mentioned are patticipati Fen “ r e d n u ; ity equ d n a on l sustainabDbil. ra tu ul : “c r l de i t un y y; it qu e nc Tefere 1s made to values and the need to recognize cultural diversity: . In line wi
. u L p e e m e m r m i m e i é m m : r a n e — m s n n o i m s n e m m i d e d e TcoancneptEaof rorganizational aan y discuss concept
mt
of o
strategies, an!
. t n e m n o l r a i l n v a o i n y i c t e t o e i s h a s f t z n o i e d n a g Cr
eee hau
see,
t n e m p o l e v e d f o Y. SE HE
ei
a t o n e b t s u m s e i g e t a r t s t n e m p o l e v e , d y t i l i b a n i a t s u s ’ n o i . t e a v z i i n s a n g e r t O n i n o i t ensive, but also organiza social environments
with high
d e t c u r t s n o c to d a e l S degrees of orSgEaEnizational density. The higher the organizational density
e r i u q e r e h , t d y n g a o l o n , h n c o e i t t a z i n a g n r e o e w t e b t fi e h r t e t t e b e h t d an
ment for managing natural resources, the higher the likelihood for sustain” able development.
Induced Development in Agriculture
When we discuss the sustainability of development, we refer most ofte? be can what to much so not and t opmen devel ing induc to programs for called spontaneous development. By induced development I have in min ments; govern by ively purpos ted initia are which development programs 4 ces resour ial financ use which and like, the development agencies, and
Sustainability of this development. Indeed, since these progr Saal Rae n° incorporating of ibility i made, t hey must contain the possibility ble adverse effects of i ss po e th t ns ai ag s rd ua fe sa so tives to growth, but al nner
e th all s es dr ad to as a m a ch su in l e n e i s s d be to t h g u o y e h T . growth e pm lo ve de n e h W . t n e m p o l e ensions of lasting dev key dim r o n e v r e t n i t n e m n r e v o g d e n n a l p h g u o r h t d e t a r and accele sé e, bl ra du s rd wa to ad le s on ti en rv te in ch d su n a at th f e i r re b to ensu l l a c n a c e w t a h w e s u a c y l p m i s t o n — t n e m p o l e v e d long-term y l n b ea a b o r p is s . €phemeral develo pment spurts
an can ment Plop a puree gh throu t opmen devel al Agricultur veDtinter = n? sustai which in nces one of the clearest insta aie sociocultural, Must be achieved through balancing the des Hons so that they address, simultaneously, the Ora rhe conference environmental, and technical dimensions of cea (earal nt pme elo dev ural cult agri s pt’ Egy to ted ica ded Was fess ae for ical crit ain °r my argument from a dom
a irmig of nt pme elo dev t: Egyp and of high priority in
Severnment programs.
exper;
4
in d te la mu cu ac ve ha we e nc ie *Per
ues
e o W e h T . s t c e irrigation proj i e a p g n i c n a rigation, by fin
ineteataaae ir e a y h p h t i w , r e v e w o H . s m e t s y s n o i ° f h t i s W t n e m e g n a r r a l a n o i t u t i t s n i ce. e h t t u O i: able ue ke ta ot nn ca t en pm lo ve de n io at ig Ur is
The Social Sustainability of Induced Development
181
velopment strategies, not only technology-intensive strategies, Develop-
ment aid agencies have long been concerned with technology transfer and have emphasized technology-intensive aid strategies. Many developin countries, inspired by this model, have formulated their own plans i technology-intensive plans. But technology, no matter how advanced, patadequate within embedded unless potential full its cannot actualize it. maintain and use, sustain, to apt organization—patterns social of terns less no is patterns socio-organizational such Creating and strengthening be to seen is organization if Indeed, itself, technology important than the potential, human enhances it if development, for a strategic resource then synergy, maximizing actions, collective mobilizing people toward
increase to way direct a is society in building up the levels of organization the effectiveness of development strategies. degree the is strategy development a of The organizational intensity
ou large-scale irrigation systems. The abS undermined many a program and hasled
€ven collapse, of the physical structures of
Users m
4
e g a n a m e h t e t in a p i c i t r a p y o l t e v i t c e l l o d c e z i n a n g a n e t n i a m €nt and authorities, Ny, Segoe ap ie wala te ac me of water user organizations results not only in the cibsonwe Gi wae be
ust
organi
capacity organizational building for of presence or absence of provisions being are alternatives development When strategy. or program that into
t a h W , k s a o t e t a m i t i g e l is it , y t i l i b a n i a t s u s y l e k i l f o s m t r a e h w t o n T i ? y d g e e t t a r a t l s p , t a h t r o contem , s i h t f o y t i s n e t n i l a n o i t a z i n a g r o r o f f s o e e e r s g n e o d i s i e v h o t r p is e d u l c n i a e p g a k c t n e m p o l e v e d r a l u c i t r a a p a a y l s e a o e d r a t s n o i t exten p o s t n e m t s e v n i s u o i r a V b ? p 0 u s 1 u o d i l r a i v u f s b o d n a l l m a a oanrdgantihezyatiaoren likely to have organization de
nt” obsof also in isthetheabsetotal activitiofes,maibut mai nte nan ce ofcemai nte n “cu ltu re ity ntenance The culture awe na etn
n o . t i e t m a z e b i n o t a g d r e o e n s i s h d t n a m e g d n i e r s e u s Th a e m r o f s k c s i s t e s d s r s a a y o t s u o r e o g d i r a m o n e b e r a t s u e r m e s t n _ Th e m g d u j l a c i b t a y l a n a e v e i h t a T t i l a u q , . intensity. Often development
that can influen
u s a e m e s i c e r p f o e senc
Stag Donec eens ona ia
sanct ions and rewa rds, mec han ism s, es, enforcement
destructive practices. is
beeen
Teen
a ee
Bate
eoaee
Tanne a:
Reining Teas
ee
ee, ee
ae
PONTCES) PenanAne
°
Aas
ant ta
are not the only development projects to nee
sustainability. Similar situations occur in 0°
ategies and any conclusions must be formulated ig 7
er, namely,
i mee
referring to the importance
eg resource
for development.
Two
of organiza
concepts—™""
t—have direct relevance: organizational intensity and oe of
Ne 4 wrot I e that pape r ina con cep ts thes e to Bote Ireferred
me poe
pment”
A
Organizations and Institution Building for Sustaliaee
(Cernea 1987), and I would like to elaborate them
suggest them for broader examination.
y t i s n e t n I l a n o i Organizat
al ci so of ks oc bl ng di il bu e th te la mu cu ac What I propose first, is that to gn organization-intensive de-
and cultural sustainability, we need to desi
d n a , e g n a h c , n o i t a e r c n o i t a z i i n s a s g o r P o . r y o t f I d e e the n rements, I admi
p o l e v e d y l l a u t n e v e l l i w s n o i t a otfhatorgwaenizdo not yet have quantified © y t i s n e t n i d n a t n e t n o c l a n o i t a Srganiz
. e z i n a g r o o t d e e n e h t f o n t o c a i e t h l a t g i e c n o s g s n a o e e r v r t i o s e t c h n t s a r t e s d b s Shuon studie un t n o i t u t i t s n s i e / l a n o i t a z i n a y g t r i o l d an ustainabi omic s
o t l a i t n e s s e is it t a h t e d Conclu y t i s n e t n i l a n o i t a z i n a g r o s fo 't
: t e m p o l e v e d h c a e e n i m a ex a n o o l a and organization
n e t n o c l a n o i t a z i n a g r o f o y t i s n e t n i e h T t «mulation. e m a r o t le indica
b a t p e c c a d n a th an effective a f o y t i l i b i s a e f d n a y t i l i b a t i u S © tioi nal
ent
give? develodpevelop: ! iintens!'i Y
of
a z i n a g r H s approP o e h t g j n i t s I a e . s t n e m t s ally Incr e v n i additional s n e e u o en w o h t u o b a n w o n k s i e a e s t n u o m a t s a v d n e p s o t e f ef in iv)
y l b a t i f o r p d n a y l e v i l ‘ e a
to invest 9
e i t c i r s y a h p P n o y e of mon e b m o p r o i f atio’
organiz
s o p p o s a ( n o i t a z i n a g r o e t of adequa ry high:
e v y l l a u s u e r a ) n o i t a z i n
bat
18
The Social Sustainability of Induced Development
3
tent with such norms: in other words, the socialization of the actors, more specifically of the productive agents, towards a normatively regulated ; t)
sound economic behavior.
[assume that even those economists who may belittle concerned with
cultural sustainability would nevertheless recognize the importance of
legal frameworks for the functioning of free markets. society the legal frameworks are a constituent part of are else what ed, Inde ure. cult call sts ogi pol hro ant and the by d lize iona itut inst are that ms than cultural nor
But again, in any what sociologists legal frameworks state? I believe,
ed -nos hard most the with even , that ut abo therefore, that we can agree
inof ty bili aina sust l tura ocul soci the economists, and argue jointly that ronenvi or omic econ the than ant ort imp duced development is not less mental sustainability. References
onal density can increase ti za ni ga or returns to producers. Multi sin mer far p of l ip e sh er mb o me r al g & on a ti za ni he : Tganizations is a characteristi c whi ch varies from one cultural setting '° another. For instance in ies iet soc al rur of y it ns de al on ti za ni ga or e th , Thailand
3
a
in t tha an th er gh hi ly ab er id ns co is a the rural eas € Republic of Kore ed ur as me be n ca y it ns De l. ga ne Se or a, di In , ia an nz Ta in s 1e so h ug ro th
i n aa ma s r e b m e m le ip lt mu eble lithkeus far confirm the correlation and bolur See fesergaee: meavas aila Seeiioe
o ti za 14 ni tion that orga ies a ic i i teg str t en pm lo ve de e iv ns te in y ll na g are superior.
Another cultural dimension of sustainability in agricultural develop”
role the is on menti to want I at al—th gener in t opmen devel in ment—and relationship between organization and no of values and norms and the
of variety entire the to refer I e cultur a of part as norms enforcement. By
values and rules, ranging from the informal to the more formal ones, from
Huma? ies. activit mic econo to n pertai customary to legal rules, which step either obey lg activities are infused with norms, and people at every
ive conduc more norms n certai are extent transgress them. To what prote®
are that norms those y, Clearl ties? activi sustainable development tive of the
environment,
support
thriftiness and
honesty,
defen
e 4% e —thes forth so and t, suppor l mutua of value the assert property, activ" tion produc nable sustai and necessarily conducive to more effective
e? pm lo ve de of ty li bi na ai st su al ci so ities. Increasing the cultural and n of attitudes cons!* io at iv lt cu e iv os rp pu e th e, or ef programs implies, ther
:
te
i r e S t n i r p e R k n a B d l r o W ” . t n e u g o l a i able Developm D t n e m 1 Develop
ernea, Michael M.
t
;
!
Repriate 4 with
“Farmer Organizations and Ins era
er 1987,
1-24.
Peasant Organizations.
permission from Directions of Change:
Realities, Edited by Mustafa O. Attir, Burkar
: n o d n o L d an e dg ri b
Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press, 1981. Coleman, James. The Foundations of Social Theory. a Belknap Press, 1990. Daly, Herman 5, Gi al. “Qperationalizing ‘Sustaindd
oe
i
ent’ in the
i
Susta inabl and e oame nt, D.C, Wash ingt on, draft . Work ing World Bank.” Envir
al ob Gl , k n a B d l r o W e h T “ EL-Ashry, Mohamed'T. . 91 19 h c r a M n, pa Ja o, ky To ” . t n Developme omich, Thomas P. ett
Values and Norms
that
Cc
Pielig
Agricultural D evelop a
10 n io at am cl Re d n a L e at iv Pr m o ments: Insights fr
4. 27 126 , 92 19 y r a u r b e F ment, 20:2,
ae
arsh Environ
World Develop-
16 Small Farmer Households and
Agricultural Sustainability in
Egypt
Nicholas S. Hopkins agriculture Egyptian of sustainability for This paper argues that any concern A 0). 199 rg gbo rin (Sp s er rm fa ll i i mind the central role of sma has t © bear in e th nd ou ar t il bu is h ic wh e on be ld ou sh i e ur lt i cu ri ag sociall y sustainable e in mb co to is ed ne e Th dyynnaammiism, energy, and i: ngenuity of the small farmers. creasingly
in an h it dw l o h e s u o h m r a f l l a m s e th h g u o r h t n o i t c u d o r aan of p d e d n i m r a e l c be to t n a t r o p m i is it , me ti e m a s s s e r t s open market. At the o T . s r e m r a f l l a m s e s e h t f o e l o r t e h e t t r u u o t b d u a n f a y l i m e a f l e h t robab f p o d n e a c n a t r o p m i e h t e i e n a i l a r e d e n h u T the o t . fe is li s l r a e r u m r r fa l and l a m s in agricuuniltut,rebut also as the instituhouseh ehold as key organizational unimatsnage al ri a as t an rt po j im household old is not only k lin e th is y d ol eh hous .
a
e Th . ¢ urs c y 0 t e i c o s e h n t o f o i t c u d o r p e l r a e i h c t o s d n a y e l i m a f e d n a d n a h e n o e h t n o e d r e u s t n l e u s c i y r d g a a e r n l i a s a bor process ; a l e W: s n o : “A has political implicati tinui tioni
:
atia is th ee th t t a o h r w T « . he r t e h o t r o en W e h t e h n n e uity o : h w ° 8 4 s r a e y y t r o f y l r a e n ) 3 4 2 a y Se be e d i s n Mare (1957: o c s ) i g n i t r o p s (self-sup
con
e t a v i t l u c e h d n a l e h t s n w o © i s a b d n u o s ” . y t e i c o s c rati
ee
i r e n a o t d e c t i o u m s e s i d s r e m r a f l l a But Se for a m s t n e i c i f a f u s e f l a e s t f a o h t d y e t u e g i r c a o s e b n a c t I a ? t n e i c these i f f ; e d n a e v ™ i s t a c h u , d s o m r r a p f o s l a ™ s y b d e t a n i m Structure o d , e r u t l u c i r g a s p a n c a i i d t n p a h c y i t a r c u a e r u b e Consistent e t levels, despi
d l e i i y e d h i g s i n h o c y r e t o f C a , ) 9 2 2 Simon 7 2 2 : 7 8 9 1 ( d n e s m m r e 9 t n i d n Vey in 1 e r t consistent
o N “ t a h t d e u g r a , : u o h t f und ” , s s a l c e z i s m r faland reflecting thei s s o r c a e f o t i a n u i r y e r e e oHe infers a p h g i h e v a armers h land, mee
f r e g r a l f i at
' e t s e v n i e v a h & r y e e r h o t o p y l e e s v u i t a a c l e e r b r i e y h l t b h a t m i w r e uMr ofaennie do bett e u d o o g e k a m t p y g E n i s r e m r a w o l p , n Ho
) 6 7 1 : 7 8 0 4 , t n e m m o C ( s r i e h t h t i w o d s r e m t es ai M 4 t r o p rans t , g n i h s e r h t , g n wi
185
Small
Farmer Households and Sustainability
187
jobs, income. The household is almost invariably built on relations of
family or kinship, but the ideology of kinship should be distinguished from the economic unit. The economic unit contains within it the basic division is labor of division d gender-base The age. and of labor, based on gender genderthe fact, In differences. age the than significant more structurally it where level, household the at primarily operates labor of division based This involve. roles the what of ng understandi al convention by isreinforced
negotiate to have not do wives and husbands cases most in that means the by provided model the adopt simply can but are, what their roles those as such patterns, new by shattered be culture. This model can but different where countries from returning brought home by migrants prestigious models prevail (Abaza 1987).
nuclear a around y predominantl built are Households in rural Egypt
and children, more added be may whom to family, parents and children,
with Husbands relative. other or parent perhaps a surviving older-generation family nuclear the called be could This well. as two wives can be included here
(aila) family extended an on based are (usra) household. Some households same the within remdin and marry sons the when household, typically mee a form to continue brothers married more or two when or household,
family on
extended ofan definition practical a Thus household.
that contains two or more married couples. One of the une
es PN peo Outcome of ext. cont ) ural cult and l cia (so l ona uti tit ins an in ing operat ple Peo These fa €Ts are active in seeking their goals—such as raising incom?
cae to allow for fami state’spla® the to ve si on sp re g in in ma re le hi —w ty ui in nt co ly mi for apri
gniculture through the cooperative and village bank systems. : d strategies, including not only farming but also Jocal hous eholds follow mixe : atio: n, education, government employment, ownership l,labor, labor migr day-y3 n aeee of mene and trade. The role of women differs by region a0 e th is d l o h e s u o h e h T . s e c n e u l f n i e d i s t u o e s r e v i d r e d n u g n i g n a h c 1s o c e c basias ae unit, the locus of exchange deriving from the gender-bas? : di é l l i n u m r m e o c h in t o n a e n d o e to t a l e n r e s h d t e l ar abor, househo Geflecan e in uy t (p e k r a m e h th g u o r h t d ) n s a e s s e c o r p d n a s e u l a v u e e e pee n o i ; t a r e p o o c s n of r e t t a p . e ) m s o e S i t i g labor and other commod an a ci so as er r n e us o t i a t w a ) g l i a r r m i r o f n i o ( t c he local level, such as the de fa tions that all farmers adhere to, are also significant.
and the family (usra or aila). The household is an economic unit based 0? w ro Th . er th ge to e um ns co d an e, uc od ous ways live, pr oal in varier wh le op pe memb s it may have rights to certain assets—land, animals, its individu
ene
ee continuity has it that is setting, rural the in family, especially household is certainy generation to another, and the extended family as a realization of this model.
bas be to appear figures census Egyptian
(usra) rather than the household (bayt). MyimpreS”
i separate 2 as couple married each and others count living and working arrangements. One of the
tess of the t this is that
si the of k wor own our m fro ed il mp co e hav we s ure fig than the official government figures for the es i : larger
” e z i d s ol eh us l ho ca pi ty e th at ze th li ra ne 8e
ee
ly mi ay "a le sc ha is Th . 7) -3 34 : 80 19 al. et ns ki op (H s on rs Pe E TH r bo la n ow its e id ov pr to of the household c s i a of ze si e ag er av e th d te ma ti es us ns ce ae 1976
hold” >.0 persons and in Lower Egypt at 9.6 persons. *“ illustrative of the size difference between hoes t.
‘Iso of the contrast between Upper and Lowe® ERE
The Farm Household
y!) (ba d ol eh us ho the ), an sk ma or il nz ma (s e us I distinguish between the ho
ae
Al
ole of the State : seekiinng g to AWine
‘Vohlyo,ugh curr; ently the state in BeyPt!® ation it W tives et op co of ork 8°? ra fo ” y, et ci so vil “ci in t i 9€men In s g n e h g th u o r g h n t i k , e r r o u w t l u c i t “8
i
Small Farmer Households and Sustainability
189
or the ability of the larger farmers to take advantage of new opportunities. Any trend towards concentration of landownershi i a inhibited by the agrarian reform rules that limited the size of ite i.
the time being, the predominant pattern in Egyptian agriculture is ee of
many small farmers. The relatively few larger ones are often better able to use their land intensively because of their greater access to capital and
markets.
Technology and Capital
e don are ks tas ny Ma . ed iz an ch me y vil hea rly fai is Egyptian agriculture
are g, tin ves har and g, din wee ng, nti pla as ch su , rs he with tractors, but ot ps, cro d ize han mec at g kin loo not are We . nd ha by still largely carried out d, lan the w plo to d use are rs cto Tra ks. tas ed iz an ch or even farms, but at me
are ps Pum ks. tas er oth me so and , es in ch ma g in sh re th run , ns go wa haul used to lift water for irrigation. : ge lar n wee bet n io at iz an ch me of use the in ce en er ff di tle lit is e er Th
and small farmers; the difference is in the ownership of the machinery. In rs cto tra d use y the us d tol t cen per 90 2), 198 al. et a 1982 sample (Hopkins om fr t or sp an tr r fo t en rc pe 15 d an g, in sh re th r fo t n e c r e p 85 orted , g ? fo: r plowin :
:
The general Picture is one of individual land tenure; transfers of title take place throu gh inh s tance and the market. The operative farm unitue Is the heeri
ee
ernie’ for the last generation as: land owned plus land legally
a an eS he a6 Ba
Wa the part thatAfter Most often, out.” “rented legally land oad Occupied between one-third and one-half of the holding.
and cooperative the at recorded was holding this reform, and Ean landholdetthe and e cooperativ the between dealings for basis the as There is also substantial unofficial rental, at a much higher price, reflecting
field to village; 62 percent used irrigation pumps. But hardly any teP fore using machines for harvesting, planting, Or weeding.
Few farmers own their own machines, especially 26°" al
ely on the rental market. Tractors available for ree
me
of cases—belong to large farmers. The Bere
9 in ally— typic 8 proves
sometimesnone™ 4. she "actors—one or two per village; pines in each village tends to be highly a ee who reported using the main renter—tha' a £n villages averaged 37.3 percent, with a ranB® of S
market conditions. This is not recorded officially.
People generally say they use machinery “toS@¥® pe Us Percent) who preferred animal and human pow" rrelation be
There are also medium and large holdings, although the very largest with thousands of feddans—were expropriated in various ways in the 1952 and 1961 land reforms. After 1969, the maximum holding in principle wes
Use of Machinery and hired labor, suggesting is very ©O™ Also hire labor, However, hired labor Paradoxically when people talk about saving ae
are many “landless” in the rural areas. Though some work as laborers, 2°
nonmechanizedleonditions
commuting factory workers—have other occupations.
the role of animal
Most holdings are small; the national average is around 2,5 feddans-
50 feddans, but a few landholders farmed several hundred feddans. The?” all are involved in the agrarian structure: many—civil servants, merchants;
Differented access to land has long been a major feature of the
political economy of rural Egypt. I detect a slight trend towards a new
less is it but lands, new the in especially hip, landowners of concentration significant than the concentration of ownership of agricultural machinery,
'n higher quality production. We found a positive 2
Mean the time and effort spent supervising wee No account of E
4nd perha
aring fone
laity prod
3 a a
Ree
aan agriculture
: =
Fatt ani
t all farm house
(Hopkins et al. 19
‘
€ animals in thes
Sibility fonteay 1S usual
and rabbi
talls (including mu
ae
n’s chore:
house: Chic
‘omen
alsoh
Small Farmer Households and Sustainability
1
91
‘ E ide outs to ing rat mig are ple peo that is e t ni men , ele 2ypt new The ce Ga ; es valu : and ; s ion dit con ent fer dif lly ica rad to subject
them me n ear s thu can ple peo y ne mo of nt ou am ger lar e Th . ms) ter ial in soc
that this is not just a survival strategy but a chance to make a quantum =
upwards in material terms. The return of such migrants also provides ane
symbol of the involvement of Egyptian villages in the world economy and by k bac sent and k bac t ugh bro y ne mo the t tha on ti es qu no is e er Th e. cultur
the in rds nda sta ing liv of t en em ov pr im an to d te bu ri nt co has ts migran h oug thr also but g, sin hou of ing rad upg an h ug ro th y countryside, most visibl s. tie ivi act ial eur ren rep ent m ar nf no of the financing the In on. pti sum con ze ani org s, mal ani for e car , Women work at home ily fam r the —ei lds fie the in k wor and s et Delta they also trade at local mark a nn he Me d an rs de un Sa ; 82 n 19 n a m r e m m i Z ( s s t a e a n fields or, occasionally, for wage e m o w pper Egypt, since U n I . ) 1 9 9 1 h t o T ; 1986; Abaza 1987 n e m e th n o n i a r t s e r o m s e c a l p it , e r u t l u c i r g a in t o n o s d n a , e s u o h e h t e d i s t ou y r a s s e c e e n m o c n i s of m a e r t s e h e t t a r e n e g d n a s k s a t e h t h l s al i l to accomp re a y e h t , a t l e D e h t in as , s e g a w r o f k r o w n e m o w e r e h W . a) 1 9 9 1 s n i k p o n H i a ( t r e c to d e t c i r t s e r e r a d n a , e g a w e l a m e h t f o t n e e c m r o e S p 0 6 . e l b t a e u g o n b a h c r e t n i e r a n e m typically paid a d n that women a
r a e l c e e t o n is e l b it a r e f e r s p u h T e r a jobs. n e m o w t a h t g n i d n i f i e n t r a o e p r e o r m s m r a f n w ) o s s i ’ e e b n o l i n B o g n i k r o r ” a W . e t n n ( e i d tehmepyloayrersmore “obe a
e S n a m o w a t a h t d e t r o p e r s a w it a y y i f u an n i M n s i i n a v a l G ( e g a l l e g a i r a m a from one vi n o g n i d i c e d n e h w t n u o c c a o t n i can3).
t
:
Be, part-time farmer. Some househo
Siar er Cases, one man wor ks on the fa rm while others work elsewhere, 2"
Ome 1s to some degree share d. In the villages near Bilbeis, for instan® Many men work in the T, nth of Ramadan, about 40 km away (Hopkins and Hamdy 1990).
and shifting
Be
c
e
ze si l al sm e Th s. es oc pr r bo la e or hierarchical control of th
d ol eh g n us i ho t e y t i l i b a e h t n o v a t ps ou ee ape on chtmweonrtks grand decisions. One of the tasks of the
Boneetsil no rn adjus at th er th e: ei ur lt cu ri ag in t pu in r bo la e e th g a n a m to a is Lip one ly mi fa of s rm te ne in li ip sc di t to ec bj su LA eee m the household and seg or it is hired labor, subject to community values an! eae iS it un ch ea d e by g a n a m d d an re r hi e b m u n e th rt pa t s o m For the Be, . : control of labor is thus intensive. Only the household head follows
The Labor Market
Labor migration has always been an important household strategy in . 1991) Nada 1991; k Brin 1991; s Adam 1982; al. et kins (Hop t Egyp rural
n me.
asks ent itfer re ity eabil chang inter ed limit In the labor market, there is
Women, adults and young, because they are usually assene t ng amo : scale wage the set ers farm big The
general wage level is the ploy of hiring work 82
s. plu sur r bo la a of re mo be y ma e er th where : a e St Tucture: 8different tasks are paid in different ris reinforced b o b a l of l o r t n o c d e z i l a r t n e : c e d e f h t d n a a , d e e s u n f f t i d red. Ofte i h y e l r t e n b a t s n o s t c e s i . r u f r e m i o k l t p r This sim e; s oWuogh a contrac
his task ate fe
e s o h n t . r e o v t E c a r t n o r c o b a l e h o t t on volvess say (as do their employers) that
Worker
oe crop through the year (crop cycle), though others do much of the Physical work. With this division of labor comes a concentration of know! edge and hence something of a deskilling of farming.
on
rand
.
t e k r a M o t g n i o G
Pt basic the is household the 'Nce : m arketing. Some crops are sold to
it, it
odu ction unt, ai
the gover?
Small Farmer Households and Sustainabi lity
Changing Relationships At present in the villages, patron-client relations, linking the rich and presti-
gious to the poor and anonymous, are more evident than class relations (Hopkins 1987: 157-177, Hopkins 1991a). Something of the sort was apparently emerging at the time of Gamal Abdel Nasser, but it seems that it went is ds ehol hous een betw ship tion rela The s. 1970 into remission in the early . olic symb and l) eria (mat real both are ces eren diff se The l. qua une n ofte of (gifts e renc defe of signs ous vari are ces eren diff ic Among the symbol l socia the But y). talit hospi of ty nali ctio dire and gs, erin gath cigarettes, evening takes ines mach and r labo of ng hiri the as far inso ure, organization of agricult In . them een betw s tion rela ual uneq es forc place between households, rein ea ions. relat old useh r-ho inte the k mar sum, the patron-client relations 1s ity activ omic econ h whic by es valu In the community are set the over ions tiat Nego g. wron and right of regulated. There is a sense of fairness, h community g u o r h t t bu , ce fa to ce fa t ou d e i r r a c y l n o t o n e r a ) s e g power (wa on ng goi is t wha r, fai is at wh on te ba de nt te processes, such as the intermit to s lie app me sa e Th on. :
elsewhere in Egypt, what is necessary, and so a also is disputes of settlement The role. questions such as women’s proper rol nts community process; so is popular religion. The sp ree oe ee a villagers, in part the ability of communities to organize themselies from vi"2e! contributio ns th mie resources: frequently new schools are built wi of
especially iho
n patter uing contin the of sion exten an ps This is perha
ustainability of
Support for mosques and other religious foundations.
Another level of integration that is important i ee
ion. Villages,
Egyptian agriculture, and the small farmer within it, is the ce instance,1D
they © Unequal in the opportunities that governorate, Tukh Markaz in Qalyubiyya
Village Politics The village in E 5 gasend ae fi
preserve ii:
ti 1s
i still
a
basic-
admi
5 58 ve nistrati
ae
structure, with institu:
o als ny ma t bu d, ze ni ba ur re mo ng mi co oie te Ae are be een scr 4 as act at th t en nm er ov -g al institutions of self
between the desi s Thi s. nt de si re r ei th of e lif e th d an e at st e th of es se t en nm er ov -g self e lag vil e Th te. eli e ag ll vi e th of r locus a -s ased on the local powe
is also the
e rk wo e ar ds ol eh us ho g amon s ip sh on ti la re e th e er wh out. Here is wh r, he ot an e on to te la s re er ld ho nd la e th d an ss le nd la e th ie i
e ia pe Se as ee
armers set the pattern which the small only aspire tO, an
er sc di n ca e on all of st fir at th e ag ll vi e th of l ve le e at th se the social contexts in which class roles are learned 48 EES uc od pr of de mo e e th of om tc ou es an e lv ar se em s th se as cl € ‘ e e : ha
® ag ll vi e th om fr nt se ab e ar ts en em el e, iv ahichs 46d bs national perspect de si re o wh s er rm fa st li ta pi ca d an e rg la y ul tr e aaa th bg egis hs NS
elite of the state bureaucracy. Thus the class structur G Wh aes , and the ge cannot be analyzed in isolation from that of the nation.
ial
!
NN apricots; the village of Deir in strawbermies;
ansour in citrus and citrus marketing. Namul fees
Manufacture of crates for transporting fruits ange arket.
Cluster of villages manufactures charcoal for the Cairo a is n the region grow berseem for sale to villages ae fo
of the other crops. Similar patte ms u could do in be d shoul s factor These areas (Hopkins 1987: 30-33).
s. er rm fa l al sm e th of s ip sh on ti la re et rk about the ma The Future of
fat small Egyptian the visualize to has ne sly in the c pital; 10)
I
active simultaneou in) is who Pitalist Te rchase 9 farmer
Th ‘al market, and of course in the pU
© difference between the large and
il
Ss
mi
Small Farmer Households and Sustaina bility
195
The Effects of International Remittances on Pove rty, Inequali A
___—..
Development in] Rural Egypt. Washington, D.C; Internati onal Food OyPoliandcy nati nter 1. 199 Research Institute,
Batatu, Hanna. The Old Social Classes and the Revolutiona ry Movements of Iraq, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1978. Brink, Judy H. “The Effect of Emigration of Husbands on the Status of Their Wives: An Egyptian Case,” IJMES, 1991, 23(2): 201-211. Chaulet, Claudine. La Terre, Les Freres, Et L’Argent. Algiers: Office des Publications Universitaires, 1987. Commander, Simon. The State and Agricultural Development in Egypt Since 1975. London: Ithaca Press, 1987.
Glavanis, Kathy R.G., and Pandeli Glavanis. “The Sociology of Agrarian RelaCurrent tion,” Produc hold House of tence Persis The East: e Middl the in tions
:
Sociology, 1983, 31(2): 1-109.
of ity Univers Austin: 980. 1960-1 Iran: in ution Revol and Hooglund, Eric. Land ; Texas Press, 1982. in y Econom old Househ the and ndry Husba al “Anim al. et S., Hopkins, Nicholas 1980. Cairo, s, Service Relief ic Cathol to t Repor es,” Villag Two Egyptian ac w, Westvie r: Boulde Egypt. in Hopkins, Nicholas S. Agrarian Transformation ol-
Anthrop Eastern s,” Village Arab Two in Wages and Work, “Women,
ogist, 1991,
under the Pressure of “ “structu: ral adju} stment” and the market principle. : Sho
d , an er rm fa l al sm e t th r o p p u s e to u n i t n o c y genes ne bevptian polic ll wi ? on ti za ni ga or al ci so of n r E e t t the poneinge famileythheoruseuhpoplodrtepda or not? If the goal isa sustainable s wh a ae
, w o r o m o g t t n p u u i o , s h e u t c i n a w l h h a ces tod y—thaengrowwhtat rwoilte dobes the family household have to play? resoury
cae
44(2): 103-123.
ete P and ts Peasan in es,” Villag Arab Two in es on ury. Waterb ae Ka d Farha by a odern Middle East. Edited Clan PN
Press, 1991a,
University
orida International
Hopkins, Nicholas S., Sf
a
252-21
and Bahgat Abdelmaksoud, A
i,
% 7 “ Survey: a of s Result Egypt. in ion nizat Mecha of Agricultural ita if to the Ministry of Agriculture, Cairo, 1982. i n a h c e M l a r u t l u c i r AS in opkins, Nicholas S., and Iman Hamdy. “Social Issues
5.
zation.” Report to the GTZ, Cairo, 1990.
aaptostitut
Frangais
n i a t e s v u s i a c to u d n o e c d r e o s m m a is r b fa that the family-
i del erie Imprim Cairo: Egypt. in m Refor AB Sayed. Marci, : : Office des Pu blica tions 1957. Algeriens. Algiers tcheologie Ori Et le,ae Marouf, Nadir. Terroire
u c d n l a a i e c t o a s u q e d , a e d a m e s b n n a o c choices or decisi . d e d d e l e o n h is e s u o e h e h r t u f t o c u r s t n s and t functio standing of the currenn d ion
A failure to understa
carl Migration 09 Rural Nad Universitaires, 1981. 1 ada, Atef Hanna. “Impact of Temporary Internation Rura of y Anatom An 14). 1991, e, Scienc Social in s Paper Cairo ” Egypt,Samir, and Eddy Lee. Agrarian Change" Egypt: R adwan, an Eayplia
r e h t o d n , a ) 7 8 t 9 e 1 l u a h ; C 1 8 f 9 u 1 o r a a M i ( r e g l , A ) 8 7 u 9 t 1 a t a B ( q a Ir accelerated migt®
ReEast Entree ge “Villa Mehenna. oe Lucie W., and Sohair25(1): Middle m,” Refor n a 75-88. 1986, logy, Ethno meu Sprin 8°org, Robert. “Rolling Back Egypt’s Agraria
Ge
abl
a
SNS
e h r c t u o s s f i ? e l e , B a n e t o l i a p y c a l s c l u f e g e r r a u e l h t n t l a is u h c t € agri ltural undert-
can lead to policies that rural social organizat d ; ) n 2 u 8 9 l 1 g o o H n d ( a e r n I in e p p a s s h a a — h e destroy the fabric of rural lif d to a e n l a c fe n l a o li r i u t r f c o u r t s e d e h . d t untries An n a c t a h t s s a l n c a b s r s u e l t o o r a d n , a s a e r n a a b r u o e t l p o e l p a r u r tionviodfe the social basis for a new regime. Not only agricultural sustainabil Pro ity but political stability may be at stake!
References rs pe Pa o ir Ca in ” t, yp Eg l ra Ru in n me Wo of e ag Im ng gi an Ch he “T . : Abaza, Mona é in Social Science. 1987, 10(3). : se cu ra Sy t. yp Eg l ra Ru in Change al ci So d an t en pm lo ve De H. Adams, Richard
. 86 19 s, es Pr ty si er iv Un se cu ra Sy
am
Pops
>
erty. London:
ly
Croom
Lee.
Agrart
Helm,
1986.
j
PortNo. 166, 1990, 38: 28-30. ;
State-Society Relations in Egypt The
tions,” Middle East Journal, 1991, eae ‘Main
oF res: “Pride, Purdah, or Paychecks: whe : Zimme abor in Rural Egypt?” MES, 19978 ir, Le
ee Kafr of n Woma The D. Waman menn,andSonja Development, 1982.
tre
reneurs:
AD
8
Wy) Women’s Rights as a Condition for Sustainability of Agriculture Hoda Badran bu ca vo e th of rt pa e m o c e b s ha t n e m p o l e v e d e l b a n i a t s u s The concept of e th , re tu Fu n o m m o C r u O of n o i t a c i l b u p e th e c n i s t n e m p o l e lary of dev plo ve De d an t n e m n o r i v n E on n o i s s i m m o C d l r o W N U e 1987 report of th : s i m m o C ld or (W d n a l t n u r B m e l r a H o r G of p i h s n a m r as i a h c e th d ne fi de r e d n is u ment t n e m p o l e v e d le b a n i a t s u s s i m o r p m o c t u o t n h e t p e i r i w s i h t t j n n I e s e r p e e h x t f o s d e pon 1987): e n r e e h h t t O h t s t t e e e e . m m s d o e t e h n c s i n h o n w i w t o a r t e n n r e i e e g m p o e l e tur v u e f d f ‘ o y t i l i b a e g a is e Renee r p n e e b e v a t h p e c n o c e en tions of th & t n e m p o l e v e d e l b a n i a t s u s t a h t t n e m gree
r e l b a l i a v a f o t n e m e g mana see enV
e e p e a ier e a f o : e t g P n a i t n a e c m e l p m ! t i c e sitio5 n ) j 3 b ( o ; e s g u n s i t mi p o d a ) 4 ( d n nnene a e l e g n n e d i s A s e r ; d y d t a i l a a u h q t h i t w y w g l o n l r i a g v t e n i e : h e c m d a n u o Suoulzd incl e r g p e n h i t l d n ; a s h d e
n e n a n m o u i h t f c o a f s i peverty and sat nology;
h c e t d e n c a n e g i n c s i t ation; adap ironment v n e e h n h t o t i i t w c a r e t Uman in
9 1 0 A g " n P i r u s and en
and the on
” 1 a s a h t n e m p o l e v e d e l b a n i a t s u s f o t p e c n ° o eens co e r u t u f towards
y l r a l u c e i s e t r t a a p S e 0 t , 0 t s n e 4 and fairnes s e s m i p o l e ulime v e . D e n r o e i h s n e m i c a a ® y a d r e t s e y f o n o i s n e t x e n a s a n l e u e c e s t s e r a N Y D s 'Ype a w o r r o m o t , d e t i r e h n i g e n i k o a f m o — e y n e c im n e g r u f o s m r e t n i o s l y a l e n t a w o i o d i e l m s m s e i ‘ g n o a h t t c c e f y f l c e I o i t O €s CN ” o i s s k n n i l e m i d e m n o i i t s t n n s e i M h . T n o i t a d a r g 9 4 ; n and * de o i t a u t i s e h t o t y r o t s i h a s e v i g ; e r rt Polici, tu
e d n u s e i g e t a r t s t n e m l p c o i l a e e ¢ v p e E d o e d today. It ii s unf rtunat n a a o * EDViro e a e n o t
197
evel
The ist
Women’s Righ ts as a Condit ion for Sustaina bility
199
sustainability is people, and not merely the natural and hysi was believed by some. Fortunately, the world has dioeatnenee women have a central role in achieving and maintaining suniaaieee
tainability. There has been no recognition, though, that they were the first to comprehend the core issue in the concept of sustainability, ie., justice and concern for future generations. Whether by instinct or because ofintelligence, they were always, before the concept even came into the open, able to
compromise their own needs for the future benefit of their children . Studies have documented that women, more than men, give priority to the satisfaction of their children’s needs out of their own income.
Environmental Managers The literature on agricultural sustainability took note of women only when it was recognized that they were to a great extent the managers of
environmental resources. They are the ones who fetch water and use it in
Preparation of food or in washing. They are the ones to collect and Lia oe cattle the raise They bread. g bakin and ng cooki in it use and fuel,
after the animals. They also play an important role,at least season’ sie
needs of existing and future generations; Cy
sia
ent socioeconomic classes; and be tween the ne is - Such balance cannot easily be achieved, but fal
8yPtian strategy is to succeed. In fact the Lae
egy has to take into account three distinct bu t in te ra ct in g dimen! of agricultural development: (1)
the crop production process itself. They are occasionally eee Producers absent from the labor statistics, but they are Pati ante tis i ae tie iy d accuse are they s time Some s. ducer repro as tially Tonment because they use the water resources for Brebathing ra fuel. They and they fill the air with smoke because they cook We "Ede they are are blamed as if they have alternatives to choose from,
Not the first to suffer from the pollutio n: d discussed rural wome n as a subsidiary 1ssue ot Ment of other goal s. They should, f or erisat hence limit the size of the population, if this is agove™
Should change food habits, if anew crop is to ie Steen
technical/physical; (2) financial’? womuc; and (3) human/institutional. This reflects the fact that agricult™! : Sustainability is not the business of one discip line. It is a
Words, and using research terminology,
the tools and language it uses.
Wholly,
multiple rey z
sibility with each discipline having its range of activities that follows fro
‘al
The environmentalists, for example, when talking about the phy: an
©nsion, mention land-use, dissemination of technology, and s© Lie
Agronomists talk about credit markets, agricultural technology, and
like. Economists discuss costs, prices, subsidies, and ma ximizing tet
Those in the field of humanities use yet other words to discuss huma? ar
institutional issues such as knowledge, skills, leadership training, heal’ communication, management, and—most important—gender equity;
s
4
‘0 breastfeed their children, regardless of the
“nd not dependent variables. They are
ote1 am thankful for the United Nation
P "ciple of advancement
art first as P jon on the
of women,
~veral conventions, then by the Decl
. The Pream
mination Against Women, prociaimee } “claration of 1976 states:
A
the role of women (Woods 1987).
Despite the Charter of the United Nations
sion—an understanding that the engine of agricultural development 4?
4nd despite the progress made in the
Fortunately, there is an increasing recognition of the human une
ated as
e Unt
oa on
Human Rights, the International Convte orth ther instruments of the United Nations
:
Women’s Right s as a Condition for Sustainability
opportunities to improve their own and their family’
2 01
iat
due tie Lice burdens the and i He multiple roles they play
economic, and political factors shape their roles and status and states health and well-being, but they have little control over them. How far ae the Egyptian rural woman exercise her fundamental right to enjoy a healthy status? I will take some significant indicators to answer the question. Maternal mortality is an important indicator: it reflects the degree of risk inherent in the woman’s reproductive role as well as her health status from early childhood. This risk has been almost eliminated in the industrialized countries. In Egypt, the average maternal mortality is 320 per 100,000 and undoubtedly the risk is much higher in rural areas. In coms on ti d Na te ni (U it wa Ku in 6 d n an ai hr Ba in 27 o is ti e ra ag er parison, the av 1991). How can one rationalize such a high risk of dying to which rural women in Egypt 8yP are subjected? J rty and unhealthy sta: Malnutrition is another indicator, reflecting poverty ar
PMent of the P countries and of humanity” the Eliminati
rural in that ate indic es devic ning plan ly fami ing seek tus. Studies on women pede as ing each ia—t anem from r suffe en wom of Egypt a high percentage
areas. urban in nt perce 46 t abou with ed par com , ages vill e som in ent 65 perc
Adequate health facilities and living conditions ie Economi eer
opportunities, including
credit, technology, etc.
n, io at ng rm ni fo d ai n, 10 in an tr Freedom too 9 ni ake t
ee ons ni.ty decisi
Tea:
&
1Ze,
0 make
rien
.
choices, , a and participa te in comm!
ItAgeis, therefor, ©, appropriate : to address the status of the Egyptian wom” sae Si
ae des
eae
Itisno wonder that, with high incidence of mainourishment pee pee!
U-
igo Sector as a human rights issue. This approach is most € concept of sustainability because it puts the well-bein8 e
uals in focus, which is actually the ultimate goal of development.
es S AEE EIDE and development of a healthy life—survival, oe dae ev pment, and enjoyment—is a fundamental human right. This $ 3 ei-being, which is an output, has to be distinguished from the mes absence of diseases, and from health services, which are only the mee
(inputs). The two concepts are of course interrelated, but the inputs foe
healthy status are several and far beyond the health services. In other words, these services are necessary but not sufficient to produce ue) status. A healthy status of the individual is actually the outcome of uF performance of all of the community delivery systems. The ir eff icient? and effectiveness in meeting human needs determine the level of well-
being of the population. Women’s Health
y th al he n te of t no e ar , ar ul ic rt pa in n Women in general, and rural wome ? we fe ll sti d an e yl st fe li r ei th t ou ab s in Egypt. They have few choice
of women, 67 percent of babies have low birthweight (em p wa high er Wen for Turkey and 9 for Iraq). The figure for Egypt's an the average for the rest of the country (Hussain pe) for rural women in
Illiteracy is a third indicator. The illiteracy rate lor
Egypt is 76 percent, compared with 44
ther, the answer 10 the
(CAPMAS 1986).
When these three indicators are taken be attained her basic right
question is that the rural woman in Egypt has: t 0 a healthy
status and cannot be Brett
artner
i n u m m o c of y e v r u s A . or ct se al ur lt cu ti “s Provide an explanation of the situation.
i10n a sustainable
available tohershould
The Rural Health System
The ._
e t h s t i ! f o r e b m u : n ‘Ural health system has incr eased the number of run
l a t o t e vices: h T e . s e g a l l i v 5 . 1 r e p t i n u e n Se O of ty ali ions t U e h T . ) 6 C 8 9 icl 1 uff jns S A M P A C ( r 2731
bee, ¥28 icized
u q e f o k c a l heavily for
ge
e f e i t l a e h e h t f o e c n a m r o f r e p d n a s e d u t i t t a e (i m d e t a t s s sewive
th nN Crit
u o h l a r u r ” r h e t , f l s n ) a a u 8 e e r n s 8 e h h e s a 9 t r h u h 1 o t t t a c e r o a d m r ce Bet
e h t ' t a h t : n o i t a z i n u m m i s Y for children’ with. Units do not hav®
th and are satisfied Furthermor drugs. prescribed the io attend, Ndants (davas), even if they at@ no t lice’
ries a
Women’s
Rights as a Con dition for Sustai nability
203
The direct correlation between literacy, he: alth, ec Onomic and ; : politii se of informd ed choice,*» esp especially for cal power, and the exerci women, cannot be overemphasized. Education determin es the rural woman’s access to paid employment, her earning capacity, her overall health, control over fertility, and the education and health of her family. Education also helps women to handle social prejudice and hence be able to participate fully in the community. In the study mentioned earlier, a high percentage of the housewives, though illiterate, expressed a desire that their daughters go to university ifat all possible. This indicates that the obstacle to female education isnot a matter of lack of understanding on the part of mothers so much as economic and social factors (Office of the Middle East 1991). As for
information and facilities on family planning, Egypt has been using the
mass media, particularly TV, to communicate messages and ee There are questions as to whether these messages have been effe a relevant to rural women. There are reasons to believe that many a women bear more children than they wish to have or know uk ae o , complications, childbirth in result pregnancies Frequent diminished working capacity.
sisters to fetch water as so On as they start to walk. The utensi ls they catty get bigger as they gr ow ol der. Fetching water is a part of their life, with n° complaint or grumbl ing, although they may have to undertake this task Several times a day. B io mass fuel (obtained at no financial cost) leads '° serious respiratory dise ases because women are exposed to the smoke that comes from it. Exposu re to biomass fuel emissions is probably one of the most significant Occup atio nal hazards for rural women.
All Work and No Play
Pe
United Nations
As to the women’s right to economic opportunites third World
Women’s Decade has exploded the myth that ee it is all work and 5 kis “re peripherally engaged in agricultural labor. ie ‘+h domestic WOIX— 10 play. Much of women’s agricultural labor—as with ear in official Booked because ita is unpaid: . Often 1it ce IS [labor force? atisti
Education
The data reflecting rural women’s exercise of their basic righ ts to ae
tion and information are disappointing. Although Egypt’s conse a gives equal right to education for males and females, and basic educa
is free and compulsory by law, enrollment figures reflect a ee between the sexes, partic
eae
ularly in the rural areas. CAPMAS and uy ils publications put out in 1989 show that the enrollment ratio for ea acs
is 71 percent, compared with 93 percent for urban girls; 95 for or vnig het 96 for urban boys. The gap between boys stages of education. School dropout rates Quality of education affects both sexes, enforcing prejudice, is particularly serious
and girls gets wider in the weed for girls are no less diseouraes ee but pigieonyping m oF tone with regard to on re eee
classes are rarely attended by rural women. They do not go to even if they are convinced of the usefulness of the ede even if there is no pressure on them not to go from the
family.
Gece , and
Cro
Teason
P harvests attract large t
ome numbers Lae of wof women
© suspect that the seasonal activities e
in cro
en
he
m r o o e f w . d e t a m i oS "nderest The labor participation Merce muc ultural Sector in general in estimated to be me d 1984 in e th e
Tat in y eality. Indicat
8 Two
surveys conducted
-in 1978 and
196#
ed that about one-third of all crop 12!
richards 1991). In 1983, for the first time, me : the fa
ie >Pted to include the amount of labor ercent Orn “ck. The data
indicated that about :
Ww
rhe done by women. Since total agree
40P a por is the W'
alone 40:60 between crop and livestock labor icultura labo In B Would be about 16 percent of all 2B
8ypt are not Petcen Ot
date. up-to-date.
The
983) indica
latest (cally active i
' of those women who are econom
divid
Women’s Rights as a Condition for Su stainability aoe
205
ican University in Cairo Press, 1991, 25-27,
a ea iar Nations and Human Rights. New York: 1984, 149-150, United “ee Development Programme. Human Development Report 1991. United Nati k: Oxford University Press, 1991. bay cee
New York:
M. “Human Development and Sustainability
po eel
Development,” in ene of Pei
eat
8
esucsiin : hington, D.C.: World Bank, . tural aaa peas Se ae Development. Our Common Future, DE vork: Oxford University Press, 1987.
The Right to Choose Finally, what can be Saiid about women’s rig : ht to make choice i s? Lifife for the rural woman is escribed d o o h d m l o r i r P f ch to old age. She does 0 ot
have the time nort he skills to organize and she is not aware of ie 1ight to p
articipate in community decisions. I have tried to touch rights which rural women are enti t m tled to. We should confess tha uch needs to be done t o make these rights a reality, and make oe eesi) the strategy to make the agricultural sector sustainable. What a eet done is not more of the same of what has been going on. Ru 0 rights: themselves shoul d be allow ed to sharpen their oy e s ee them. They should then lear h
ow to increasingly attain them and e 2 5
n
They may be assisted in doing so, but rights are never han
ded
out.
References us of s n e C n ti . o is ) i s t c i a t z s i l i S y e l t a h c a A d i r T t n n b t S M a r e o n o g M P e f C A A ( C in se Cairo: 1986.
. The Statistical Yearbook, 1988. Cairo: CHEM
FAO. “Sustainable Agriculture and Rural Developme
AS
1986.
2 eseen ise
erlands Conference on Agriculture and the Enviironmen t, Regional oh
ment No. 4. Rome: 1991.
oe : Offi
the National Conference © 0
:
g r e1988.Conditio B= ns tof: peneQuem ) Minicsteryedofin Health.tore Cairo: : Never bee
of ae Middle East. “Improvement of the S089 ae
The Rural Areas in the Arab ES
ee
one Ce,
onic, 1991.
arena ent Pol bole ul
Ri Durieengattr ti OkBoom tn Employmant a “
-f
BYP
Adjustment
fen}
Edi
m
Egypt
tn
the
1
5
| by
Heba
i
Handoussa
and
Gillian
18
S S S t n e m p o l e v e D e l b a n i a t s u S
n o i t u l o v e R l a i c o S a s e t a t Necessi
e t u o b a m e l b o r p al ob gl The
© n io ct ra te in d an ce confluen
a t n e m n o r i v n e n; io et pl de ce ur so Te
; t n e m y o l p m e n u d an n io at problems such as infl
n e e w t e b d n a s e i r t n u o c and poor, both within ; s ; p u n d ne o l i i t u s a b m r r g a e t n i s l i a i d c o d s n n atio a
c i l f n o c 4 e as c n e l o i v of e g s n u i t a l and the esca we have is a metaproblem—4 problem on fs s s e m “a , it d e l l a c e v a h lematique, or as some In such situations, when you "Y Lo sol Me g n i of n e s r o w a o t d y a l e t l n e u q e fr ing clearer to many, though un
economic and political powe!, isnatble to sO" : e m a t o n that these problems are t n s e s m s p o l e t v n e e d d m n n a o r i v n e cern for the “
i n e v n o c e h t h t i w , e s r u boost, of co
Environment and Development—t publication of their findings (World
of
s e n i z z u f d e u n i t n o c e h Notwithstanding t
able development, there is genera
desirable. Can you imagine somebo
a e d i e h t t r o p p u s t o n saying, “I do
t n s o n c o i s i c e d t a h t r a e l c is e it cours
0%
community, institutional, nation’, sik © n o i t o n e h t y to r a r t n y o l c e t e l p m co :ng from desp : i g n a are very varied, r e h t at it e b ( l a v i v r u s secure their , s s e n h s i f l e s , d e e r g to y l l u f e s o p r u p is e l t My ti a J t a h w t u b , 2 5 9 1 in revolution
erate
S
Sustainability Necessitates a Social Revoluti on
209
reducing price supports for pesticides and chemical fertilizers; providing
incentives for sustainable agricultural production practices; and reviewing land tenure systems, instituting ones which encourage the use of Tegener-
ative approaches.
Mic, or cy
iM
But how can the political will be generated to put such policy changes in place? There are even some answers to that question. Modification of national accounting systems, for example, truly to reflect resource deple-
u t i o n ni in the very unde to move in a P Ositive direction ,
tion or degradation, in order to build a convincing case for conservation
measures. There is also emerging some belated debate on the importance of ecological carrying capacity and the question of “scale.” The question of carrying capacity or scale puts us face to face with the total impact of
our production and consumption activities on the ecosystems, This puts pop of ulation sub jec t emo tiv and e dif fic ult ex tr the em el ce y nt and er front
We e. ic st ju al ci so or s c i and eth
e bl na ai st su r fo s t n e m e r i u q e r € y; e it v il r e rt avoid salinization aad s il fe t n so s o u c >° We m such as maintai
er iv od bi n i a t n i a m ; s d o h t e m n o i rigat r i r e p o r p m i y ba l e t a p Se pesticide use or abuse. Add to these objectives others
u Yo . fe li ld g wi n i v r e s n o c d n a y t i r u c quate food se?” e d can then ask, aiBnuitnghoa w can we do this Well, some technological answ*"
are already available: promote which integ
use of regenerative production systems us t o m o r p s; op cr l a u n n a d n a , l a i n n e r e p , k c o t s e v i l e t Proaches w vhtiach use to a much reater g extent mulching, crop sae intercropp ing, agroforestry, conservation tillage systems, green manutite, nes; il develop a nd use appropriate Ppropriate integrated i pest managem diversify entre crease irrigation efficiencies and improv e drainage systems; tof
sus of tai nability sub jec the t abo ut co is nc er ne wh d o An yb od growth. y cannot fail, after a while, to be confronted with the link between es
e the e in fa ct thi or s tur ns one Ho we ve r po pu an la d ti on . capacity con clu the sio n lon g for avo id to im po is ss it ib le eq ua ity tion,
we if dec rea not se if sta bil to ize ha ve wil l point populations ai t me ee , en vi ro nm en ta l irr eve rsi ble to wa rd tr en d the continue
One of the problems with many of the strategies ests Itis only they do not proceed via an analysis of the causes of the 4 the reality. Such by performin g such social analyses that we can cont neously: int0 al
sim m™ dir ect ion s ma ny int o yo u tak e analyses quickly thropology, social psychology, economics, an
attitudes and social belief systems and values come
Teal
genetically away from monocropping; perhaps even reduce the ¢ 090) conve
rsion of humanly edible grains to meats (Conway and Barbier pout?
The question then is: How can we bring these and other changes ® And why, if they are so obvious, do they not happen on their own"
and
the
reasons
for
eit through force or through mani pula”
Frequently, strategic analyses, especially y ting tha
Public funding, will have great difficulty in indie
satus
on, : you po utinuation of present systems of productimple, a Of goods and services. SO, fon exe.
Mt if
litical will,” 48 .
fr decision-making
institu
Who benefit and those who suffer from maintain’ sumption
Technology Is Only Part of th e Answer
by farm
families.
We
4 resbnol
become more aware that to be effective, or even to be adenine and
gies must fit into supportive policy environments. Fortunate te sustainmore is being written about policy changes which may aeon s a
able behavior: putting in place laws where the polluter pays; oh
enaliZi8
account
wherever possible the costs of “externalities”; taking outa resource degradation and depletion in the charges made tents
use;
z com
act phenomenon that either exists
a function is wi ll po li ti su ca l ch th at ® fore “S Operate and interact in a societi y:
’
r does not, as
B
ec
Sustainability
n o i t u l o v e R l a i c o S a Necessitates
pall
e b to e m o c y l e t a n u t r o f n u s a h e r a f l e w or social ut eae
t n e m p o l e v e d l a i c o S
o b a y l t n a s s e c n i k l a t e W . h t w o r g c i m o n o c e h t e i w e p d e t a equa e k a m it s e o D . t c a r t s b a e h t n i t n e m p o l e e t t a o to growth and deve s e e 1n r u c n i e w s t s o c e s o h t h t w o r g e c i i S m o n i o c e as e n : s m e t s y s n o i t c u d o r p r u o f o s e c n e u q e s s n e o t c e e v a i t e a e g H ne o r p l a n o i t a n s s o r g f o s n o i t a l u c l a c o s b o j i ‘ not to factor int e o e a I e h t h c i h w n o s e c r u o s e r f o n o i t e l p e d : e t i l income the of y t i l a u q e h t g n i v o r p m i o t e t u b i r t n o c n o i t all these quesc all produ a
really constitute goo tions in my view is: N our primary goal, then we nee goals actually should be. To
have to look at our values. ethics; and between these an
tems. We must try to be clear: t, en pm lo ve de t ou ab lk ta we So when what? Development for who ment how? For further reading abou Ttecommend Another Development (N
Anybody who is serious about
oa 20 : So,A to trel i ate o this to the sustainability of agriculture in Egypt: Reductions! Scientific method olo gy has resulted in the creation of disciplines ® Specializations, an d the subsequent creation of institutions which at
hig segmwal entetd Sec hlylem: hicmetinensss
, all
disconnected.
Biology,
economics,
engineer!”
come together to determine what happe®S ie ie
us old, househ farm the field, the ms—in syste l gricultura
me ie
a
unity,
ee
the nation,
and the global commodity marketpla a
efforts are now being made to pull different disciplr eae multidisciplinarity and interdisciplinarity—but ies lleushon. eee tan unders to ach appro tic synthe truly a ing complex eens pa eee
a
ange
ge.
transdisciplinarity, the whole education syst
The difficulty, however, is that those who have to de
the educational
structures
are products
of the system. Th
ee
4
People must acknowledge that all is not well with the system that orca
them—then make a leap of faith, to make the difficult decisions nee ‘a to invent, test, and promote new approaches. This requires of OF
security in their sense of self to take these difficult positions: werd .
.
-
iti
absolutely necessary.
Social Goals and Economic Growth
;
e liz rea st mu We s. on ti es qu e es th confront because of a deficiency in nature, tha s nd ma de the are e bl na ai st su un Ment, and on people. In our prese With the accumulation of material good?
283% of commodities. We need to laasktion
bp ae ec ree xam be ine d: to hav e soc iet ies our of und erp inn ing oth s er Two
mar free socal led the of role relating to economic growth and the
©
mu cu ac if t Bu us? in ingrained
somehow we have to become ™
a nm no in on ti ac sf ti sa d an e lu va creased Bearing the Costs
,
‘
Practices will involve
ws t
cant cost signifi hasizZ
Even a very superficial analysis sho
immediate costs, it should be ore increase those costs in the futur’: that those who bear the costs #
be the same group: they cou
e
e
Costs, or benefits foregon? now, my
generations; farmers upstream ™ may
for those downstream, exporya me!
and everybody will be asking:
c
su
question in our time will be ne enhancement of the natural res them.
haces
c
, and Pol itica] As pects
Redistribyr; 10n: In . ter th e li :1S made of the neeq fora readtiusrteriobution
:
sustainability Necessitates a Social‘ Revolutioni u
;
wee Agriculture, little ment
Sector, or towards the nat 10N of wealth towards t generally eevee ae val Tesource Production and y i and the Tesulting dumpi€ngSubsonidi - ie ea sb sustaina
Tedistribution be to those f to be made of the im resource base ie
|
i r e e e e Cl ea rl y, a Co nv in ci ng ar orta ca se ne c sited of spate 2 . tegrit: y of the natura the In
? tural commo dine Ous political forces k i P €S Ke ep pr ic es S l o w of . ag ri cul T o th is m u s t be . : PTices in some way benefit a d d mp le xi ty Poorer segmentesd ofthenco th at e, ae ete
e n e f o ayve be that it is becoming more adequaOn te IondcomIte mle im ls po rt an t to to th en su e re fa rm i sustainabilit b i vestmentstsin arming sector so that in y can be made
:
d that theriseisno noroadroad otother than
Bit propaganda has got Conan regimes that for the ce ma : of oa % a i over the demise -cal sle sue of alternat:ives—and any really lly obje0D) c-
Bi prectseas any oon |
|
|
ry budgets as a source of funds: To ease th e pain of the redistheribu€
quired to brin 8 about sustainable e c o n o m i e s , a concerted etna ave to be made to identify sources
of the markelaystem=all
the exchange of eign of the ae i He! as the main me ch an is m e in th ee : e e m m a a rketis vices has meant that wie s ansac
net are thereby dealt ; oo ds an d se Al g l pu bl ic . a ion va , lu e. lac k Al © l p 2, jal co id he er si ed on , no t to have ; CO ns IB er un e: it ie s, SO c i c ca io lc ni ung c o m m clean air, clean water, Be s on om e do not enter ms me ee age,icand the
gumejand species ic ha ve be co me th e a luMs.eeUnfortun de li ve r) th e at mo re el y, va situation ec o becomest( and thewa len ss they ©4 id of the myth ta teliance on them seems af e e answers to gui iti er coencoomniocmsicshasmuast bei:n a aera
signs, however marginal, oF cai are a ca se in po in t Hazel Henderson
of surpluses for redistribution.
most obvious sou
. nvince
reativity if we were really br ofc and economic organization. Free c etwo; no alternative mode: f hand in the euphoria and gloating
10
aan dratkets, how accept
(1978 and
ated at a trillion dollars annually. Some , will say that wie
ing
ee erg
Mode
Mo
To return to the question o: 9 +t:
the a priori dec 1aes10n t ine eqt hat peaceful resolution of conflicts and e uitieicse.i be sought.
It I 1tag nomic dogma works ainst
has
Th ere is no real question as to which is th e p referre The shift to s ustainability is desir able, as well as necessary.
The “Religion” of Free Markets One
2
of the reasons
that the notion of “redis2 trib9 utio: n”
”
rece
attention is the quasi-religious attitude about the free na
ives S' o
nt ones Can: to inflict the damages that cu rre oste 1991) to the p
little
resent reality (von Dr :
e all th es e ye ar s of be brtoain of UN Sar rac congeners shouinldg ibs e without palan
in cr ea s ye market
ingly, “global competitiveness.” To raise qu es ti on s about t x (1991) indtis almost to be accused of blasphemy, as Je remy ma irc united cates. Seabrook—a strong advocate of the
With the fact that without eens OU Cooperation, without redis inability. AB" 4. Not achieve our goal of Debits di
Green RON or raised forits Kingdom—points out that the free market Syste ee ie es ich d elves
ie i
i
ivering
:
= ee i
“the
goods,” is separate
have % Ob invented conomies
icht
a siaaage distorted view of the worldin ee of is so
Rereegame onomiic ey ale mns/s0 Peault iey s OFs. ve “we ine dividual hoee
perfection.”
5
mehow cleansed: it becomes 10 ly flaw in
eT aay ane
global competitiveness imP €conomic st
the system becomes ! ing shaming contrast to its shin
ark et s for the nea r-r eli gio us fer vor ab eu ls t One of the main reason i tral planning systems over th pas ae
ict lis tear fais, structures is the dismal ee mi Cae ae Ha half century actually to deliver t e goods. ee ion ails would be a terrible indictment of human 1mag ee
isa ane
mplemen™
su
Tesult in entropy and venta on us
those
:
21 3
5
1
?
ructures. It is WP
derf
ical effi tec pnical
: M p9roductnaeion. B5 ut if dlo thengse t erm envi ronana dto £02 lone bly lead Social efficiencies and competitiveness will inevit@ ant tion dn oes eee
Iris
tyre ly
15
on ti lu vo Re al ci So a s e t a t i s s e c Sustainability Ne
s e o g it d n A . e c n e t s i x e r u o f o s n o i s n e m i d l a u t i r i p s d n a , l a n o i t o m lectual, e n o i t i d n both ways. o c e r l p a c i t i s r i c s a n o i t c e n n o c e s e h t f o e r a w a g n i e b , w e i v y In m to ke li d l u o w I . e r u t u f e v i t a n r e t l a , e l b a r i s e d e r o m a s d r a w o t g n e r o m for movi a to s s e m t n e s e r p e h t m o r f e s a h p l a n o i t i s n a r t e h t o t e assign a nam . s s e n d e t c e n n o C f o n o i t i n g o c e R f o e g A e h T : e r u t u f e l b a r desi Decision Time
e l p o e p r e h t o f o s d n a s u o h t d n a s n o i t a n t s o m d n a f o g s n i d t a e e e h m e ; l h a c t i t i r , c 2 9 9 1 a s a e w n u t I i t. In J m m u S h t r a E e h t r o f o r i d e f n a J e d o i r R o W in t n e a m m u h e h t w o h n o me
t ou e ? s Ar e i g o l o e c a l e a b o l g d n a l exiiksti ng political Bididusrss ciety and loca p al ci so m r e t g n o l r o f e t a u q e d a s n o i t u t i t s n I e e R n o D t a h w r o F ? g n i n n l i ts t e i c o s e v i s n o p s e r e r u t u f s l l a c ) 8 7 9 1 ( l e a h c i : t o n y l r a e l C ? g n i n ar n o oedwshaa r i S t fo s e r u o q j a m a s s i i h T e e deba te and one which ne Ng
soci
sed
attention.
Recooggnniittiion of Connectedne ss ra s si es dn te ec nn co c d an e c n e d n e p e : d r e t n i al ic og ol ec d n a f t s u m e ; w altity ? refe ll e oi nc ch ue l fl a u in d e r ace. Indivi e h w y r e v e e d a m s ce oi ch si ci De . s n es o di m bo m o c l na io global at rn te in or al on ti na by s e g : e e i a d a e t yp Eg s. ou vi ob e th influence the d n o of individuals far bey economi
Global
ae to s e d i c e d it r e v e e, ur lt what cu ri ag n ow s it of ty li bi na ai st su e th t u o b a e a b e d th e c n e u nd l f ou n ar s al du vi may be i di of billions of in to continue
re
e decisions
it em d an s el fu il ss fo ) e m u s n o c t no r (o te te sr rs Bo es rt aa Cu ’ t n u o c g in greenhouse ly wlo to st re te in ar ul ic rt pa of e su is ae ob gl If a. se e th near ce , ls ve le a se in se ri a to ad le ed de in es do e o by i a G ed oe nc ue fl in n be so al ll wi impact in eo s n a i t p y g E t. ea gr be uld a sh it t, de n ia op hi Et with wahnomSerie an it e b — d e h s r e t a w s it s re Wpant t co e Th n. da Su of t n e m n r e v o G e th or e i h e m A e er
world
e S ee owe
e e aes
ad ok
pen aay =
l ra ru ed at ol is st mo e th in er
Cseottminmogdiwiltly Exbe chffanecttet d
a St S. U. e th F, IM e th of ae the executive bodies ant
E
® s! ci de st di e es Th . y t i n u m m o C c i m o n o c E n a e p uro v? in r fo t n e m n r e v o g an available to the Egypti
Sica eee | ee ae eh Por
ieee
d
: h. rt fo so d n d a an , s e i t i d o m m o c of es e pric , al ic og ol ec , c i m o n o c e — res e h p s l al to s nd te ex n i i cognize that
re e or ef er th st mu e both space and time. W : dividu’ in at th ly on t no es nc undertakes influe
y an individual
” ec nn co ” o c s i . h T n a m u h n o n d n a n a m u h h t o exis iege: but those of others, b ’ e t n i e h t o t s d n 4 pe e ne: it ext
a l p l a c i s y h p , l a i r e t a m e h t n i s is not only
zs
o c o t s r a e y r o f e n o t e h t t e s e g n i y may hav r t e r a o h w e s o h T . e u q i t a m e l b o r p s k l r a o b w o l e g e h t with n e v n o c l a n o i t a n r e t n i t n a import s, maintainin n o i s s i m e s a g e greenhous t n i o g t o n l l i w [ . s e i t l u c i f f i d y n ot encounter ma et al: 1991).
f work out for seca so on D
a
fart
l l i e N c a M ( k o o b t n e c e r a n i 0 d o e n a o T t covere a h t t u o t n i o P s e u g a e l l o c i s i h d n a l l i cNe de-offs wil :
a r Ma t e g u h y n a m t a h t s i n o i t a u t i s ction. e r i d e istics of the v i t i s o p a n i e v o m o t wn e o r d a e y w l d n if i l b s i s a g n i b an ongoing g n i o G . y n t i i l i b d a n a p y a c l l l a a n c o i t j i l o p l a ; c t i a t n i r c a e m o c e b l l h i t w o b , l l a r o r o f s d n l e a r d e a e t d a l o t i t d a l e u l m l l i w ” t h g i r 0 is t migh ractiveness
t t a e h t g n i d n a t s h t i w t o N . y l l tiona v d a o s l a s r autho this and h e t s i e w e h e t r g a , . s I s eargarle” embeanrtgain
wou
¢ e h t s i e m o s y b y a w e h d t d e a d e e l e d a Wchgrnound an
e a © n e e w t e b ’ s u j t o n e d a m r e e b h t e h t w s u m e d i c e d s f f t o s u m Trade s r o g e t h n s t i e v v l n o i s e r s n r e i ci hei d
e t r e d n n e a c f irssel thee e
poli
a b n o o l i g t a d a l r g a e t d n e m n o r i v continued en have
tor
l l i w s n o i s i c e d y l u l a s n g o n i i t t a o N m o r . p l l y e l w e t s a a i d fnoeredtehde;m the costs of imme e v a h l J { s e i r t n u o c l l A . n e k a t r e d n u e b e t t s n i u m d n s a e c ti e d a r t e e r f l a b o l g e r s o d m n a w n o a h t r pe e h t a r , t n a w y e h m t ? e e w Choi t e made b
be t s u m & N ! y a ee t s d n a s t s o c e w l o a h t n e m n n o y l l a b tans o l e g , e 8 n e i d t u a y l m l l o l p be nta e t m s n u o m r i S v n e h r e o x e austibl
© n o i t u l l o p f o s t s o c e h t r o f e e t s y a t p n a w e W on who r e h t e h w o t a s a : y e m r o e n o c e l a ae wh r u r coais ctor and se
e S y e h t e s u a c e b s e i t i c o t n l i u o d n 4 e s n o i of mi s d on deci
ae
e s i m e r p s i is
n o i t u l o v e R l a i c o S a Necessitates
Sustainability
917
n i a t s u S : n o i t u l o v e R n e e r G e h t r e t f A . r e i b r a B . B d r a w d E d n . 0 a 9 9 1 , . R , s n n o o i d t r a o c i l b u P G n a c s h t r a E : n Conway, o d n o L . t n e m p o l e d i v s e n D o c e r R o f d n a e r u d t e l t u a c d p i U : t c e p able Agr s o r P n a m u H e h t o t n i y r i u q n I n A : . t r e b o R , r e n Heilbro . 0 8 9 1 , n o t r o N : n k e r d o r Y a G w . e s N c i m . o s n 0 o 8 c E f o d n E e h T ered for the 19 : s e r u t u F e v i t a n r e t l A g n i t a e r C: . l e z a H Henderson, , y t i C . 8 7 9 n 1 e d , r s s a e G r P r . o s h c c i n m A o n : . o Y c . N E , y o t t i C s e v i t a n e t l A : e g A r a l o S e h t f o s c ___— The Politi : e c n e d n e p e d r e t . 1 n 8 I 9 1 , d s s n e r o P y r e o h B c n A . i j : . i Y h N. s u k a Y : k o r z o Y i a T d w e N , s . u i y m g e o s l n i o W c r E e t e i P , s m ' i J d , l l l r i o W MacNe e h t d n a y m o e n o t c E n s ' d l r o W e h t The Mashing of . . 1 9 9 1 , s s e r P y t i s r e v i n Oxford U
of
the
“
‘
social
ecol
3°
t s i c s a of f o c e e h t , s s a i t s h r t n o e t e f e m r e mov
t s i c s a eee f o i n h c te Itis importan : l a c ma i g o l o c e e h t t a h t g n i of think Sustainability saab pti af é ic st ju l a i c o s f o n o i r e t i r c e h t e r o c s t i n i It does not. And that 55 cin co e su ; is is th t u o b a g n i k n i h t e s o h t f o . y n Insist that social justice be part of a : l l a m e r a s r e g n a d e h T . n o i s s u c s i d e Huge inequities could be ie ees th c i t a r c o t u a y b , t c i d e d n a e c r o f y b regimes in perio ds of eco nomiacintdaecilniende, as Robert Heilbroner (1980) has n I . t u o d e t n i o p
(e}
ate
decisions Sane
e th r e v l o o r t n o c p u n e v i g e v ie of the world, we ha
e e p . e c i e n nocrats, and
h , e s t t a r c u a e r u e b l b i s i our lives to inv
e P f o e m a g e h t y a l p o t d e r r e f e r p e v a e h h t i n t i a e v l i u s s m a u p c g c n a i e e b activecaolnldyimiennstihon of ulatxiiosnteonfcec.omImnodfaicttiewse hwahvilee been encouraged to
politi
n of our e do this b y those who benefit from our nonparticipation.
Utopia or Dystopia?
as ! n e d n e p e d — n a i p o t u S L Much O H N e e e y i e ) t n u d e r e p i re (o ways s r e h new I of and it is PACH hats human, of of a new type and nature. But this! Seat
Ee
Miatahumans, and between humans oe
area
ra im the through
sustainabil: of logic internal the through we work societies. sustainable creating
of goal the of on? the 0” societies plications utopian of creation the conscious
choices are between
r e h t o e h t n o s a d i p o t s y n d a i r a t i r o h t u a r o r e t s a s i h and, and environmental d References
, s k o o B e s o R k c a l B : l a e r t n o M . y t e i c o S l a gic o l o c E n a d r a w o T . y a r r u M , n i h c k o o B 1984. . Remaking Society: Books, 1989.
g n i n n a l P d n a n a l P to g n i n r a e L n O . d l a n Michael, Do Jossey-Bass, 1978. d n a s e h c a o c r p p A : t n e m p o l e v e D r e h t o n A . r o t i d E . c r Nerfin, Ma . 7 7 9 1 , n o i t a d n u o F Dag Hammarskjold rket: P.
a M e h t f o h t y M e h T Seabrook, Jeremy.
5
. 1 9 9 1 , s k o o B e s o R k c a Bl
c i m o n o c E e l b a n i a t s u S y l l a t n e m n . o r e i v r n E u t . d u n r F e B , e t n o von Dros m . 1 m 9 9 1 o C , O C S r E N u U O : s i r a P . t . n d pme ing on Brundtlan
World Commission on
i
1 , s s e r P y t i s r e v i n U d r Oxford: Oxfo
e
ie d n a s c i m a n y D n o i t a l u Pop l a r u t l u c i r g A e l b a n i a t s Su t p y g E n i t n e m p o l e v e D
1 r e t p a h c s i h t ma ae in i m a n y d n o i t a l u p o p n a i t p y g E n o p m i e h . i T ? m e t s y s e l b a n i a t s u s d n le a =
a stab e c o r p y e k e r a e r e h t ) 1 ( t a h t s e s from the premi e H n g i s e d e h t n i d e t a r g e t n i e st b
© " nace ics that mu e e w t e b n o i t a l e r e h t ) 2 ( ; t n e m p o l e v e d l a r 0 1 u t d e ae t a d i c u l e o n n a c dynamics
population
i m o n o c e d n a l a i c o s r e h t o n i oe n i s t n e m p o l e v e d m o r f e a e i e r d n a s e s s e c o r p e s e h t ) F & lized.
i t u r e d n u y l l a n o i t a r e p o d n a ped i e s r e v i d d n a e d i w s i t c e j = The sub ’ . t n e m p o l e v e d c i m o n o c e d n a m l i a i c s o e s u s f s o i s t c l a r u aspe t c u r t s d n a l a c i t i r c e m o t p m into focus s e t t a o N . g n i n n a l p d n a : v € y c i n l a o p F O o t t n a s v k e r o w tel e m a r f l a c i t e r o e h ic t t a f m o e t s y w s e i v e r a sive e d i v o is to pr an e s o p r u p y m , r e Rath
, s e l p i c n i r p of t se a t n e and pres e t a b e d y c i for pol as a basis
The dec , understandin
i ns, o i conclus
y t i l i b a n i a t s u S d n a s c Population Dynami
221
n r e t t a p r o i v a h e b l a n o i t u t i t s n i n a f o e c n e s e r p e h t n o t p y g E P I s a . tin I P I as d e b d e b b u d , e c n e r e f f i d n I d n a , n o i t a n i t s a r c A o a r P , n i o t s i n i s n i g c n e e i t d s n i e I x e n e o h t y b d based e t a u t e p r e p d n a , d e n i a t s u s , d e r b e g n o i e d b n a e , r n e o w i t a e c s u d e The , e r u n e t d n a l , e r u t c u r t s y l i m a f e h t , n o r i e g h i l t e e r h w f o , s e s y l a tutions n a s ’ a m u T m o r f , r e v e w o h , t n e d i v e t o n is ment. It e T e L p e th to s u o n e g o d n e OF s u o n e g o x e is r o i v a h e b pattern of Pal erent
e a a a i O e M 2 i l 1: 99 deyelopment. Richards (1 during the 1980s1s a result
of the 8
to y it il ab s t i i : e r a s d n a d n e o t i i g n e U r e e h th t m in o r e f l s o r r 0 l v a a c f i g t n i t c a i r * a i c i at t it i l o p s it f n o o i skillful exploitat & by ” nt re ic eg at tr “s at th on capitalize : States and the IMF. Agricultural transformation has historically pa
s m r o f e r y c i l o p implement
w no the of ce en ri pe ex e Th . th decline and grow indicates that the share 0
i
o c n i a t i p a c r e p s a output declines m o s y b n e k a t s a w n r e accelerates. This patt
r g c i m o n o c e r o f t n e opment as a requiremeems to evolve throug ‘ formation process s
fsten the In phases. such four specifies (1988)
a
sat
Investment in rural infrastruc tr,
bas failures market and mobility, ae ms, labor
been hampered by ree rural interrelated major “all integrate to ability la P markets—land, in bor : —i it l de l mo ra nt ru re he co le o ng nt si a —i it ed ne cr , ce : as am sr (Bin
g in er id ns co , ts is om on ec e m o S . ) 5 5 4 5 : 81 19 g i e w z n e s O a Sustainability as ergenerational equity, propose imposing
aaa
matter of int
e use of resources
current generation (Daly 1973).
and environmental systems by the
©” ected process of structural transformation or change during eee low-income tural economy to an industrial ur ban ae ac
us crea isa It s. proces tive disrup a is tion defini by e chang ural ae oyer of values (Goulet 1992: 467-475). It implies that vane t and an gments of the economy grow at different rates. It also implies significa?
af
st the of role The . change to ance resist the ize minim and shifts facilitating this transition can be instrumental, depending upon 4 comple
Egypt’s apparent failure to implement policy reforms has be
ously explained. Tuma (1988: 1185-1198) blamed the slow eco? os
; a nt me rn ve Go r. bo la d an Namely financial t pa s ow fl l ia nc na size and timing of fi
mation. The size and timing of labor flow®
gricultural transformation should be viewed as an integral pat of2g tfe
set of economic and noneconomic factors.
status, Each phase indicates the pattern oh erventi ence the
Systems of Agricultural Transformation : Q A
geographic, social, and economic mobility. Accordingly, population lose and others gain. During this process, pO institutional changes are required to reduce the costs of th
Ogies, agricultural productivity pe j d re er sf an tr is s lu rp su e th e, second phas ! ts ar st e as ph d ir th e Th s. or ct se al ur agricult tural sector into the new industrial econ ony fn becomes one of many sectors in the econgn ee
™ ™n ve go ct re di in d an by direct n io at rn te in -, €.g , es rc fo s ou en exog
an ? ur lt cu ri ag of n er tt pa l ra ne ge _ The is the dynamic nature of the process é h t th ow gr l ra tu ul ic gr na linkages to no mn : es oc pr e th , ry eo th stages-of-growth Movement from a primarily agrarié movements are viewed as histori dual-economy models, jumPS
th m is al du of n io at in im el e th
e fe r he ot e ar e er Th . et rk ma the 5 ate ae or government in designing str stress nutrition as a key objective
on maximum employment during! Johnston 1984).
9
ty li bi na ai st Su d an s c i m a n y D Population
me
r fo s e i t i l i b i s s o P s u o i r a V in h t w o r G n o i t a l Role of Popu 0-1980 6 9 1 , s e i t i v i t c u a Labor Prod
) e l a c s g o l ( t u p t u O l a r u t l u c i r g A f o t i n U Labor per AtL=(1.0)
~~ _ Technology
The Role of Populati on Dynamics
It 1S evident, then, that the rural population must undergo significant adjustment
during the ag Ticultural transformation process. Specifically:
¢
The number of a
gricultural workers per hectare (L/A) is re
from over 40 percent to below 15 percent of the total Jabor fore
The productivity of agricultural workers (Y/L) increases tela! to that of land (Y/A)
Rural fertility experiences a sustainable decline
nae
The result of this sizable geographic and occupational mobili ty 1s i Se flow
Hel
of resources between the agricultural and nonagr icultura neces The sectors are mutually supportive. The process, however, ae 4 gricul sarily smooth. It cannot be accelerated beyond the capacity i sectors 1° tural sector to develop; the capacity of the ees the labo! absorb the agricultural surplus labor; the mobility PEE ext ent © force to acquire new skills and move to new locations; an istori the demographic
Tesponse.
This pattern reflects ee
experience of agricultural tr ansformation, for example, States from 1880 to
1980.
ion
;
in the U8!
ited
I must stress that the path of agricultural transl e ie een uF States, and its implied role of population dy Pe or ci ie Structure of its resource endowment, technolo sia in Figure eo public policy. Clearly it is not the only pattern. om among populatio® six different possibilities exist, based on the intera c
1. i)
tpt In this, Hayami and Ruttan (1985) examine the rela l a Y r p u t t 7 u l u o c ‘ s ga ) y tural output per labor unit (labor productivit aSue:nd agric Z ulatio A jon of popuy
hectare of land (land
The eeeic interact g the process of agi
i labor outmigr: a growth and agricultural
cu
ene eo
bor Poe"aos -
Sole
2.
oa
“ pilsaiol a coal
deterioration
: W: change in raising yields,
IN atreelerendeeds
growth and density, available land, and the use of eee Beiween sos productivity).
7
-
) le ca -s og (l nd La of e ar ct He r pe Agricultural Output
oe
: j
3.
ulation grgrowth Population
land opening
faster than 9% ian roblems
[Z “technical change, plus
riean ereion ota
standards.
d
problems (>
policies leadiDB Sali
ae
Source: Based on Timmer (1983)
d Hayami
y
y Frontler
y t i l i b a n i a t s u S d n a s c i m a n y D Population 0 8 9 1 0 6 9 1 , t p y g E r o f s c i t s i t a t S l a r u t l u c i r g A d e t c e l e S 1 . 9 1 e l Tab Indicator/ Variable Agricultural output 4000 wheat units Number of male workers
in agriculture 1000s
Agricultural land area 1000 hectares Livestock 1000 livestock units
Fertilizer consumption (N + P203 + K20)
1000 metric tons
Tractor horsepower 1000 hp
Egypt: Early Stages
My pu
TpOse is not tod
population with experience Egyptian the and agricultural aormation, but rather to provide an outline for is : i t c e r i d p: lo ve de general l a r u t l u c i r g a n a i t p y g E in s d n e r t c i s a b s g n i Ment (from OCOPec s od ri pe at th g n i r u D . .1 19 e l b a T in n w o h s e r a 0) i agricultural output etric tons of wheal equivalent to Be ers) increased 7
stabilized see
m n o i l l i m 7 . 7 1 m o r f ae t r o w e l a m of s m r e t n (i s r e k r o w l a r u t l u c i r g A . n millio ivation
lt cu r e d n u d n a L . n o i l l i m 6 5. to n o i l l i m etd
om fr ly ht ig sl d e s a e r c e d k c o t s e v i l ; s e r a t c e h n o i l l i m 5 i m : n a h c 7 e m 4. s d r to a w o n t o s i t l p l m i e m t t a s 5.3 u o i r .7 millioa n. There were se 1 Egyptia: n agriculture during the 1960-1980 period: tractor horse zation on in a® th ” Or e us er iz il rt Fe 0. 00 9, 02 1, to 0 00 Po ere incr eased from 220, Bwe ee
) a e e th in is t p y g E t a h t s d n e r t y t i v i t c u d o r p e vo aan from thes r a l p o p 4 n e e b s a h e r e . h n T ansformatio
ieaiones
ie agricultural tr
Fe
ae force d
Number of farms 1000s
Literacy ratios percent
School enrollment Tatlos percent
Ruttan, 1985.
e p ) 1 ( : o t d e t a l They are re ps: i h s n o i t a l e l r a r o t c e s
e e oi s t n e m e v o M . y t i l i b o m c i h p a r g o e g f o s m r e t in y l n i a m ™ ? e e i n e p e d n i e b to m Egyptian | e e s uring the 1970s and 1980s
: p a h c e th in r e i l r a e d e n i l t u n o o i t a m r o f s n a r t l a r u t l u c i r g a pee process of e rc fo to d e t c a e r e v a h to rnment policies seem . Furthermore, gove ap of t n e m e v e i h c a e h t to d n a s s e c o r p n o i t a m r o f s n a ” p o exogenous to the tr l e v e d l a r u t l u c i r g a e ainabl
t s u s a r o f y r a s s e c e n , e c > s n o i t n e intersectoral balan t n i d o o g d n a ll wi d o o g e h t l al of e t i p s in ment. The result is that s policymakers
u s a s d r a w o t y r t n u o c e h t e d i to gu
® V ! t c e j b o is th s d r a w o t d a e l to d e t a n i d r o o c n e e b e s e c r o f ¢ policies seem not to hav s e h t e r a t a h e w n i m a x e must first e W . k s a t t l u c i f f i d y a l s u o i v b o is It n i a m o d e h t e c u d e r y l n o t o n that
of policy options
but also confus?
™ ” o i t a m r o f s n a r l t a r u t c u r m t s r e t g n o l h t i w s n o i t u l o s d n a s n o short-term acti
horizonta
growth in Egy f i s 4 r e t f a , s e t a r h t r bi 70s. This
1960
17,737 4,024
2,569 5,322 204
1970
23,713
4,839 2,843
1980 26,153
5,644 2,848
y t i l i b a n i a t s u S d n a s Population Dynamic
y c i l o P l a r u t l u c Agri
. ) 9 8 9 1 r e i h t e D . 8 . € ( t p y g E n i y c i l o p l a r u t l u c i r g a h t i w s a r o t c a f Many studies deal n o i t a l u p o p e h t f o e l o r d e t c e p x e e h t e n i m a x e c e j b o y My purpose is to c i l o p n e v e s s t s i l r e i h t e D . s e v i t c e j b o y c i l o p d e t a r e c u d o implied in the st r p on ct fe ef d e t c e p x e r i e h t d n a , m e h t to d e h c a t t a s n t o h i t a l u p o p f o tives, the weig e l o r e h t h t i w y l t i c i l p x e s l a e d s e v i t c e j b o e h t f o e n o N . s e c i r p
e h t f o e n o n d n a s s e c o r n p o i t a m r o f s n a r t e h dynamics in t deals with the consequ taxe ences to populati on mov heavily landless; the supporte d policies that finds Dethier agricultur al of transfer sizable a promote d and system, interacti ng househol ds; of farm income agricult ural-dem ographic all as e Examine d h t imcome: f o y t i l i b a n i a t s u s e h t o these policies would not necessarily lead t transformation process. Intersectoral Issues
Rue
t p y g E , s e d a c e d o w t t s the pa
aa. ;
e country is now
hi
—
, e v i t a g e n e m o s d n a positive a net expo:
4 s e c n a t t i m e r of with that ee a f o e r a h s e h T . e g n a h c x e n g i e r € of fo 29 1 (a
in t n e c r e p 19 to 5 6 9 1 in
t e th 1? e r u t l u c i r g a of e r a h s e h t in mer e n i a t s u s a of e m o c t sed as an ou 7 e u l a v al re e t u l o s b a e h t ion, in which e e l ta to e th in e r a h s substantially while its
es a c h a ps tO s e e m d y n a m i c s a p f r e s aS e n t The in the early 4980s)
declines.
e n v i s a g (a ed s economy 1
in the country (Wally
982). B
War, it seems to have takena
as a resource misallocation evenue, r l oi f o t c e f f e d e the combin
workers. The major ity of
many of th 2 M
are recent migrants.
This t ype of
different
mi
ratio of Egyptian total are
clearly
n io at gr mi the of cs mi na migrant and the dy 2 a orm nsf tra ral ltu icu agr y erl ord an in n ter pat expected
from th € y ilit bej stab of ad e th to ad le Process. Inste. y il ar ss ce ne d ul wo at th pe ty e th g in y n ma e r a t tha s al gn si e R e e id th ov pr of to to l ia nt te po e th s ha it 5 s, es oc Pr lead ; ; t a e, during ne ti policy Cy ini initiatives in conflict with this aim. For exampl mej a a5 ion rat mig l 1980s th ona ati ern int d P ate tre ly ial € governm ent essent ” nce™ itta Source of forejeign exch re m ma xi mi to ze pol ici es de ve lo pe d an d co i t n an ge e nd m a 2 At the sa y l l a n o i i erat me,
ceptually.
le ti
p o , k a e w s a w y c its population poli
about 127 percent
y t i l i b a n i a t s u S d n a s c i Population Dynam
229
. 9 8 9 1 , . C . D , n o t g n i h s a W . y c i l o P g n i c i r P l a r u t l u c i r g A f o y , m o o e n m i o m c E t f a r D : o r i Political a C » . s i s i r C f l u G e h t d n a n o i t a r g i M r o b a L b a r Fergany, Nader. “A .” World Devel-
1992.
: p o l e v e D ‘ Goulet, Denis. . o N , 0 2 . l o V , 2 9 9 1 opment,
'
p o H s n h o J : e r o m i t l a B . t n e m p o l e v e D l a r u t l u c i r g A . n a t t u R . W . V d n a , . Y , i m a Hay , e r u t c u : r t S n s, o es i Pr t c u d o r P kins University d n a t u p t u O l ta To : s n o i t a N of h t w o r G c i m o n o c E Kuznets, S. t i s r e v i n U d r a v r a H : . s s Cambridge, Ma
Lewis, W.A. “Economic Deve
chester School of Economic an Economic Literature,
as ty li bi na ai st Su B. Norgaard, Richard nd Practice. _
aes : i i that must be combined € export industries ae brats intensiv \ ina wigortan Feria graphic transformatio li li publ example,
oo ait Hono (aimed rewards SHE om individual ¢ MAy We remittances)
attracting at migrants’ ' enterprises national encourage that those 2 labor-in initially, export, high ultimately, and, services, and goods ensive A value-added products. 0" essential clearly is policy population vigorous of success the long-run 7 of such an integrated policy package. eee a of an efficient market is clearly necessary ee - e BE (ee Fic eee
ne
nsformation process. We must, however, 1 ealize that ions to relying fully on market solutions. References
t n e m y o l p m E , s t n e m e g n a l r a r u A t e r, H.P., and M.R. Rosenzweig. Contrac Binswangge l u c i r g A ; rk ew. New YO and Fees W.nage ini Rural Labor Markets: A Critical Revi
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h c i l o P g n i c i l r a P r u t l u c i r g A d n a , e t a e R g n a h c x E , e d a _ ap Tr ~ ~ : s e i d u t e S v i t a r a p m o C k n a B d l r o W . y d u t S y Vol. I, The Countr
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, ” a s a v i n i r S N , e g n Cha l a r u t c u r t S of ns r e t t a P “ . e h s o M N . T d n a y Syrquin, e n e h C Hollis
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i t a l u p o P f o t n e m Depart 1991.
20
d n a l a t n e m n o r i v n E f o n o i t a Integr t n e m p o l e v e D e l b a Sustain l a r u t l u c i r g A n i s n o i s n e m Di s i s y l a n A y c i l o P d n a g n i n n Pla y a h s i B . K Fahmy g n i p o l e v e d f o A majomaj r challenge to the populati ons en be s ha pove tty and create material abundance as
a3
; e l b a n i a t s u s , al ur lt cu ri ag y antl
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. ss re og pt ic : om on ec r ei th to l ia nt se es g n i z i m i x a s ofm
ural dev3 elopment is a proces
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be more accurate god ae ed in the macro and/o ye to be taken Provements in the coefficients utilized ortant factors ha Tn actual planning
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237
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in Planning
n P. olicy and
26 9
t t a n ” g e n s i e t h t s u a ; e h o s x a e b “ r o t e c men r u o s e r l fects on the ae mee do a r u e a n f e a e h v h i t t i o t s o t p n e e r m d o n n m e e t v a s legume coun , pi in lo op ve el de all st mo al in ; tk ae e ee
subsidies are wi idespread 1
d ie if st ju y ll ua us technologies
onth
5
ao an
e id ov pr ey th at th e e p a basis d an ans pe om , ts pu in D rn de mo w ofne , the use of associated estabare schemes subsidy input i tion for low prod ucer prices. Although fixed low, for farmers lished to enhan ivi and compensate
commodity pric = prod eee and latter the accomplished not have they etany whi agriculfrom income of esult has been a transfer : o t l a r u t l a r u t l u c i r sectors g a n o n n o s e i c i l o p e c i r p f o n e d bur new the In Egy of pt gypt, an analysis was made input alt hou gh that ed l a e v e r e s i c r e x e the agricu e h T . 0 8 9 1 r in e c u d o r r p o t c se ‘ e th l a r u t I , n o i l l i m 7 0 4 E £ g n i h c a o r p Subsidies p a t e n , e g e r h a T l . n o i e l l i e m m 7 8 9 E e £ o t g n Price a i t n u o t m u a p n i , e r h e t g r d a n l a n o e i l e l i e m i 0 8 a 5 E e h £ t u o b a s a w burden on t n r o o t c e d s e s l o a p r m u i t l
u ” c x i a r t g “ e m h t o c f o t n e c r Subsidies e p 1 4 y l n o r o f e , e v a a h e s n o i e t r a l e r e s e agricultu h T . y c i . l s o 0 p 8 9 1 e c d i ' r p d i h m g u e o h t e e c b n i s d t e p t y a i g t n i n o in Eg i m s a m r o n o f i e t r a i e concili se of pric
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Shows t
n o c Price pooeli l failure to effect ively form u d n a n o i t c u d a i o t r i p n i hat an i[ nable a t udgetary i
i € S 0 t : s a l l n e w s a Ptio , t e m t o n i e , r a r h e c v i e h w w o H i . e s r m o e f l d b n o a r p e g , n n a o i h t c a r x e e d i tak n g ns Sumptj
o c o t n i s a r n o r t e c t a l f a : f e o s e s t i f of th: e n l e l b d n a s , u s s t s r i o o t c f s e s v e , i s In c t i c l a o p p m e i c i r p he t l a r u t l u e c i r g a f o r the S i e t h r t o p f o p u s n o n i i t a y t i l y i b i d e r c tural de lopment. r d o o c p a l a y n t o i i u t n u i t e t i t n s o n c i ) I 1 ( : e d u l need for c in to
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in most prices for very few producer e s u s d n a cotton
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a r g o r p s m e m u s a j d a l a r u . 0 t 1 c u r : t e s h t e , h t p y g E g n i a ith t d u l c n i , s e i r t n u o c g pins evelopin i
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Institutitional Reform for Sustainable Development dev el agr Eff icu ect ltu ral ive n su atu st ral ai na ea re bl d e m a e an calls for a and pl ann an in ni ng tur al agr icu of l ecentralization ian policies. An FA O study (1988) on the subject identified many advantages j gov ern st si as o T of institutiona . n o i t a z i l a r t n e c e d g emphasizin
n i a t s u s r fo n o i t a z i l a r t n e c e d l a n o i g e r f o s s e c o r nopatarlineraal ae the p me FAO document
e w in s t n e m
able
a s e h t , g n i n n a l p t n e m p o l e v e f o t e s a d e Beiblish . e v i t c e j b o is th e v e i h c a to s e n i l e d i u g l a n o i t a r fo s e l p i c n iia ERB eo eae i r p l a the following gener
strengthening
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that:
insti
ecentralization,
n o e c n e r e f n o C n e g r e B 0 9 9 1 e h t at d e s s u c s i d — stitutions
y l p m i s e l p i c n i r p e s e h T . l u f e s u o s l a e r common Future—a
e v a h s r e s u n e h w y l t n e i c i f f e e r o m Man y natural resources are manag ed e r a s e c r u o s e r ty r e p o r p 9 n o m m o s c s d l u o h s seactu el oeeaioh rights. Open-acce s t n e m m e v o G . y l t s n e i c i f f e n i d n a y l e v r i e s v s o e c x s e t h d g i e r t i y o t l ' p x i n u y e m m o c : d n a l a u d i v i d n o i t h d c a i e l h w t a o h t t t n s y a w n i exami: ne the exte d e n e h t g n e r t s r o d s e i r t n u o C . na establishe be use. can their 1n resources sustainability Pesicy and i efficiency, oon pean scope of the mark Panding the, Taw. s and environmental regulatto b N onin u i t c n u f e h t i s a b r o f a basic precondition cE : establish rules t a at make them responsib: or financial subsidies.
li cei e c i r . p s t c p u u d o r g p in d o o f c i g e t e a h Se policies ree wee ee on str s u t l u c i r g d a l r o w e th e of l r a a i h s t n a t s b ge a su uced
in the
da very,
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. 0 9 9 1 Agricu : y a w r o N ainable , n e g Ber t Sus in an s e v i t e c r e u t p l s u c r i e r 07 Ag ssues and P
FAO. “I
e c n e r e f n o C s d n a l r e h t e N ment.” FAO,
p!
f
Bahe
i
, s r 3 e f i u q a d n u o r g r I. e d n u . s f d , n o a s l e i r g t n n l u a i o n p c i m g r g a n e i a p o l f e o v e d n e o h i t t e c In e u S d o . r ds n p a i s i valic’e h c e i t i s y e = s i e i d Me import subsi ater, the
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ct as implicit
l o y l a n tio r o t s i d r i e h t e u n i t n o c o t e u l a v ountries r e v o , e Meanwhil
h t e c u d e r . s e i c i l o p e ce they s o h t f o t s o c e acti
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me: o R . 1 t n e m Docu tio. a z i l a r t n e c e D if
NeaRee
d North Africa.
. 8 8 9 1 O A F : e m 73. Ro c i r g A f o e l o R e n Thorbecke biaa. UIniversity Press, ‘Colum
241
2] Food, Jobs, and Water:
F
a r fo ce an rn ve Go d an e e m : : stainable Agriculture in Egypt s d r a h c i R n a l A
y t i l i b a n i a t s u s e h t n s o i d l n i e b p a e e n r d i u a t t l s u u c s i Thewider wee of Egyptian agr i Ci r o n i s 1 e r u t l u c i r g A . s t n e m p l o a l n e o i v t e a d n f o s h t o f i f a n a e h t R s E s e l e h g t n f o i
t u b i i r r t g n A o c . e c , r y o f m o r n o o b a c l e e h a t e f s o t r o d p r i h t e n and ex o g n t e i y y o l l u f p n m i e a p 4 d n g a n i o e g e r e e d d n e u t a s i c o | h c i h w y m o , n culture is e o v c i t e r o p n a p u s n i y iall with
5 i r e p y r a Necess
t n e s s e e h t f o e s u a c e B e . h g t n i r u , t y c m u o r n t o s c e e r l a n o i t a a n n e a h h t n i e r Tather t u t e l h u t c i f r o g a s s f e o c c u s e l o e r h t n , o g n i d a e s d n e t p i e l d i b a n e i r a u t t s l u Su c i r g a n a i / t y of Egyp structu derway.
E
n u s s e c o r p t n e m t s ral adju
s n a e m s t i d n o y e b g n i v i l a been sted more than it saved,
r e s e h T , d oy e v i e c e r t i e n v a n h i t t i e r , o Ts m t n e p h s c i h t w More th n e m n , r s n e o v i t o r g o t s i e d h T o r c . d i l m o s e v t i i s n a a v r e p y . ated b *
.
b r e c a l x a e i c o e s r e g w n i s d e n e nic s a l y b a b n m o i thw e efficient resource allocat y r o t a l u g e r i e h a T . s r e m u s n nd co Macr
O1
a u s e s R r e c . u r d o o t r c e p s e t a v i r inesars p e h t n i y l r a l u c i t r a p t t a a r a p m o c n o i s t ' c t S p E y g E m o r f r a f y r e v e r e w n ae # m 4 d e s o p s p a g l a c s i f fin ee ationa
n e h t f o y t i l i fi ab Pp e r e w s p a g e h t , s i s y l a n a m o r nal f ? s o T t b rnational de
ments: inte
U
o t , 0 8 9 1 n i US$21 billion at was
h W . 0 9 9 1 n i crisis ™ 2 r e g r a l r e v e consumed There
essential
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ili
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245
for Sustainability Participation and Governance
to r he et wh en ev d an e, er wh , en wh w, ho t ou ab s ce oi ch n ow r ei th ke ma
En . on ti ac ve ti ec ll co of rm fo me so in e at ip ic rt pa to or et rk ma a enter e: iv ct fe ef re mo be to is ce an rn ve go if y ar ss ce ne so al is n io at ip ic rt pa ed hanc , g. e. , es ti vi ti ac r ei th of s ct fe ef e th t ou ab n o i t a m r o f n i ed ne rs to administra e. iv dr n io ot om pr rt po ex an of ct pa im the on The Challenges
ht ig he d an ce an rn ve go ed en th ng re st Structural adjustment, including e th of s e g n e l l a h c e th t e e m to is t p y g E if l a i t n e s s ened participation, are e 1990s and coming decades. Egypt faces many challenges, but noné © a
! i p a n c a m u , h bs , jo d o o f e of s o y h t t n i a l h i t b more critical to sustaina
e o p e l a y ° W s e g a g p n i w o l l o f e . th n formation, adanjdustwmaetnetr, coinmsperrovvaetdio goveInrnance, and enhanced participation tural
Struc
c 4n contri. bute to meetin: g these challenges. Food Securi ty
for
food
, ta pi ca de of h t w o e e d : oth of income Pea 6° e e. Th ur t Firs , consider the food security pict mand
S upon the rate of population grow" food.EL Ting the the income elasticity of demand for
depe nd:
pelo dev al ur lt cu ri ag , th ur Fo n. io at uc ed e en Ment can make an ae portant contribution to alleviate the employmea! problem
by
and services.
stimulati
ating the demand
for off-farm, labor-intensive goods
sector. Howeve:
ieee
try, and
: of the Egyptian economy; uei sustainability
privat? the for role greater a requires services, the
that mean not does this that realize to essential is fee government © Or should be given a weaker role. On the contrary eens
publicuecen
ae
gro
pnd n lio mil 12 ut abo n: tio ula pop its to ro” Cai a d Race m 62 st lea at be l wil re the 0 200 r yea the eed. By ann w gre ita cap pet P GD ” ro. Cai r the ano (nearly) “yet 3 eae from 1980 to 1989, with mos © decade; the growth rate of GNP per me inco ld Shou 1990. to 1986 from Year a : :
Be of rate ent curr its above was far better duri ng 4 grew t l.well resp utpu Supppply a ar). ae iG onse . 5 2 19 From u lt cu ri ag 79 to 1990, Egyptian year, while food production rose by 6.5P ercenl a
(and agricultural) development requires 4 stronget
Agricultural prod ov ab , ly ve ti ec sp re t, en rc pe 23 d an Poona
r o f use sae noe ). This is an impressive performanc® buiee nsion OF
Consider the fact that, despite the imp vene to 19
tion—which more than doubled oon unchange Continuing population increas?
eee e Government of Egypt needs to stop doing things ie id or can do better. In this way the government can focus ee
doom any plans for national se
pes eee
Products,
.
th
! cap er oe ) nt ce r Pe 0 (3. on ti uc od pr al re ce of te Ta P h” uc od pr od fo d an uction
Role for the Government
There is c dane gee
1
otf B fulfill. can alone it that functions those oane ep ak decentralization imply greater participation by the cll nd
private world of markets and voluntary associations, peoP le
Security lies through diversified,
Participation and Governance for Sustainabilit Y) With
add
j r u d i T s b o J 1 o b a l e h t 9 © 9 1 e h t d 8 e 1 c u I p © red m i s f I , s O . e c r o f , n e e k e o t l Y , PI r g e a i O n e v u e f p o s l 2 e o t n o i 5 i t . p 1 n Sy Pan labeor f Orce Was ap llio i m tp Toughly 40 a e r a t , a D ust be fou a 1 e a a e b o i s ‘ omre ust be c Oy d e t a e T t s i t N edu r e b O y To
n e f i e ee jobs myn r t ; e s i T St j Teation
million
Just to
ke
D
Durin ig
990 th
D
the
: 1990s
o l p m e n u P © i f i n g i s d e C C 0 5 y l h g u a e h m t n n e e h v t € S I e r o s i h T decade: e n a ‘ l a e r s s e l n , u d i p a t a T h t e r s o e i l e P h t f i n g a y t l s n O l l i w s e g a fe) ae d e h t f o n i m o h c t w e O h t T 8 g n ] i a r e r u d e t th a n a h t d s Pply can i p e a r e r n o o M t i S 1 d n o a a c t s u s y l e b s i a r n i a s e g a t W n e m y o n l i p m m o e o l 8 BR 8 1 a 80, which is a r e n n a c n e e t f i s f ’ y a d t s o a t e l t a s r a e t e l b e a l a a s s h k n a l e e e h t e tHe c r e o W t e c r o r o o o c e h n i t ure “Be was
Temune
Tation f
aSserist
b
n i n w a P S ,
’
n i c i f i r c Sa
b
| r e v e t a jobs
l a i c i f i t r a g&
id stuibeine
0 r a r e o f S a e I U M e M e n O o { r e v i O c o e t s o e d n L a e A € p halh e t i s i o t ‘ 6 7 e 9 e 1 r c m l o r s f D O e J e n t a s S i h T o . d ) n 9 e 8 a 9 1 e . r o the public es ect
saS
Was on
e s e h t e c N I
n i e a i e l i b a n i a t s u s a t as no ‘ment strategy,
;
Se job
y the mid: h t is of d-19g
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e d a e r e w d c s n D a O p J x e o e t u n i t n o c if
the Gulf states
I ai Oosn, twhaes oielm R t o n d l u o c , o o t , , they
ution t oemplo
) 4 1 9 9 1 s d r a h c i (R
aS
e n i w a e s e i r u t l u c i r g a e m a r a f e h n t i la Or d s s a e ( s a e r re c: recesnltamimnecd shut) have ty-oe has a,tiornathsearfea r g 1 s d e g n a e w n v i w e T O e e e e = B h s c a e : h M n o . i t t n e a NiZa m y o l p m e d e d n a p x r o e f l o r r d a l f o s o t i o t y a l d p e o d t e e e r c u o t r l u p c y as “shock i agr a bsorber ” The
d
€mand
for labor
5
durin gslum ps.By 1990 their hihistoricIal peak of Agric
$
Gh Gl 1S giin ng g, orTg
:
labor
in
booms
and
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labor
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3
b E K C d N l u o c e t a o h t H housing, f s d e o o r g o d n a ! , e s r u m t i n e r u s a e l i at , r o duced — s a e r a l a r u r ” P o l e v e d e r u t l u c i r g a “ n a h c u S t n a t r led o . t ment p y g E n i , 2rOwth” b ies bast) (Adelman 1984) could be an imp
complement to the
i
uman Resources
;
F i l i b a n i a t s u s o t e t u a b i r r t a n o C c d n a e c t a c e u d e eopl e n i s s a h e n b o i u t a o r e n f e o g t s s a e p i c a e u h t q e d a g n n most serious i to provide all Egypti policy duri e t a l e h t n i y l n O e e r u l M i a f e s a b e h n t been the o i w y l r s a n e a n i ; l o o e h c e s b y r l a l m a i r p y n l i r a e d n e l l r o o r n e , l l a e y e ji r , 1fo9u8r0tsh wofegirls are still not e ™ P y B E y l t n g u a n h i s a e r c n i l l i w y c a g e l s i h T e l b a ‘ . d e e b r t e s d r u o m t i , s n n e i z t i t r : i o c p x e s t i t s u y m o l p Ge eypt in hee a to feed and emEgyptiaF ns must produce quality locompete ket thematioo: o marketplace. technoloPeopl
w e n f o e r a w a attcles and mar e b t s u m y e h T . y l l u f s s e n w o h s s a = h h c r a e s e lg es, and adopt and utilize them effectively. Economic r e r o m e r a pt e l p a o r e i p l a d c e t a c that, ’ in a agri , u d i © f i H eco nom © y, the t u in o l a i r els ewhererce is poor mate culture as o f k r o w p e P t a r e l i . y n . g A e t a r t t : r s o h p x e ev d J‘ led growt o m m e v o i c s bor-inten
a l e c u d o r p . o n T o i e v t i i f u t r e t s p n m i o s i c g n t i o d r t c s u G r t s n i s i e t O i , 0 ities a | s e r e i h r t t o n h u t o i c e w e t t g l e u a p d w a m f o w o o t l n e c 1 r e p 6 5 y to cons; l h g u o r n e h e r w a P , 5 8 9 n 1 u o n c I . n s a e i t nside s a A r y c e a m r o e s t i r l o f r i s e e r u h g i r f t P r g n i d n o p s e r r e o c ; t n e i c r EBgeysptpliwiae ns were illiterate, the e p 13 ; a S t k n a n L e c ‘ri r e p 0 m 1 a n t e i V e d s ; ( e e P t ; e ° i t r n t e n c e r e p 2 a i s e China 31 sere n o d n I d n h a c i , h t w n e c , r a e e p r o 7 K 2 a d , i n n s a a y t a w o l i , a n M untries— Ta nt; Singapore k 1 c-
a o f e c u s n a e h T . m ) 9 91b i e v i s n e t 1 n i r o b a J n i n o i t i t e p m o c e h t e r e l a r a e — ar d a e h a r fa e h y t d a ! n i fires n a h r t r e t i o t d e M e e th e l c to e t a r k e o s o e o l l S c l a c i d a r 0s. To g 9 9 n 1 i o g e r e d n u s e v l e E ur s m e h s S t ( s e i a r t a n u o a c E O a d Bent) a n a y c a r e t i l l a s r e v i n u y l l a p c i i u p q y e t o t e v s t a r h o f f e s u o u n e r t s skills. E ey have to make Ban
Meet cas
will
e g n e l l a e h s c n e t n is i
m o r f t n e c r e p 3 n 4 e l l a f d a h s e g l a a r w u t ae agricul
be n are likely o i t a s e n r o b c i o t j o u t b i r t indirect: : providi : 4 { g n i s i r h c i h w i e r s o u f l u m i t ing s 2incom, l e a h i t r t s u d d n a i Is g n a h c x e . t o v t i s n e e t v n i i g r o b a l e a r o f paging d n a m e d m o S . s e c e i v U r e s ©, Nd l a r u t c u r t pps di in l u f s s s ndicate tSheatri succe sstul S n o i t a l u m i s e€ : d l u o c E t n n r e u m t s 0 ret u 2 an agricul J i t p as y g e l o r l a c i r o t s i ex porter (Khed h s it to e r u t l u l u f s i a r s e c c u s By , s e m o c n . ) i 9 8 9 1 ’ . s al r e m r a t e f r g n i s a j d e a e v o Y r p m i . l r a o r f u t c u r d St d n a m e d e h t . Justment coul E S A e pro” ulture’s
A main
; t i l i b a n i a t s the foreign exch ange and jobs which long-term su pile g
h bot e id ov pr can e on al h ic wh , port-led strategy
Egypt’s total water supplyP 55-56 6 bibilllliion cubic meters
for th er year. Deevel
p o l e v e d ve ti " e v a t S n a i r a p i e r l i N e l i e N u l B e h t of on g ti n o m a to r e t a w i t i of sy u r P ani d sharinatg least ten years: Indeed, it is ea : ts ec oj pr n o i e e ef fect for n a i p o i h t E d e s a e r e e c s n e i r o f h t e i h t w a p # , e l p m a e x e e r o f . ’ , n as a d u s d ments, ds
e l d o h n a p x t e en y l t a e r g g n a F O in , s e ? c e r t u a w o s e r of y l p water p u s e th d e x i y f l l a c a i s a b is g n i m is u Th s s a e a s e t a t ” c d i e d t a c i t s i h p o s dence e r o m t a h t s w o l l o f It . e r u t u f gypt able
E l al of nt pe 7 80 n fs S é o ¥ ic l a v P l a i c o g s n i o g n e o h t T e m a g n i z i m i t e p o e n the key iltoity of the agripcueletural chars!
responsib DER
wala ae
pi
ee
, d n a h e n o On the
247
249
ty li bi na ai st Su r fo ce an rn ve Go d an n Participatio
in ic pr i if c op i f cr i c e p s of m r o f e r e the late 1980s) and by th e o g n i i t c a r e t n u o c e m o s e e it ere ae
ich
‘in _
. i i n pe o i t c a r f a y l n o e ar s t u p d n e i vels, since purchas
s ct fe ef ch su gh ei tw ou s se ca st mo in i ll l i wi s se ea cr in i e ic e c i r p pr t u p t u o ut tp , ou ts, cos e t a s n e p m o c t o n d di s e i d i s b u i s Furthermore, , t there isi evidence that input :
;
for output
cots
|
It . ) 0 9 9 1 r e i h t e D ( s 0 8 9 1 y l r a e d n a s 0 7 9 1 e th e h t , r e v e w o m incomes. H
r a f e s i a r d l u o h s l l a h m t s o b e s u a © c e B i . s m s i r d a f f e o b e z i y s a m e h t s t c e n f o f e g n i d n e p e d , r a l i m: i , s t c u d o r p y r i a d f o s e l a s d n a t e farmers de k r a m r o b a l e h t n o p u e O e h T . n u r t r o h s e h Pe are teh co t n i t n e m t s u j d a l a r u t c u r om st ose frae s a , x e l p m o c y r e v , se ur co of r ger lon -Tun, are,
s ct fe ef s l l i u q al , run rt sho the tO minecctant in t Bu d. te op ad are es gi lo no ch te w nt ne me st ju ad u l wo ura uct str of ts fi ne be the conclusion the t tha be seem to
are
a di Tec t functij on
of
farm
SIZ (S
Participa tion
e t o p n e h t is t n e m t s u j d a t l a r u t c u r t s r o f y c n e u t i Siderable: > O & many a5 perhaps (and million society f arm7ers Stan ver one-half rural : ‘ a n T n a i t p y g E , e r o m r e h t r u F t n . e n i i l a c g n o r t to a p “ of a ” , e g exhibit a v a e l c l a c i t r e v “ of s m o t ymp Ships ; The
Tr
ural
consti
IPs, in whi
w o l l o f s r e m r a f r e r o o p the n e p e d n e t f o r m the poo
Neighbors ine who acute need O
e g u S s n o i t a r e d i s n o c e s s ” 7 0 1 e h T r o f . ) 6 8 y 9 1 c n e ams u t a i g t a lar ge, relati r s o n n o u c y l l a e i v t i n t e a t l e o : r p d , e r p e p v a 5 e t w o r n e h e m t d , JUs n @ r a u ” s O F y r e l m e r a v r e attihe countryside. F h t a r s i n o i t a p i c i t r a p hized, ae l a politic
de
f o e t a r r thei
r p l a c i t i l o p e h t n i s r e m r a f y b n o c n o n t a e b s r f u f o t n ta d e z i n a g r o l l e e, w
Patticipati
g r a l . t n e h e t m t s u i j d a l a ShortT-hreun we from structur c Is
n
Io
i t r a p d e c n a h n e y b n o i ntribut
e a e e a s i l i b a St
limited t
s u j d a l a r u t c u r t s d n a e e ! m e e n s Winn a w t n e m t s u j d a l a r if structu
ste
™ se lo e r o f e r e h t l l i w o t d n y t a i l i , b y a g a g i s l ' t n pavt e m n r e v o g e h t s e c redu justment also
uy 0
ybe 4970s) strongly
: 0 1 t p y g E f o t a h t g n i n d o u l c n i ( e r y i r f o k t c s a i b h t l n wil and rece ! s s e r p e r ed
Structu
i
r e m fi y n a of e m o c n i e h t e s i who is a r d l u sho t p y g E in t n r e o f n i e r is b n a o l e i y t f u o a b u T l a v e i d e h t s : e or r o the dec]4j inneet j i r bor costs Phe ble cos
ral adjustment
€ 1n la
a i r a v f o f l a h r e v o ere often
s a e r c n i t a h t ” Suggests t s u j d a h t r o y f c n e u t i t s n o c a d l bui i , e t u o r e n O ? y m o n o c e e l b a n i a t s u s a r fo r r g h c u e s in l r a e j f f o M to P reared c reform, nomi s e l b a t i v e n j N R d n g b e th t o T To economic adjadujuss tment . ssary # e c e n is t n e m t s u that adj
he more eas!
Participation and Governance fo r Sustainabilit 'y
251
i criti the of e rn mpl gove exa for one d but nee is This ical crit e ae Piste ae managerial infra Wi SD ; weak is re uctu astr infr the if ly per pro k wor ee n oa oly a rap y, nom eco l ona ati ern int ve iti pet com Bone is requie ae mucom and on ati ort nsp tra ent ell exc ns mea is Fe tion syste a BE: public works5
aoe ae
e
for n isio prov its with nt, pme elo Dev for d Fun Social
iminfrastructural combine aa for the poor, can and sustainability to contribute Both poverty alleviation.
effective governance
n oe arkets v will
work
at all if information is absent: none of the ;
its of markets obtain in situations of poor and highly :
tic ro al to le pl in ay : cri a ve skewed acce ha s nt me n. Govern io ss to informat n tio ina 5 sem dis and : t c ion e l l o c a t Providin nformation to all. Rapid da
g such i
n o i t c n u f c i l b u p itical
i d e t a e r c e b o t s i y m o n o c e e l a b n that mu st be greatly strengthened if a sustai r e h t a g t n e m n r e v o g e h t t a h t a a l g a c i t i r (Klit c s i t i s , t i e r u t e l t u a c r i e r l e g c a c a n I y l t a i e r a g c c s a e l l e w s and Ti a n o i t informa h more to
c t u e m k r o a d m t s u a m d t n n a e m n h r c r e a v e o s G e T a . s s e a i t f i o v i t t h c g a u o h n t o e i b s n y e a m i s t i h a t c u : d n e o i t a l u p o p Talse the e h t f o e h t l e v f e o l l a y n t o i i l t i b a ca p a c g n i s s e c o Public j Nvestment to raise the information Pp r | y N ure. t u f s ’ t p y g citizen E more vital to tizens
i s c i g n e i m h o s t o N , . n N © ty matter how well markets fu nctio behi ind. The Government of EgyP t is commit m Saf e m rest
o o p y r e v e h t r com asiefo Proper functioning of the s Hones c u r t s f o y t i l i l sustaina b
hae bees
thespeniticay publi or n 1b) ic sectSua
BE agers, one and constraint” et taint”: ernment wz, it that
a credi
(1) great! ee things: ; e right to fire worker ;
orm can succeed
th Y €ctive in its roles as the tax
He eee as the regula
authority, fhe a8 and en sustainable A agriciined authority. onetary set decades coming sophistthe n high! technologically a cated, requ 5 stron, nat and the over administration tal mono if Tesponsive, of the banki
system.
yaa Me and irrigatio” the of sections main nch-canal the poly of
e h t f i y l n O . e cliv o t s m a r g o r p implement iae
r a t i n a m u h e h t real aaa can for
. ” e m p o l e v e D d n u F l a i c o S ‘ed. The ts it 3 f i y l n o t , u y b t i l i b a n i a t s u s s o t n o i t u b i r ont
oe
ic Oe thee as ean ‘i Baie a rescue not ae weak A Structural several the go Weaken pacguner, aay itt cannot ae aes a Or py adjustment structural ibis manele Per sconaynte macr strong structural requires aoaEconomic refo justment brig econ only i comes more eff,
Siz ae
the politica n e m e g a n a m e h t t u b , d a o r b a me. from i u q n a c t n governme
Notes
e Unite2 d
own country, th for its ay r yO ;m or vi p to ginning be h behavi¢ c u s n i e n w o o n l a is , nn ! e e b ly d r a h P y g E s a e h k i l t p y g 1. E , d n a diy a b as t s u j d tates, has behave:
S
previous excesses-
2. That is, d= e,e=ine
The differe
€xplained “trenuous
d
ced
© cotton,
©mphasize
efforts
Owth
may
q h e r i n t h hat i s creasingly area, effort Y e t l h e ange C u r r e n t 80Vernm s that are tight budget ent has Mad the more i a Constra 5. The lit e m p i r n e t s s eraty ive 8iven th Chapters i Vast. The n Dornbuse e t c h i a h n e d r 6.A furthe e : H e l f o m l e l r o s w s Norton r ( 1 C 9 a 8 v 8), eat must May enjoy (1987) and t be mad the benefit h e S o Structural s of past me Wealth y farme “Ten “Seek djustment. ing behay i n d See the €x 4 8 T O 7.An addi e x p o j r t e r a s T m , ” p l tional j es discus a n d stand sed ; n and T economic €: “cultural P role of Islam or Politica] o l ) i m a y Tefor, matter more tics” (i.e, the to people than
References
» Richard H _Jr. Develop meny and S Syracuse ocia University
ics in Mubarark ’ s E g y p t , Z ” s i e C a g o n t e m p a o r r y ington, Dc: Ge E , g y pt. Edited by Ibrahim Owe orgetown Univer iss. sity, u
y of Egypt.” Geneva: ILO, 1989. ployment and Remuneration: ilian Potter. Edi t ors Re fede esc Mresint A justOs. Cairo: Ame rican University in Cairo Pres: Prien PPlications of R eal Exchange Rate Analysis.
:
age
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in Firms,
, 1970. Vi eae NR er ces d nee McCarl. “Ev aluation a Ministry sapere for Furthe r Deon trol.” Do o f Working Paper be No. APAC :
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Oi Employment, "ihe e Ol hohe in SeeWag djustment: Egypt cd by P and Gillian 1991 nas
ro c Ea
Reet
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SadowDsekvi,eloYpamheyn, M a M. e Poee itica ee
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Businessman an eve, lopment of Egypt i a n Agriculture. Washin;gto: n, D.C.: : Brookinings gs In:It tion, 1991.
Worild
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a inabil
and Govern i t f o S r u s t a inability ance
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Loan Docume nt: Egypt. Wa 2 shing o
rt 1991. New ‘k: Oxford U Ba World De niversity Pres York: velopment R s, e p 19
91b.
Conference Organizing Committee
Chairman:
Dr. Youssuf Wally ,
aw Prime Minister and on, ati lam Rec d Lan and ister of Agriculture G Overnment of Egypt, Cairo, Egypt Secretary: a Mohamed A. Faris, Sciejenc nces , es Env iro nme nta l and Agr icu ltu ral of Fac ult y Tofessor,
McGill University,
and Director, CEMARP, Montreal, Canada
Dean, Faculty of Ag:
McGill University, Monte: Dr. Ahmed Momtaz,
Advisor for Research
Affairs,
Ministry of Agriculture and Hang x
Government of Egypt Cairo, EByP h, ba b a S . A d e m Dr. Moha culture, . ™ g A of
Dean, Faculty
, y t i s r e v i n U a i Alexandr
Alexandria,
Confere
nce
Organ i: zing or
bs Aly Shady,
Mittee
lef, Irrigation Sector
Canadian
Inte
.
IRL ’ Cie ebec ) e Can e ada
evelo
PMent Agen
cy,
es Conference Participants
Dr.
ion Fine M ahmoud
ProducAnimal for Aboul-Nage, Undersecretary Egypt
Cairo, Reclamation, Land Ministry of Agriculture and
,
Ex l a r u t l u c i r g A t of n e m t r a p e D , n a m r D i a h , C d u o e S l u o b cone if . Kheiry A Egypt
;
, o r i a C , y t i s r e v i n U o r i a C , y g o l o i c o S l a r u R d an Mahmoud
s i n i M , r e t n e C h c r a e s e R r e t a W , n a m r i a h C Abu-Zeid,
t p y g E , o r i a , C s e c r u o s e R r e t t a W d n a s Ty of Public Work d l i h C r o f l i c n u o C ional Dr. Hoda Badran, Secretary General, Nati ‘ od and Motherhood, Cairo, Egypt GovernDr.
A
, e r u t l u c i r g A f o r e t s i n i M r e m r o F , n a r d n a a B x e l y A l d , A y t i n s r a e m v i n U a i Dr. Os r d n a x e l A , essor
f o r P s u t i r e m E d n a , t p y g E f o t n e m
dria, 2 Egy;
Developand Research Rice , r o t c e r i nd a , D l e a r l u a B t l u d c i e r y g a A S f o d y e r m t s a i h n i o M M , r . e t Dr n e C h c r a e s e R am, Agricultur. al pt
ment Progr
t p y g E , o r i a C , n o i t a m a Land Recl
d E , a t r e b l A f o y t i s r e v i n U , r o s s e f o Pr s u t i r e m E , y e l t n e B d e r F Dr. C, the a , d r e a t n n a e C C , t n n o e t m op l mon e v e D t r e s e D , l a r e n e G r o t c e 2 Dir ; y a h s i B pt y Dr, Adli g E o r i a C , y t i y s c r i l e o v P i , ' e S n c U i v r e g ‘ n n i n a n a l P d Americ n a y c i l o P , f e i h C , y a h s i B . K y l a t I , Dr. Fahmy e m o R , O A F , n i o n U i s d r i o v f x i O D , e t r t n n s e e C i
Analys , s a w s i B . K Dr. Asit United oxford,
m p o l e v e D l a n o i t a n r e t n I
Kingdom
n e m n o r i v n E t d n l a u c al i r u r g A f o y t l u c a F , n a a d e a D n a , C d , n l a a e , r l y t n k t o c M i s r e v i n U l l i G Dr. Rog’ Bu c M , e g e l l o C d l a n o d c a M ; s e c tal Scien
versity,
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.
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h z a M e e . B r D , y z w E a F r a ypt g
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Directo r of Research, Internati Fit
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Dr, Nicholas
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n o r g A f o t n e m t r a p e D , n a m r i a h , K C . d H n a t p r o y s g , s E a e f i o r r d P n a l x u , e c r l , A y h:ad t A i s r omy, ’ Fa e ty of v i n a U i r d n a x e l , A e r u t l u c i gr r e s a r F n o m i S , H s c i m o d n o o o c m E h f fessor o uae Ma o r P e e e c n a V Wersity, t n e m p o l e v e s D g l 5 a n o i t a n r e : t n I F . r D h s i K n y z w L a o k O Re ( e r t n e gypt Search C Ca 1rO, , l Dr. Fouad
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o r i v n E a t a a i a e C s r e d s r n i a U f f A t s r i F 2, l e a o t n e m n t o s r i i n i v t p y g E ry for En nizatAion, M o, ir Ca ,
a a , K , o r I i E a C , y t i s ulture and L m o n o c E e r e W ; i m M a l o c t e R r j 1So d y n d a A e I e m n n o e ver J z o i G D , n o 7 of ani, F e e e Egypt, f o ak, L t l n t p y g E , o f I n o i 8ypt AOR an th r o f e c al Offi Agric
at
i r l o i n a r m s e I v o G , r o n r e a i v l o i G a m s I , i l , e u o G , Dr. AhmedA.
Mr. Salah Hi
e r u t l l a u r c u R i r g A n e e t G g Washin on, D.c
aELD
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a t n e m n o r i v n E d s n u a g n A l a r u t l u c Scien i r g A f o a d a n y a t C l u c a , F l a e r , t e i n z o n M e , f y a t , i s r e v l i a n n U o d l l i G c M Nees, Mac , t e g g A f o Colle y r t s i n i M , s r i a f f A Daa for Research F tie
-Adhm ee Momtaz, Advisor ! y g n E a , o e r r i u a t C l u c , n o i t a , y m t a i l s c r e e v i n U and R o r i a C , e r u t l u of Agric D r. Ahmed
Searc
Tahir Moustafa,
S of Agmc¥ h Institute, 2 Ministry
D
j n o o j k n O o i z o s g e ; N t a . t r S d n a d L e t i d n n U a a B » . C e . r D u t l u c i , r n g o A t f o s e n i nk, Washing M o t ” e s i ee v d A a , a f i i e t O P Y < B E . ? A o r i , v o n r r E i i a k C a , B y t i n t u p y g E f o Re pee i Government Community: , y m o n o c E 2 , t n a t l u s n o C , n i v t o P . R a h p e s o J Mr.
clamation,
a
public Au
! b u P n a i t p y g e R . r n e a t m a r W Wa i Cha 5 Works and
a d a n a C , a w a Radyc,y, f Public ent, Ott o a R y r y t d s a i n H i M l E , s a t b c e A j o r P d e : m e a g h a o n i M a r D . r D eit thority for rm' o f i l a C f o y t i s r e v i n U e , E s v c E i B m o n , o e c x i E a G f o t o s s e sources, f o r p , s d r a h c i R s Dr. Alan ited State Un , a i n r o f Cali , z u r C Santa
OF , nomy Agro oot Montes ntreal, Cana ah
meri
A Poncish; , Ibrah eim, 54
Macdon-
economic aspects of, 7, 8
eid, Mahmoud, 7 9 Acade my of Scientific Research and Technology, 65 Aiwitication, 18 ,21 ‘Gministratio 3 Improving, a is BAS, i ee Agricultural Development Pro-
A
future of, 194
5 3 2 3, 2, r, fo l a o g y c i l o p
9 9 1 8 9 1 3, -4 41 , 23 r, sponsibility fo 2 6 1 6 , of s e i t n i a t r e risks and unc
) le ab (t 57 , e) bl ta (' 56 transition to, 19 2 , 10 , n o i t a m r o f s n a Agricultural tr pattern of, 220-222
gram BeérTegate Measurem ent of Support
am areas, Renccten Ogenic
sustainability of, 2.
Agriculture
4 3 , 5 2 , 9 1 6, , e v i t a n alter 1 8 2 1 , 3 2 1 1 2 1 , r o f challenges
rehabilitation of, 53
paercultural Bank, 121 ultural developmen t, 179, 231, 233, 244
inploymentand 234
Tacti manne
A i sea
paority for, 23
Ag
and
(ADP), $3Devel opment is Ticultural
A
105 , f o n o i t a c i f i s r e div 156 , f o t c a p m i l a c i ecolog energy for, 22
of, 198, 232 2a
ne also Development; Sustaina opment
167
e in, l o r t n e m n r e v go
188, 251
ble devel-
Program
gricultural Extension and Rural Developmental Research Institute, 100
-2 3, 117, 121, 187-
9 4 1 8 4 1 , 2 4 1 1 9, 14 1 1 , 1 7 , f o e c importan 221, 232
67, 1 , 3 4 1 2 4 1 , d n industry a 0 4 , e v i s n e t n i inpu t232 , f o s p i h s n o i t interrela -134 3 3 1 , 2 3 1 , 0 2 1 £, liberalization of, 1725. 93, 118,
gricultural policy, 118-119, 125
analysis of, 117, 237-241
constraints on, 151-152
industrial sector and, 167
of, administration Agricultural programs, 32-36
Agricultural rent, 118
100 (ARO); Center Research Apricultural SLs } , 5,1 % 1 5, 4, ty li Agricultural sustainabi 9, 21 4, 21 0, 21 820 8, 14 6123, 142, 14 228, 243 achievements i
constraints on, 2 97 definition of, 19, 42, 209 desirability of, 39,
108:
7 6 , 1 6 , m o r f n o i t u l po!
e, rmational Conferenc 108 , 34 5 2 , 9 1 Al 6, , e r u cult i r g a e v i t a n 9 r 1 , y Alte m o n o r g A f o ty e Supi c f o o S t n e n a c i m Amer sure a e M e t a g e r g AMS. See Ag rt
— k c o t s e v i e L e S ‘ 4 3 . , e 5 2 i , o h t J i w s lem b o r p , e c n e i Antisc 4, 155, 240
7 3 7 , s r e f i u q A
Arable land
analysis of, 76-77 decrease of, 6, 18 62 stimates of, 77-78
Increase
Index
of, 62
resource, 6, 27, 40, 43, 208, 18, 233, 234, 241
Population
impact of, 132-133 Education, 3, 15, 28, 41-43, 106, 125, 194, 221, 225 (table), 251 health, 202 problems in, 24
social, 177, 207 soil, 53, 101 Delta aquifer, 73
Deregulation. See Liberalization
productivity and, 30-32 research, 86, 88 spread of, 193
Desertification, 47
Developing countries, 231 domestic support and, 170
sustainability and, 247
special treatment for, 169 Development
women and, 202-203, 226
assistance for, 158
conservation and, 124-125
213 1, -21 210 , 128 93, 27, 8, , 1-2 , ic om on ~c environment and, 207, 2
Cooperation, 171, 186 Interdisciplin a , 31, 32 Cooperatives , 186, 188 oe land Teform, 118
Tole of, 125
undercutting,
Cotton
ERPs
Biotechnolo
2
Bishay, Fahmy, 10
6 Asit, Biswas, Bl
ast disease, 95, 96-97
Bookchin, M
%
194
for, 130
€xporting, 124, 137, 145 Nationalization o f, 119, 120, 132 Profitability of, 1 36 Speculation on, 2 14 Credits, 23-24, 157 -158, 198
Cropping patterns, 47 , 75, 208 indices of, 131 (tabl e)
Crop Totations, 4, 40, 43, 208
net returns from, 135-136, 136 ( figure) shortening, 123
onal Agricultural Resea rch Chemicals, 106, 109, 1 10 fear of, 21-22, 34-35 using, 40, 43, 160-161 See also Fertilizers; Pes t
icides
CIAT. See Internati onal Institute for Trop-
ical Agriculture
Class Structure, 192, 193
Climatic changes, 61
Commander, Simon, 185 Competitiveness 166 ,
water and, 138
Crops
Seetaialso Agricultural development; Susnable development
evelopment strategie s, 128 effectiveness of, 177 -178, 181, 182 Distortions, 129, 243
reducing, 117, 134, 137, 1 66, 172 trade policy and, 165, 240-241 Division of la Drainage, 129, improving, 3, Sustainability
153 145, 208 of, 138
Tainage Research Institute (DRI ), 66 Draina ge water, 75-76, 76 (t able), 123 RI. See Drainage Resea rch Ins
titute
Dried sludge, 75
Drinking water, 155
choosing, 149-150
land and water requireme nts for, 151 (table)
livestock and, 124
water-conserving 64 , Culture of maintenanc e, 180 Debt crisis. See Foreign debt Decentralization, 42, 167, 241, 244 See also Liberalization
Teal costs of, 29 tural, 125-126, 1 92-193 time dimension of , 197
omestic support. See Subsidi es
shifting, 129 Crop Protection, 109
rmea, Michael, 9 CGIAR. See Consult ative Group on InterNati
245, 247 induced, 178-180 Planning, 231
bor, 186, 187, 190
liberalization of, 13 5
Capital, 148, 189 -190 CAPMAS, 202 Carrying Capacity , 28, 54, 209 Central Bank, cred it ceilings by, 134 Cereal crops, 192 , 245 domestic sources o f, 124 Ce
39-240 human Tesource, 29-31, 8 1 , 86-88, 106, _ 198-199,
social goals and, 210-
Declaration on the Elimination of Disc™ ination Against Women, 199-200
Deep sustainability, 6, 49, 51 shelled: sustainability and, 50 (table) Deforestation, 47, 237 Degradation, 47, 51 ceibeamental 3, 6, 18, 37, 48, 121, 122, 207, 213, 215, 216, 241 land, 21, 28, 34, 39
h c e T d an e nc ie Sc of y m e d a c A Egyptian nolosy
Eisa, Hamdy,
El-Serafy, Salah, 8-9 Employment 243 4, 23 2, 22 0, -3 29 Ahi 0 5 2 , 7 4 2 3 4 2 , g n i t a e cr overnment, 246, 25. 1
233-234 and, growth population t n e m y o l p m e n U o s l a See Energy 0 4 , f o e s u t n e i c i f f ine
sustainability and, 22
, d n a t n e m p o l e dev
’
a n a y c i l o p c economi peo
, s e S , m e t s y s di Daath
ook, b e c r u o S t n e m ssess A k is vfii i Lay: 158 hics, t e l a ‘ 199 , i 8 7 u ) s t n e m age n a m e 4 Bay , n o i t c e t o r l p a t n e m n o r i v En
WHO regulations for, 67 Drip-irrigation, 30, 108, 1 0 9, 113 Dunkel, Arthur, 156 Dutch Disease, 227 9 Ecological issues, 49, 51, 62, Bal oO 203 Economic development, 12, 8, 27, ~ » we. financing, 128
Jabroata
e e C ic om on Ec an pe ro Eu e Se EEC. , 0 3 1 , s) RP (E on ti ec ot pr of s te ra Effective 134
Economic disparity, growth of, 3
F
Economic policy, 60, 142 fot environmental goals and, 37, 136, 243,
Economic reform, 11, 117, 127, 250
agriculture and, negative effects See also Reform Economic Reform ment Program
118, 120-121, 17 of, 171 and can (ERSAF),
4-173
al Adjust-
130, 134
tional, on ti ec ot pr f 37 ,2 51, $3 O) rates
ve ic Reform and Stru
a
Index
Harmonized System of Customs Nomen-
Inflation, 131, 135, 144, 207 Inputs availability of, 23-24 labor, 190 Prices of, 152, 239
clature or Classification, 169 Harrod-Domar model, 235
Health, 203 horticulture and, 103-104 tural, 200-202
Tee markets, 20
Family
FAO.
j
: P l a n n Wa Hower
tion Farmin 2 deskillin
questioning 215 9212-2 E Tui€tes, al1s0o3 Markets a demand for
44, 122
and Apr;
riculture O
i haga
’ 104, 105, 112-
€xporting, 1 11 , 11 213 3 Prod
uction of 11 : , 110organ
Herbicides, 109 Herbs, 103, 104
High Aswan Dam (HAD) , 6 3 , 76, 129, 141 construction of, 59, 62 ,
ae
ically grown 705 Fuleihhaan, Y O ussef, 3 Fungicides, Using, te
Storage at, 71 water flow from ,
Hill, Stuart, 6
cy for Aquaculture, 120 General A é reement on 3 Tarififfsielae nd T as rade (GATT), 156-157, 158 agriculture and, 171, 173 assistance from, 168-169
Uruguay Round of, 5, 9, 165, 166, 172, 17
3,214 Global warming, 9, 18, 53, 155, 214
growth of, 132, 235 public sector and, 128 Groundwater, 155, 161
Growth, 124
accelerating, 221
Oomadinstaseaincueriintyg,, 5416, 29 48, , 208, B
y
Population gr owth and, 245
agricultural, 246-247 constraints on, 109, 132 See also Population growth 19, 151, 169
HAD. See High Aswan Dam
Hanson, Bent, 141, 142
Income 5
disparity, 234
distribution, 234 per capita, 148 raising, 186, 235,249 — and IndifferIndecision, Procrastination, ence (IPI), 221
Industry, 64, 152 agriculture and, 142 pollution from, 67
143, 167, 221, 232
protection for, 130, 232 water demands of, 74, 79
Interest rates, 121, 131, 132 reform policy for, 134, 135 selves stabilization of, 133 Intergenerational equity, sustainability :
Climate on Panel Intergovernmental
Change (IPCC), 155
oe.
Ag: Tropical for International Institute culture (CIAT), 35-36 2, 12 , ) F M I ( d n u F y r a t e n International Mo 43, 146, 214, 221 a
18, 96, 101
IPI. See Indecis
a, e Indifferenc i g a n a M t Integrated Pes In h c r a e s e R e c i R ation s e p a T e D
Human Tesource development, 86-88, 106,
Import substitution, 128, 129
43, 86, 101
i l C n o l e n a P l a t n nme r e v o g r e t e e w e me mate Change Procrastination, and , ion
between, 193
decreasing, 129-130, 136, 171 increasing, 2, 18 Subsidies for, 240
Interdisciplinary coopera tion, 31, 32, 42-
RRI),
°mposition of, 187, 190 Telationship
Imports, 121-122, 169
hydraulic, 152
127 , d n a n o i t a z i l i b a t s man spiel support from, 5; 8 arch Institute International Rice Rese .
global role of, 1 04-106 he
ILEIA, 54 IMF. See International Monetary Fund Immigration, dynamics of, 226-227
debt as part of, 227 determining, 29
ternational Trade (GATT), 156
Tole of, 103, 1 04, 105 Horticulture
stitute
igation, 9,
7, 39, 59, 118, 130,p 188
180 9 7 1 , 9 1 1 , 3 3 , f o Or eelopunent e, 113 e ne: drip-, 30, 108, water, 1 7 5 7 , 5 3 , 8 2 , , 21 3 , n i s t n e m e v pi ro a 1 3 2 , 3 109, 11
IFOAM Conference, 54
227, 233, 243
Grou on Environmental Measures and19
, 110
ydroelectric da ms, 155
Gross domestic product (GDP) agriculture as part of, 2, 128, 166, 198,
irrigation with, 73
Horticultural c rops, 106-107, 109, 111, 113 ©xporting, 105, 106
Size of, 187
Interdependence, 81, 214-215, 233
and, 220, 228
ights, women and, 10 , 200
Green Revolution, 18, 33, 119
availability of, 64-65 categories of, 73-74
Nicholas, 9-10 Horizontal ex Pansion, 16-17, 40, 95, 129, 137
Sustainability and , 81 uman r
See also Ozone layer
agri~ cuYletaur reDeyZ, elo pment Plan, 93, 101
Holdings, size o f, 188, 189 lopkins,
Strategy for, 29 -31
Greenhouse Bases, 155, 159, 214, 215
eee else Forei gn debt
7 He Seg)
i
198-199, 245, 247
Goueli, Ahmed, 8
zoe
77, 78, 119
alth and, 103 -104 Sustainabilit z Households ae
domestic Support and , 170 €xport subsidies and, 1 70-171 Tedesigning, 54
Teducing, 131
subsidies for, 33-34, 43 Integrated Pest Management (IPM), 109
Henderson, Hazel, 2 13
- See General Agre ement on Tariffs
as Part of Gpp
purchase of, 193
Heilbroner, Robert, 216
21, , h t i w s m e l rob
113 , 0 3 , r e l k n spri
surface, 74 80 1 , 8 3 1 f o y sustainabilit
water reuse ub
0 18 igation systems, , 125, 14. 21 4, g, in in ta ve in
wees
See Employm ent
Index See also Resources
project phase of, 237
Nature, changing attitudes toward, 209-210
Plant breeding, 95
Netherlands Conference on Agriculture _and the Environment, 235
Policy design, 124, 237
Political stability, 97, 228 sustainability and, 23
Nickel, John: on seed unit, 35-36
Nile ma importance of, 59, 71, 118, 123
Polluter Pays Principle (PPP), 42, 157, 159,
208 Pollution, 40, 177
monitoring of, 161
of, 120
tion from, 67 lle Research Institut e(N Neutaritt measures, icone e Rn See Nile Resear ch Institute
2
agricultural, 61, 67, 162 air, 21,28
controlling, 7, 43 costs of, 215
!an Sandstone aquifer, 73 utrition,
domestic, 67
104-105, 221
‘
o Brian, Patr ick, 141
ts ©xporting, 148, 297 Dre
plant:
Pastel Don, ate Minne
g wealas Ng ozi, 8
OTraenninnnrt!oldensi1t8y,, 111798,,121880 ,
mbalances 243
“gration, 248
;
International Jobs and, 244° 8 boe r, 1o9s9- 191 , 19 Mian 4, 220, 222, 224, 226 Mie
Eanizational
Agriculture, 100, 168
Sale Of, 1 93
Patron. 208, 249-250
204°
PRDAG
;
land tenure and, 24 Wh
public spending on,
using, ri 43, 106, 124, 178, 179, Cale
eat relations, 193
Bees, 100, 109, 168
ntrol of, 34-35, 41, 161
Subsidies for, 132, 137, 145, 161,209.
2 20 8, 16 016 12 1, 3, 97 , si€engal, so22,Ch40e,mi49ca,ls
ests
build-up pol,of, 22-23
controlling, 34, 40, 47-48; 93, 95 208
, 98, 108,
OM» a g r e e m e is n t su es , Phytosanitary
mn
171 lanning
-236
agricultural, 232-233, 239 pa development, 2 218
long-ran2A ge,a7
micro stage
0”
middle stage of pac 2at
ays
Prin
9, 15 5, 13 0, 13 41, , 0 4 n le Po e Se P. PP , 0 4 , -34 Price policy, 33 168
134 , 0 2 1 , f o n o i t a z liberali 9 3 2 8 3 2 , n i r o t missing fac supporting, 239
9 24 8, PricesOS , 16 oe, 137,
adjusting,
producer, eae
natural, 49, 51, 53
3 4 2 , 4 3 2 4 2 1 °. og teal
6 14 514 137,007 131, 135 OL,
eralization3-239 ber: lijb
porting, 120 Manufacturing, 22
NARP. See National Agricultural Re-
arei, Sayed, 195 Market a ccess, 173
1on, 9, 41, 43, 97, 98, 100, 185,
Pest “nt and Agricultural Credit
research programs, 93,
enhancement of, 1, 211, 212
| , ee phva , Joalsele iny, tvrt Pove Po
ees See Principal Bank for Develop-
Mulching, 107, 208
techno] Ogy and, 232
233 219 , 1 8 , d n a y t i l i b a n i a sust 9 i , 231,
Parj
er Resources
degradation of, 6, 18, 233, 234, 241
44, 62, 68, 77, 79, 97, 207
) e G e e d, an o ti ra r o land-lab ure ig 2. d, an ty vi ti uc land prod , 71 , 40 7, -3 36 , 24 , 18 Peeiens with, 3, 7,
;
e Onocropping, 47, 208
94, 96, 99-100 Natural resources
lowering, 49 4327, 20, 15, 9, 8, 6, , wth gro Population : 1 12 g, in ll ro cont e) ur ig (f 3 22 d, an ty vi ti uc od labor pr
Renee lo, 18,21 also Gree nhouse B ases
PWWR. See Ministry of Public Works and Wat
Providj ng, 251
249
pone laye r
Be ammed Ali, agriculture and, 118 M
Crop, 93, 97, 101
2
Bertie 132, 133, 143
National Research Institute, 111 | National Rice Production Campalé™ 93,
182
"crease in, 2 99 224, 245 Prices of, 15
A ffai
search Project Ni asser, Gamal Abdel, 193 : National Agricultural Research Project (NARP), 96 9 11 811 d, an e r u t l u c i r g Nationalism, arch Council, 106 National Resea
concerns about, 122
intensity, 17 8, 180, 181
panes) of inal, 6 7H a TaD of Public Works and Wate r ReOurces (MPWWR), 63, 71, 76 eae quality data from, 6 6
Mul eae)
Population density
; crease in, 142
in Ty of Agriculture and La n d ReclaMint (MALR), 67, 96 a 271 Agriculture and Land Reform, inistry of Foreign
industrial, 67 marine, 237 water, 21, 47, 67-68, 125 Population control, 36-37, 43-44
|,
i i Z g A d n a t n ppme o o J l e v e D r o f - 135 BBaene k 4 3 1 , 2 3 1 , ) BDAO
l Pciepae Credit (P a e a a A 1 Private sector, investme Snnt by, 125 1
anticipation © 131-133, 145, 167, 168,
244, 250
os 1 8 , n o i Product ints on,
0 0 1 5 9 , 5 3 3 , 22, 30, 3 8 1 7 1 , Cer 72 1 1 7 1 , 2 3 1 , 1 10 101 e)
(tabl 1 3 1 , f o s indice for, } e t a r t s national 430, 151-152
atterns of,
uctivity, 1,146
education anda,
Index
shipping, 109-110
subsidies for, 239, 24 0 testing, 83, 85, 99
using, 17, 25, 31, 32, 40, 54 , 8 3 , 97, 98, 181, 220, 222, 249
Technology transf er, 7, 9, 31-32, 43, 86, 87, 93, 94, 96, 99, 123, 1 81 agricultural, 119, 120
cycle of, 83, 84 (figur e)
Tenancy law, Teview ing, 134 Tenu
re rights, guarant ee of, 188 Tourism, 75, 130, 142, 143 Tractors, 35, 189, 225 (table) Tr
ade, 129 agricultural, 166, 168-169, 171distortions and, 2 40. economic reform and, 171-173
environmental impa ct on, 214 lib
eralization of, 131, 165, 166 Testrictions on, 156 , 157,171
Trade and the Enviro nment (GATT), 156 Training. See Educati on Transdisciplinarity, 210 Transportation, Cost s of, 110 Underground water, 1 23, 240
Unemployment, 121, 207, 222, 233
Population growth an d, 122 Teducing, 246 See also Employment
UNICEF, 202
United Nations Conventio n, Article 14 of,” 200 United Nations Organization , women’s issues and, 199 United Nations Women D ecade, 203
United States Agency for Inte rnational Development (USAID), 96, 1 38 on sustainable agriculture, 19-2 0
United States Department of Agriculture,
19
United States Urbanization, losses to, 63,
State Department, 214 10, 62, 192, 198 78
Uruguay Round. See General Agree ment on Tariffs and Trade USAID. See United States Agency for In ternational Development Valdez Effect, 158 Vavilov Centers, protection of, 53 Vegetables, 103 demand for, 104, 105, 112-113 export of, 111, 112-113 organically grown, 109 selling, 192 Vertical expansion, 16-17, 40 Village bank systems, 119, 186
Index
Village or gan izations, 33, 125 Villages
Specialization
urbanization
of, 193
literacy and, 201-203
of, 192
opportunities for, 30-31, 199 pollution and, 199
Wages decline in, 135, 248
rights of, 200, 203-204 role of, 31, 186, 193, 199, 201 technology and, 204 World Bank, 8, 17, 158, 167-168 adjustment program and, 127, 143-144 irrigation and, 179-180
Setting, 191 women’s, 204
Wastewater, 177
pollution from, 65, 67
treated, 7, 75, 123 Wate
market access and, 173 Teport by, 1 support from, 5, 179
r, 6-7, 63, 159
accessibility of, 41 accounting for, 125 allocation of, 21, 138
Sustainability and, 177
symposium, 24
charges for, 8, 28-29, 32, 137-138
conservation of, 53, 64, 73, 150-151, 245 consumption of, 138 (figure)
demand for, 248 drinking, 67, 155
irrigation, 28, 32, 40, 61, 65, 72, 78, 98, 100, 101, 123, 129, 146, 153, 238, 248
storing, 71 underground, 123, 240
using, 78, 101, 149 wasting, 39, 40, 61, 238, 240
Water consumption, 138 (figure)
_
6
Water distribution systems, Lea
Water efficiency, 3, 64, 74, 98, 244, 2
improving, 4, 8, 27, 28, 138 a8 Waterlogging, 3, 18, 21, 39, Or oaS 48
Water pricing, pape
149, 1
Water quality, 65controll 21, 66, 67, 76 eb Water Research Center (WR©);
Water resources, 63-64, 71-72 exploration of, 3
Stren: 123 19h tainability
of,
Water sealed 6, 20-21, 28, 123, 1
41,
149, 202, 244 Water use
agricultural, 63-64, co
managing, 28, 33, 2:
municipal, 74
navigational, 74-75
80 unaccounted for, 63 Water user associations,
jzation
" a z i n a g r O h t l a e H WHO es wore i
i n e m o W , 0 1 , d n a e r u t l u c i r
4 0 2 3 0 2 , 1 0 2 , 0 0 5 *
1 , d n a t n e m p o l e v e d
4 906
08 200
s N % s e e n o i t a n i discrim
education and,
2 , f o s e u s s i h t l a he
202- Se
sustainability and, 19
human rights and, 10, 200
p
ie
147-
World Commission on Environment and
Development (Bruntland Commission)
on access, 23-24
agricultural productivity and, 16
work of, 1, 2, 15-16, 146, 197, 207
World Development Report 1992 (World
; Bank), 1 World ern Organization (WHO), as drinking water and, 67
World Summit on Environment an ment, 1, 5,215 er nt Ce ch ar se Re r te Wa t wee
Yield
s e p 0 3 ing, 61, 1 , 4 97, 1 43 , 40 , 18 , 17 8, ae 129, 135, 136, 185 indices of, 131 ( Bo , ) e l b a t (1 5 9 , 5 9 4 9 rice, Yield gap, oe
York, E. T., Jt,