Agriculture and poverty reduction in Ghana

If you asked most Ghanaians where the opportunities of the future lie, they would point to Accra, Kumasi, and other big cities. The country’s thousands of small farms symbolize the past—and they symbolize poverty. But this dichotomy misses an important point. Agriculture is not going away; it is tra...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Thurlow, James
Format: Opinion Piece
Language:Inglés
Published: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/145511
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author Thurlow, James
author_browse Thurlow, James
author_facet Thurlow, James
author_sort Thurlow, James
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description If you asked most Ghanaians where the opportunities of the future lie, they would point to Accra, Kumasi, and other big cities. The country’s thousands of small farms symbolize the past—and they symbolize poverty. But this dichotomy misses an important point. Agriculture is not going away; it is transforming. Subsistence farming may be gradually disappearing (the number of Ghanaians who say farming is their primary job fell from 57 to 44 percent between 2006 and 2016), but it is being replaced by a more dynamic, productive, market-oriented agriculture.
format Opinion Piece
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institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2018
publishDateRange 2018
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publisher Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
publisherStr Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
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spelling CGSpace1455112025-12-08T10:29:22Z Agriculture and poverty reduction in Ghana Thurlow, James innovation productivity agrifood systems agricultural development poverty If you asked most Ghanaians where the opportunities of the future lie, they would point to Accra, Kumasi, and other big cities. The country’s thousands of small farms symbolize the past—and they symbolize poverty. But this dichotomy misses an important point. Agriculture is not going away; it is transforming. Subsistence farming may be gradually disappearing (the number of Ghanaians who say farming is their primary job fell from 57 to 44 percent between 2006 and 2016), but it is being replaced by a more dynamic, productive, market-oriented agriculture. 2018-09-19 2024-06-21T09:04:36Z 2024-06-21T09:04:36Z Opinion Piece https://hdl.handle.net/10568/145511 en Open Access Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Thurlow, James. 2018. Agriculture and poverty reduction in Ghana. In Goalkeepers: The stories behind the data 2018. Pp 30-32. Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. https://www.gatesfoundation.org/goalkeepers/report/case-studies/ripe-for-reinvention
spellingShingle innovation
productivity
agrifood systems
agricultural development
poverty
Thurlow, James
Agriculture and poverty reduction in Ghana
title Agriculture and poverty reduction in Ghana
title_full Agriculture and poverty reduction in Ghana
title_fullStr Agriculture and poverty reduction in Ghana
title_full_unstemmed Agriculture and poverty reduction in Ghana
title_short Agriculture and poverty reduction in Ghana
title_sort agriculture and poverty reduction in ghana
topic innovation
productivity
agrifood systems
agricultural development
poverty
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/145511
work_keys_str_mv AT thurlowjames agricultureandpovertyreductioninghana