Agricultural mechanization: Drivers and characteristics

Widespread agricultural mechanization is a very recent phenomenon in Myanmar. In 2010, just 0.5 percent of farm households in the Delta used combine harvesters, and only 6 percent used threshers. A study of farm production economics in the country’s main agricultural zones in 2013/14 found that only...

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Autores principales: Belton, Ben, Win, Myat Thida, Zhang, Xiaobo, Filipski, Mateusz J., Takeshima, Hiroyuki, Masias, Ian
Formato: Capítulo de libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Food Policy Research Institute 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/155170
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author Belton, Ben
Win, Myat Thida
Zhang, Xiaobo
Filipski, Mateusz J.
Takeshima, Hiroyuki
Masias, Ian
author_browse Belton, Ben
Filipski, Mateusz J.
Masias, Ian
Takeshima, Hiroyuki
Win, Myat Thida
Zhang, Xiaobo
author_facet Belton, Ben
Win, Myat Thida
Zhang, Xiaobo
Filipski, Mateusz J.
Takeshima, Hiroyuki
Masias, Ian
author_sort Belton, Ben
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Widespread agricultural mechanization is a very recent phenomenon in Myanmar. In 2010, just 0.5 percent of farm households in the Delta used combine harvesters, and only 6 percent used threshers. A study of farm production economics in the country’s main agricultural zones in 2013/14 found that only 1 percent of paddy-cultivating households used combine harvesters. This was attributed to a combination of low wages and surplus labor in rural areas, poor infrastructure, a poor regulatory environment, and a lack of access to long-term capital among farmers. However, Myanmar’s policy reforms and reintegration into regional and global markets between 2011 and 2020 contributed to increasingly dynamic conditions, including economic growth averaging 7 percent per year (ADB 2018), accelerating out-migration from rural areas, and rapid rural transformation. This context gave rise to rapid and widespread agricultural mechanization. This chapter compares data from two pairs of complementary surveys to assess the effects of these economic changes on the uptake of agricultural mechanization. We combine demand-side (farm household) and supply-side (agricultural machinery retailer) surveys implemented between 2016 and 2018 across two major agroecological zones—a deltaic rice-growing environment (the Delta) and a rainfed semiarid zone (the Dry Zone). This approach allows for triangulation of results and captures variations in mechanization across geographies. In addition, we use data from multiple rounds of rapid assessments to evaluate the impacts of COVID-19 and other recent shocks.
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spelling CGSpace1551702025-11-06T04:17:39Z Agricultural mechanization: Drivers and characteristics Belton, Ben Win, Myat Thida Zhang, Xiaobo Filipski, Mateusz J. Takeshima, Hiroyuki Masias, Ian agricultural mechanization agrifood systems development economic shock governance Widespread agricultural mechanization is a very recent phenomenon in Myanmar. In 2010, just 0.5 percent of farm households in the Delta used combine harvesters, and only 6 percent used threshers. A study of farm production economics in the country’s main agricultural zones in 2013/14 found that only 1 percent of paddy-cultivating households used combine harvesters. This was attributed to a combination of low wages and surplus labor in rural areas, poor infrastructure, a poor regulatory environment, and a lack of access to long-term capital among farmers. However, Myanmar’s policy reforms and reintegration into regional and global markets between 2011 and 2020 contributed to increasingly dynamic conditions, including economic growth averaging 7 percent per year (ADB 2018), accelerating out-migration from rural areas, and rapid rural transformation. This context gave rise to rapid and widespread agricultural mechanization. This chapter compares data from two pairs of complementary surveys to assess the effects of these economic changes on the uptake of agricultural mechanization. We combine demand-side (farm household) and supply-side (agricultural machinery retailer) surveys implemented between 2016 and 2018 across two major agroecological zones—a deltaic rice-growing environment (the Delta) and a rainfed semiarid zone (the Dry Zone). This approach allows for triangulation of results and captures variations in mechanization across geographies. In addition, we use data from multiple rounds of rapid assessments to evaluate the impacts of COVID-19 and other recent shocks. 2024-10-10 2024-10-03T20:51:33Z 2024-10-03T20:51:33Z Book Chapter https://hdl.handle.net/10568/155170 en https://hdl.handle.net/10568/152392 Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Belton, Ben; Win, Myat Thida; Zhang, Xiaobo; Filipski, Mateusz; Takeshima, Hiroyuki; and Masias, Ian. 2024. Agricultural mechanization: Drivers and characteristics. In Myanmar’s agrifood system: Historical development, recent shocks, future opportunities, Duncan Boughton, Ben Belton, Isabel Lambrecht, and Bart Minten, eds. Chapter 7, Pp. 171-200. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/155170
spellingShingle agricultural mechanization
agrifood systems
development
economic shock
governance
Belton, Ben
Win, Myat Thida
Zhang, Xiaobo
Filipski, Mateusz J.
Takeshima, Hiroyuki
Masias, Ian
Agricultural mechanization: Drivers and characteristics
title Agricultural mechanization: Drivers and characteristics
title_full Agricultural mechanization: Drivers and characteristics
title_fullStr Agricultural mechanization: Drivers and characteristics
title_full_unstemmed Agricultural mechanization: Drivers and characteristics
title_short Agricultural mechanization: Drivers and characteristics
title_sort agricultural mechanization drivers and characteristics
topic agricultural mechanization
agrifood systems
development
economic shock
governance
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/155170
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AT winmyatthida agriculturalmechanizationdriversandcharacteristics
AT zhangxiaobo agriculturalmechanizationdriversandcharacteristics
AT filipskimateuszj agriculturalmechanizationdriversandcharacteristics
AT takeshimahiroyuki agriculturalmechanizationdriversandcharacteristics
AT masiasian agriculturalmechanizationdriversandcharacteristics