China: An unfinished reform agenda

Agricultural production in China has grown rapidly—relative to other countries— over the past four decades. Much of this growth can be attributed to investments in agricultural research by national and regional governments combined with policy reform and increased use of inputs.1 After 50 years of d...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Fan, Shenggen, Qian, Keming, Zhang, Xiaobo
Formato: Capítulo de libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Food Policy Research Institute 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/160575
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author Fan, Shenggen
Qian, Keming
Zhang, Xiaobo
author_browse Fan, Shenggen
Qian, Keming
Zhang, Xiaobo
author_facet Fan, Shenggen
Qian, Keming
Zhang, Xiaobo
author_sort Fan, Shenggen
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Agricultural production in China has grown rapidly—relative to other countries— over the past four decades. Much of this growth can be attributed to investments in agricultural research by national and regional governments combined with policy reform and increased use of inputs.1 After 50 years of development, the Chinese agricultural research system is now arguably the largest in the world, employing over 50,000 senior scientists and spending more than US$3.8 billion in 2002 (measured in 1995 international dollars).2 However, the system is currently facing a dilemma. Chinese agricultural production is becoming increasingly dependent on new technologies generated by research, especially as agricultural land and other natural resources become more limiting factors. The quantity of agricultural land—and high-quality land in particular—will only decline further in the future with rapid industrialization and urbanization. At the same time, a national policy introduced in the mid-1980s has encouraged research institutes to become financially self-supporting. As a result, on the positive side, research has become more integrated with economic development because research institutes have sought financial support by selling their services. On the negative side, however, areas of research not easily commercialized, including significant aspects of agricultural research, face financial problems as governments at various levels reduce funding for R&D.
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spelling CGSpace1605752025-11-06T03:59:10Z China: An unfinished reform agenda Fan, Shenggen Qian, Keming Zhang, Xiaobo agricultural innovation agricultural economics agricultural research Agricultural production in China has grown rapidly—relative to other countries— over the past four decades. Much of this growth can be attributed to investments in agricultural research by national and regional governments combined with policy reform and increased use of inputs.1 After 50 years of development, the Chinese agricultural research system is now arguably the largest in the world, employing over 50,000 senior scientists and spending more than US$3.8 billion in 2002 (measured in 1995 international dollars).2 However, the system is currently facing a dilemma. Chinese agricultural production is becoming increasingly dependent on new technologies generated by research, especially as agricultural land and other natural resources become more limiting factors. The quantity of agricultural land—and high-quality land in particular—will only decline further in the future with rapid industrialization and urbanization. At the same time, a national policy introduced in the mid-1980s has encouraged research institutes to become financially self-supporting. As a result, on the positive side, research has become more integrated with economic development because research institutes have sought financial support by selling their services. On the negative side, however, areas of research not easily commercialized, including significant aspects of agricultural research, face financial problems as governments at various levels reduce funding for R&D. 2006 2024-11-21T09:51:11Z 2024-11-21T09:51:11Z Book Chapter https://hdl.handle.net/10568/160575 en Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Fan, Shenggen; Qian, Keming; and Zhang, Xiaobo. 2006. China: An unfinished reform agenda. In Agricultural R&D in the developing world: too little, too late? Pardey, Philip G.; Alston, Julian M.; Piggot, Roley R. (Eds.) Chapter 3. Pp. 29-64. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). https://doi.org/10.2499/089629756x.ch3.
spellingShingle agricultural innovation
agricultural economics
agricultural research
Fan, Shenggen
Qian, Keming
Zhang, Xiaobo
China: An unfinished reform agenda
title China: An unfinished reform agenda
title_full China: An unfinished reform agenda
title_fullStr China: An unfinished reform agenda
title_full_unstemmed China: An unfinished reform agenda
title_short China: An unfinished reform agenda
title_sort china an unfinished reform agenda
topic agricultural innovation
agricultural economics
agricultural research
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/160575
work_keys_str_mv AT fanshenggen chinaanunfinishedreformagenda
AT qiankeming chinaanunfinishedreformagenda
AT zhangxiaobo chinaanunfinishedreformagenda