Inorganic fertilizer in Uganda: Knowledge gaps, profitability, subsidy, and implications of a national policy

Agriculture is at the core of the livelihoods of most rural households in Uganda. It is a major engine for overall economic growth and possibly the single most important pathway out of poverty in the rural space. Although measures to enhance the rural farm economy are reflected in national policy th...

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Autor principal: Bayite-Kasule, Stephen
Formato: Brief
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Food Policy Research Institute 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/161895
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author Bayite-Kasule, Stephen
author_browse Bayite-Kasule, Stephen
author_facet Bayite-Kasule, Stephen
author_sort Bayite-Kasule, Stephen
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Agriculture is at the core of the livelihoods of most rural households in Uganda. It is a major engine for overall economic growth and possibly the single most important pathway out of poverty in the rural space. Although measures to enhance the rural farm economy are reflected in national policy through the Plan for Modernisation of Agriculture, tangible benefits, such as improved smallholder farm productivity, income growth, poverty reduction, and national food security, continue to elude the farm sector. Increasing the availability of inputs such as inorganic fertilizer and improved seed is critical to meeting the above policy objectives. The lack of functional and efficient agricultural inputs markets in Uganda is often highlighted among the major constraints to substantial agricultural growth in the country. Improved soil fertility management through increased levels of fertilizer use, increased use of available organic soil amendments, and improved farm management practices, together with the use of improved seed, can result in positive gains in farm productivity. This brief specifically addresses fertilizer use in Uganda.
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spelling CGSpace1618952025-11-06T04:23:56Z Inorganic fertilizer in Uganda: Knowledge gaps, profitability, subsidy, and implications of a national policy Bayite-Kasule, Stephen agriculture inorganic fertilizers fertilizer profitability fertilizer subsidy Agriculture is at the core of the livelihoods of most rural households in Uganda. It is a major engine for overall economic growth and possibly the single most important pathway out of poverty in the rural space. Although measures to enhance the rural farm economy are reflected in national policy through the Plan for Modernisation of Agriculture, tangible benefits, such as improved smallholder farm productivity, income growth, poverty reduction, and national food security, continue to elude the farm sector. Increasing the availability of inputs such as inorganic fertilizer and improved seed is critical to meeting the above policy objectives. The lack of functional and efficient agricultural inputs markets in Uganda is often highlighted among the major constraints to substantial agricultural growth in the country. Improved soil fertility management through increased levels of fertilizer use, increased use of available organic soil amendments, and improved farm management practices, together with the use of improved seed, can result in positive gains in farm productivity. This brief specifically addresses fertilizer use in Uganda. 2009 2024-11-21T09:59:14Z 2024-11-21T09:59:14Z Brief https://hdl.handle.net/10568/161895 en Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Bayite-Kasule, Stephen. 2009. Inorganic fertilizer in Uganda. USSP Brief 8. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/161895
spellingShingle agriculture
inorganic fertilizers
fertilizer profitability
fertilizer subsidy
Bayite-Kasule, Stephen
Inorganic fertilizer in Uganda: Knowledge gaps, profitability, subsidy, and implications of a national policy
title Inorganic fertilizer in Uganda: Knowledge gaps, profitability, subsidy, and implications of a national policy
title_full Inorganic fertilizer in Uganda: Knowledge gaps, profitability, subsidy, and implications of a national policy
title_fullStr Inorganic fertilizer in Uganda: Knowledge gaps, profitability, subsidy, and implications of a national policy
title_full_unstemmed Inorganic fertilizer in Uganda: Knowledge gaps, profitability, subsidy, and implications of a national policy
title_short Inorganic fertilizer in Uganda: Knowledge gaps, profitability, subsidy, and implications of a national policy
title_sort inorganic fertilizer in uganda knowledge gaps profitability subsidy and implications of a national policy
topic agriculture
inorganic fertilizers
fertilizer profitability
fertilizer subsidy
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/161895
work_keys_str_mv AT bayitekasulestephen inorganicfertilizerinugandaknowledgegapsprofitabilitysubsidyandimplicationsofanationalpolicy