The economics of soil conservation in development countries: The case of crop residue mulching.

The study contributes to the search for a methodology to assess soil conservation, particularly in developing countries. The study first assesses the economics of soil conservation in general - with special emphasis on the relationships between technology, economic analysis and policy implications....

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Autor principal: Erenstein, Olaf
Formato: Tesis
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Wageningen University & Research 1999
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/79724
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author Erenstein, Olaf
author_browse Erenstein, Olaf
author_facet Erenstein, Olaf
author_sort Erenstein, Olaf
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The study contributes to the search for a methodology to assess soil conservation, particularly in developing countries. The study first assesses the economics of soil conservation in general - with special emphasis on the relationships between technology, economic analysis and policy implications. The quantification and valuation of soil erosion and soil conservation are highly controversial and present considerable analytical challenges that have been tackled in varying ways. By implication, government intervention is controversial too - and has typically been unsuccessful. This has direct implications for both the development of conservation technology and the implementation of conservation interventions.The study subsequently assesses the economics of one particular technological conservation option: crop residue mulching (also known as conservation tillage). An analytical framework is developed to assess the socio-economics of the technology in developing countries. The technology assessment framework follows a stepwise expanding analysis along a three-tier hierarchy: crop production, the farm household and the institutional setting. This results in a private and a social assessment of the technology, and the formulation of corresponding policy implications. The framework is applied in ex ante , ex post and partial analyses of crop residue mulching in different settings in Mexico and Central America. Conclusions are drawn regarding the technology assessment framework and crop residue mulching.The author can be contacted at: olaf_erenstein@usa.net The study is also published in the Mansholt Studies, Wageningen University and can be ordered from Backhuys Publishers, Leiden, the Netherlands (http://www.backhuys.com , or info@backhuys.com).
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spelling CGSpace797242024-01-08T18:54:14Z The economics of soil conservation in development countries: The case of crop residue mulching. Erenstein, Olaf crops soil conservation economics The study contributes to the search for a methodology to assess soil conservation, particularly in developing countries. The study first assesses the economics of soil conservation in general - with special emphasis on the relationships between technology, economic analysis and policy implications. The quantification and valuation of soil erosion and soil conservation are highly controversial and present considerable analytical challenges that have been tackled in varying ways. By implication, government intervention is controversial too - and has typically been unsuccessful. This has direct implications for both the development of conservation technology and the implementation of conservation interventions.The study subsequently assesses the economics of one particular technological conservation option: crop residue mulching (also known as conservation tillage). An analytical framework is developed to assess the socio-economics of the technology in developing countries. The technology assessment framework follows a stepwise expanding analysis along a three-tier hierarchy: crop production, the farm household and the institutional setting. This results in a private and a social assessment of the technology, and the formulation of corresponding policy implications. The framework is applied in ex ante , ex post and partial analyses of crop residue mulching in different settings in Mexico and Central America. Conclusions are drawn regarding the technology assessment framework and crop residue mulching.The author can be contacted at: olaf_erenstein@usa.net The study is also published in the Mansholt Studies, Wageningen University and can be ordered from Backhuys Publishers, Leiden, the Netherlands (http://www.backhuys.com , or info@backhuys.com). 1999 2017-02-03T11:04:52Z 2017-02-03T11:04:52Z Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/10568/79724 en Open Access Wageningen University & Research Erestein, O. C. A. 1999. The economics of soil conservation in development countries: The case of crop residue mulching. PhD thesis, Wageningen University.
spellingShingle crops
soil conservation
economics
Erenstein, Olaf
The economics of soil conservation in development countries: The case of crop residue mulching.
title The economics of soil conservation in development countries: The case of crop residue mulching.
title_full The economics of soil conservation in development countries: The case of crop residue mulching.
title_fullStr The economics of soil conservation in development countries: The case of crop residue mulching.
title_full_unstemmed The economics of soil conservation in development countries: The case of crop residue mulching.
title_short The economics of soil conservation in development countries: The case of crop residue mulching.
title_sort economics of soil conservation in development countries the case of crop residue mulching
topic crops
soil conservation
economics
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/79724
work_keys_str_mv AT erensteinolaf theeconomicsofsoilconservationindevelopmentcountriesthecaseofcropresiduemulching
AT erensteinolaf economicsofsoilconservationindevelopmentcountriesthecaseofcropresiduemulching