1. Global strategies
  2. Increasing efficiency of manual farming

Increasing efficiency of manual farming

  • Increasing productivity of subsistence agriculture
  • Improving subsistence agriculture

Implementation

Small-scale extraction of indigenous forest resources is very important to extremely impoverished households in rural areas of tropical Brazil. Such extractive activities are important as inputs to household reproduction, and are critical as a source of cash income. They are roughly equivalent to wage labour and to agriculture in its contribution to household income. This is usually overlooked in rural development analysis, and is of particular concern for three main reasons. First, the importance of small-scale extraction is more pronounced among the more impoverished. Second, extraction is a major source of cash for women, who are often denied access to alternative means of acquiring income in rural areas. Finally, current rural development programs are actively undermining access to the resources and often imply their destruction. Changes in social relations and technology can undermine the bases for the sustainability of the stable interactions between shifting cultivators and palms, such as exists in the babassu palm/shifting cultivation system in northeast Brazil.

Broader

Improving
Yet to rate
Farming by hand
Yet to rate

Facilitated by

Intercropping
Presentable

Problem

Value

Unproductivity
Yet to rate
Subsistence
Yet to rate
Inefficiency
Yet to rate
Increase [D]
Yet to rate
Efficiency
Yet to rate

SDG

Sustainable Development Goal #2: Zero HungerSustainable Development Goal #8: Decent Work and Economic Growth

Metadata

Database
Global strategies
Type
(D) Detailed strategies
Subject
  • Society » Disadvantaged
  • Agriculture, fisheries » Agriculture
  • Agriculture, fisheries » Farming
  • Cybernetics » Cybernetics
  • Economics » Productivity
  • Development » Reform
  • Content quality
    Presentable
     Presentable
    Language
    English
    Last update
    Oct 4, 2022