您的位置: 首页 > 特色资源 > 特色资源列表页 > 资源详情
Agricultural research in Southeast Asia: A cross-country analysis of resource allocation, performance, and impact on productivity
- 作者:
- Gert-JanStads; AlejandroNin-Pratt; NorahOmot; NguyenThiPham
- 关键词:
- Science,Technology,andInnovation;
- 年份:
- 2020
- 总页数:
- 88
- 语种:
- English
- 信息来源:
- 国际粮食政策研究所(IFPRI)
- 摘要:
- Southeast Asia made considerable progress in building and strengthening its agricultural R&D capacity during 2000–2017. All of the region’s countries reported higher numbers of agricultural researchers, improvements in their average qualification levels, and higher shares of women participating in agricultural R&D. In contrast, regional agricultural research spending remained stagnant, despite considerable growth in agricultural output over time. As a result, Southeast Asia’s agricultural research intensity—that is, agricultural research spending as a share of agricultural GDP—steadily declined from 0.50 percent in 2000 to just 0.33 percent in 2017. Although the extent of underinvestment in agricultural research differs across countries, all Southeast Asian countries invested below the levels deemed attainable based on the analysis summarized in this report. The region will need to increase its agricultural research investment substantially in order to address future agricultural production challenges more effectively and ensure productivity growth. Southeast Asia’s least developed agricultural research systems (Cambodia, Laos, and Myanmar) are characterized by low scientific output and researcher productivity as a direct consequence of severe underfunding and lack of sufficient well-qualified research staff. While Malaysia and Thailand have significantly more developed agricultural research systems, they still report key inefficiencies and resource constraints that require attention. Indonesia, the Philippines, and Vietnam occupy intermediate positions between these two groups of high- and low-performing agricultural research systems. Growing national economies, higher disposable incomes, and changing consumption patterns will prompt considerable shifts in levels of agricultural production, consumption, imports, and exports across Southeast Asia over the next 20 to 30 years. The resource-allocation decisions that governments make today will affect agricultural productivity for decades to come. Governments therefore need to ensure the research they undertake is responsive to future challenges and opportunities, and aligned with strategic development and agricultural sector plans. ASTI’s projections reveal that prioritizing investment in staple crops will still trigger fastest agricultural productivity growth in Laos. However, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Vietnam could achieve faster growth over the next 30 years by prioritizing investment in research focused on fruit, vegetables, livestock, and aquaculture. In Cambodia, Myanmar, and Thailand, the choice between focusing on staple crops versus high-value commodities was less pronounced, but projections did indicate that prioritizing investments in oil crop research would trigger significantly lower growth in agricultural productivity.
相关资源
- Bridging the Delta: 2012 Annual Report
- Regional trends report for the common market for east and southern Africa (COMESA)
- On the path to better nutrition and health : A4NH 2012 annual report
- Breaking ground: HarvestPlus 2011 annual report
- Biosafety of GM crops in Kenya, Uganda, and Tanzania
- Complying with the Maputo Declaration target: Trends in public agricultural expenditures and implications for pursuit of optimal allocation of public agricultural spending
- Assessment of agricultural research capacities in Ghana: The case of council for scientific and industrial research (CSIR)
- évaluation des problèmes critiques de la recherche et developpement agricole au Bénin: Le cas de l’institut national des recherches agricoles du Bénin (INRAB)
- Constraints and knowledge gaps for different irrigation systems in Nigeria
- évaluation des problèmes critiques de la recherche et developpement agricole au Burkina Faso: Le cas de l’institut national des recherches agricoles du Burkina Faso (INERA)