Closing the Potential-Performance Divide in Ugandan Agriculture

Agriculture accounts for 70 percent of employment, overwhelmingly on small farms; occupies half of all land area, and provides half of all exports and one-quarter of GDP in Uganda. It is considered a leading sector for future economic growth and ec...

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Main Author: World Bank Group
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/996921529090717586/Closing-the-potential-performance-divide-in-Ugandan-agriculture
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/30012
id okr-10986-30012
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-300122021-05-25T09:15:30Z Closing the Potential-Performance Divide in Ugandan Agriculture World Bank Group AGRICULTURE AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY PUBLIC SPENDING CLIMATE SMART AGRICULTURE CLIMATE CHANGE WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT LAND USE ACCESS TO FINANCE VULNERABILITY TRADE AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH AGRIBUSINESS FINANCE REGULATION INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY POVERTY IRRIGATION SOIL DEGRADATION TRADE FACILITATION Agriculture accounts for 70 percent of employment, overwhelmingly on small farms; occupies half of all land area, and provides half of all exports and one-quarter of GDP in Uganda. It is considered a leading sector for future economic growth and economic inclusion in the current National Development Plan. Yet despite having very favorable natural resource and climate conditions for production of a wide variety of crops and livestock, average Total Factor Productivity (TFP) growth--the difference between aggregate output growth and the growth of all inputs and factors of production that produced it--in Ugandan agriculture has been negative for the last two decades. This suggests that on balance the country is now getting less for equal or greater effort. While drought and pest issues likely have played a harmful role, other plausible explanations are a combination of the following: weakening over time of the public institutional base for promoting agricultural productivity at the level of small farms, inefficiencies in agricultural public expenditures, inadequate agricultural regulation and policies, and a lack of collateralizable farm assets. National agricultural output has grown at only 2 percent per annum over the last five years, compared to agricultural output growth of 3 to 5 percent in other EAC members and 3.3 percent per annum growth in Uganda's population over the same period. 2018-07-17T14:44:03Z 2018-07-17T14:44:03Z 2018-06-19 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/996921529090717586/Closing-the-potential-performance-divide-in-Ugandan-agriculture http://hdl.handle.net/10986/30012 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Other Agriculture Study Economic & Sector Work Africa Uganda
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic AGRICULTURE
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY
PUBLIC SPENDING
CLIMATE SMART AGRICULTURE
CLIMATE CHANGE
WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
LAND USE
ACCESS TO FINANCE
VULNERABILITY
TRADE
AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH
AGRIBUSINESS
FINANCE
REGULATION
INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY
POVERTY
IRRIGATION
SOIL DEGRADATION
TRADE FACILITATION
spellingShingle AGRICULTURE
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY
PUBLIC SPENDING
CLIMATE SMART AGRICULTURE
CLIMATE CHANGE
WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
LAND USE
ACCESS TO FINANCE
VULNERABILITY
TRADE
AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH
AGRIBUSINESS
FINANCE
REGULATION
INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY
POVERTY
IRRIGATION
SOIL DEGRADATION
TRADE FACILITATION
World Bank Group
Closing the Potential-Performance Divide in Ugandan Agriculture
geographic_facet Africa
Uganda
description Agriculture accounts for 70 percent of employment, overwhelmingly on small farms; occupies half of all land area, and provides half of all exports and one-quarter of GDP in Uganda. It is considered a leading sector for future economic growth and economic inclusion in the current National Development Plan. Yet despite having very favorable natural resource and climate conditions for production of a wide variety of crops and livestock, average Total Factor Productivity (TFP) growth--the difference between aggregate output growth and the growth of all inputs and factors of production that produced it--in Ugandan agriculture has been negative for the last two decades. This suggests that on balance the country is now getting less for equal or greater effort. While drought and pest issues likely have played a harmful role, other plausible explanations are a combination of the following: weakening over time of the public institutional base for promoting agricultural productivity at the level of small farms, inefficiencies in agricultural public expenditures, inadequate agricultural regulation and policies, and a lack of collateralizable farm assets. National agricultural output has grown at only 2 percent per annum over the last five years, compared to agricultural output growth of 3 to 5 percent in other EAC members and 3.3 percent per annum growth in Uganda's population over the same period.
format Report
author World Bank Group
author_facet World Bank Group
author_sort World Bank Group
title Closing the Potential-Performance Divide in Ugandan Agriculture
title_short Closing the Potential-Performance Divide in Ugandan Agriculture
title_full Closing the Potential-Performance Divide in Ugandan Agriculture
title_fullStr Closing the Potential-Performance Divide in Ugandan Agriculture
title_full_unstemmed Closing the Potential-Performance Divide in Ugandan Agriculture
title_sort closing the potential-performance divide in ugandan agriculture
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2018
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/996921529090717586/Closing-the-potential-performance-divide-in-Ugandan-agriculture
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/30012
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