Agricultural Productivity and Poverty in Rural Sudan
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World Bank, Washington, DC
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While agriculture remains the
mainstay for a large share of the population in Sudan, and
rural poverty has seen a dramatic decrease (between 2009 and
2014/15), poverty remains relatively high among those
engaged in agriculture. Households engaged in
agriculture—either crop farming or raising livestock—see
among the highest rates of poverty among households
classified by their main livelihoods in Sudan. As these
households form a major bulk of the total population,
understanding why these households remain poor and
identifying strategies for lifting them out of poverty is a
key concern for researchers and policy makers. This concern
occupies the primary motivation for this study. Using data
from the 2009 National Baseline Household Survey (NBHS) and
2014/15 National Household Budget and Poverty Survey
(NHBPS), this study sheds light on the rural landscape in
Sudan. Though rural Sudan has fared much better than urban
Sudan between survey rounds, the number of poor remains
higher in rural than in urban areas. Sudan severely lags
other African countries in terms of agricultural
productivity. Sorghum, Sudan’s most commonly produced
crop—grown by close to half the agrarian households—has seen
yields increase from below 500 kg per ha in 1995 to almost
700 kg per ha in 2017. A major constraint to improving crop
productivity in Sudan is the low use of
productivity-enhancing inputs, particularly fertilizers and
pesticides and low-yield seed varieties. Increasing input
use can be achieved by investing in rural markets. Market
participation of agrarian households in Sudan is low,
constraining farmers’ ability to raise their income levels
and escape poverty. Improving rural transportation and
telecommunications networks, providing access to rural
credit and financial services, and increasing the ease of
doing business for input providers and output marketers can
increase the geographic penetration of agrarian input and
output markets. Though sorghum and millet remain the
dominant crops grown in Sudan, the recent increase in the
number of households growing sesame is a welcome
development. Deteriorations in the irrigation infrastructure
need to be reversed to ensure Sudan remains competitive in
the export of commercial crops. Access to cell phones has
significantly increased channels of communication for the
rural poor.
Palabras clave
AGRICULTURE PRODUCTIVITY, POVERTY, IRRIGATION, RURAL POVERTY, SORGUM FARMING PRODUCTIVITY, FARMING INCOME
