Estimation of efficiency, sustainability and constraints in SRI vs traditional methods in North Coastal Andhra

Article Courtesy : Agricultural Economics Research Review

Author : I.V.Y. Rama Rao

Abstract

The study has assessed the economics and sustainability of SRI (system of rice intensification) and traditional methods of paddy cultivation in North Coastal Zone of Andhra Pradesh for the period 2008–09, based on the data of costs and returns of crop. Apart from budgeting techniques, benefit-cost ratio (BCR), yield gap analysis, sustainability index and response priority index have been employed in the study. It has shown that BCR is higher for SRI (1.76) than traditional (1.25) methods.

Further, there is a 31 per cent yield gap between SRI and traditional methods, in which cultural practices (20.15%) have shown a stronger effect than input use (10.85%). The most important constraint in SRI cultivation has been identified as ‘nursery management’. The SRI method being more skill oriented, the study has observed that yields can be made sustainable if constraints are addressed on war-footing basis.

Introduction

India is one of the leading rice producing countries of the world with cultivated area of 45.35 Mha and production of 99.15 Mt in 2008-09. The leading states in rice cultivation are: Andhra Pradesh, West Bengal and Uttar Pradesh. Andhra Pradesh ranked third with cultivated area of 4.39 Mha and production of 13.80 Mt with yield of 3.15 t/ha in 2008-09. In India, rice is an important ingredient of household food-basket, yet its yield level is low, stagnant and uncertain (Barah, 2009). The operational holding-size is shrinking, and land and water resources are getting degraded.

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