Food insecurity, soil degradation and agricultural markets in West Africa: Why current policy approaches fail

TR Number

Date

2001

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

International Development Centre, Oxford, UK: Carfax Publishing-Taylor and Francis Group

Abstract

At present, the agricultural sector in West Africa is not capable of meeting the growing demand for food for its population and of reversing unfavourable trends in soil degradation. We argue that integrated soil management is an essential condition for sustainable agricultural development in the many regions in West Africa where population pressure forces an intensification of land use. Such an approach combines improved soil-moisture storage measures and the use of organic and inorganic fertilizers and soil amendments. The synergetic effects which could result from this combination are indispensable for achieving the productivity increases needed to cope with the pressure of population. Current policy approaches are unable to realize the transition towards integrated soil management technologies to local circumstances, and in reaping the benefits of soil fertility investments, call for (at least temporary) support of agricultural incomes.

Description

Metadata only record

Keywords

Local markets, Soil degradation, Soil management, Food security, Soil, Markets, Conservation, Trade policy, Agriculture, Policy, West Africa, Sahel, Population pressure, Integrated soil management, Ecosystem Farm/Enterprise Scale

Citation

Oxford Development Studies 29(2): 189-207