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. 2022 Jun:33:100628.
doi: 10.1016/j.gfs.2022.100628.

Helping feed the world with rice innovations: CGIAR research adoption and socioeconomic impact on farmers

Affiliations

Helping feed the world with rice innovations: CGIAR research adoption and socioeconomic impact on farmers

Ashok K Mishra et al. Glob Food Sec. 2022 Jun.

Abstract

Rice production has increased significantly with the efforts of international research centers and national governments in the past five decades. Nonetheless, productivity improvement still needs to accelerate in the coming years to feed the growing population that depends on rice for calories and nutrients. This challenge is compounded by the increasing scarcity of natural resources such as water and farmland. This article reviews 17 ex-post impact assessment studies published from 2016 to 2021 on rice varieties, agronomic practices, institutional arrangements, information and communication technologies, and post-harvest technologies used by rice farmers. From the review of these selected studies, we found that stress-tolerant varieties in Asia and Africa significantly increased rice yield and income. Additionally, institutional innovations, training, and natural resource management practices, such as direct-seeded rice, rodent control, and iron-toxicity removal, have had a considerable positive effect on smallholder rice farmers' economic well-being (income and rice yield). Additional positive impacts are expected from the important uptake of stress-tolerant varieties documented in several Asian, Latin American, and African countries.

Keywords: Africa; Direct-seeded rice; Impact assessment; Latin America; Natural resource management; Post-harvest and other technologies; Southeast and South Asia.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Average growth rate (%) of area (hectares), production (tons), and rice yield (t/ha), by period, 1962–2019.

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