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Out of the Shadow of Famine: Evolving Food Markets and Food Policy in Bangladesh (International Food Policy Research Institute)
 
 
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Out of the Shadow of Famine: Evolving Food Markets and Food Policy in Bangladesh (International Food Policy Research Institute) [Paperback]

Raisuddin Ahmed (Editor), Steven Haggblade (Editor), Tawfiq-e-Elahi Chowdhury (Editor)

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Book Description

March 27, 2000 International Food Policy Research Institute

This book describes how Bangladesh transformed its food markets and food policies to free the country from the constant threat of famine. Since 1990, the Bangladeshi government has dismantled its food rationing system, privatized grain distribution, eased restrictions on international trade, and reduced its own presence in grain markets. The foundation for these developments was laid in the preceding decades. Improvements in agricultural science in the 1970s roughly doubled farm yields, while in the 1980s liberalization of irrigation restrictions, the lifting of import barriers to irrigation technology, and the privatization of fertilizer distribution rapidly increased rice cultivation. These increases in production, coupled with improvements in infrastructure and a more slowly growing and increasingly urban population, have substantially changed the structure of food grain markets, leading to increased marketing volumes, lower prices, and significantly larger private grain stocks.

The book sets the Bangladeshi case in the larger context of the South Asian subcontinent and other developing countries in Asia. The authors examine the shifting structure of supply and demand in the grain markets, the history of government intervention in those markets, and the more recent changes that altered the arguments for such intervention and led to policy changes. The case of Bangladesh also has more general relevance as a study of the outcomes of a market-oriented reform program.

Contributors are Raisuddin Ahmed, Steven Haggblade, Tawfiq-e-Elahi Chowdhury, Akhter U. Ahmed, A.W. Nuruddin Ahmed, Lutful Hoque Chowdhury, Wahiduddin Mahmud, Francesco Goletti, Herbie Smith, A. S. M. Jahangir, Shamsur Rahman, Golam Kabir, Sultan Hafeez Rahman, Sajjad Zohir, Paul Dorosh, David A. Atwood, Nuimuddin Chowdhury.


Editorial Reviews

Review

The happy marriage of political economy and agricultural economics breathes fresh air into debates that are conventionally static and dry... The overall quality of this book is high; its value for the policy analyst very high; and its significance beyond the case of Bangladesh certain.

(Patrick Webb Quarterly Journal of International Agriculture )

About the Author

Raisuddin Ahmed is Division Director, Markets and Structural Studies Division, at the International Food Policy Research Institute. Steven Haggblade is an independent consultant and a former research fellow at the International Food Policy Research Institute. Tawfiq-e-Elahi Chowdhury is currently secretary to the government of Bangladesh, Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources. Previously he was secretary to the Ministry of Food.


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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The transformation in Bangladesh from traditional agriculture to a dynamic and progressively commercial agrarian society is a fascinating process that should interest many developing countries. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
ration dealers, modified rationing, public foodgrain distribution, foodgrain digest, ration channels, private rice imports, atta chakkis, foodgrain traders, targeted food interventions, dhaner upore, offtake price, food policy project, aman rice harvest, ration cardholders, foodgrain technology, foodgrain stocks, rural rationing, foodgrain markets, food policy reforms, foodgrain sector, nonrice crops, aman harvest, boro crop, boro season, milled production
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
International Food Policy Research Institute, World Bank, East Pakistan, Bangladesh Food Policy Project Manuscript, Ministry of Food, Bangladesh Institute of Development Studies, World Food Programme, Research Report, Working Paper, Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics, East Bengal, Sri Lanka, Beacon Associates, Government of Bangladesh, Steven Hagghlade, Sajjad Zohir, Bangladesh Development Studies, Green Revolution, United States, World War, New York, Oxford University Press, Civil Supplies Department, Essential Supplies, International Fertilizer Development Center
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