Abstract
Nearly one-quarter of Pakistan’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
is contributed by the agriculture sector and it employs nearly 44
percent of the labour force. Agricultural exports, directly and
indirectly, make up a large proportion of total exports and foreign
exchange earnings of the country. Agriculture in Pakistan faces
considerable challenge in the 21st century. The present population of
about 149 million, growing at about 1ta. 9 percent per year, is expected
to double to 298 million in about 40 years. Pakistan’s agriculture has
experienced rapid growth since the 1960s. The average annual growth of
about 4 percent in the four decades before the onset of the new
millennium has exceeded the population growth that touched about 3
percent for a substantial part of this period.1 This rate of growth in
agriculture has been sustained by the technological progress embodied in
the highyielding varieties of grains and cotton with supporting public
investment in irrigation, agricultural research and extension (R&E),
and physical infrastructure. Agricultural growth, in turn, has made
significant contribution to the overall economic growth of about 6
percent per year during this period. Despite rising per capita income,
food demand is likely to grow rapidly given the low level of current per
capita income. There is a compelling need for sustained efforts to
increase production of essential items (wheat, edible oils, etc.). Faced
with limits to further expansion of cultivated land and slowing returns
to further input intensification, productivity growth assumes a central
role in meeting the challenges of the future.
Publisher
Pakistan Institute of Development Economics (PIDE)
Subject
Development,Geography, Planning and Development
Cited by
6 articles.
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