Abstract
The main challenge of agriculture is to ensure food security in line with yield increases and minimize environmental costs due to complex interactions between social, economic, and ecological factors. Here we review to identify the impacts of socio-economic factors on crop production efficiency between China and Ethiopia. To set the economic reform and improve the grain yields in rural China, a series of policies on land reforms from communal systems to tax cancelation and subsidies have been implemented. Similar to China, Ethiopia has also experienced different types of land reform from landlord and peasant structure to land as the common property of nations, nationalities, and peoples of Ethiopia. The Gross Domestic Products per capita trends which represent the mean standard of leaving of residents in a country show almost similar growth in the 1980s while later significant variation was achieved between the two countries. It is suggested that to meet food security and increase agricultural efficiency in Ethiopia better infrastructure development that meets socio-economic demands should be prioritized while in China policies to reduce fertilizer inputs are highly recommended to minimize the environmental costs due to high agricultural inputs for sustainable agriculture growth.
Publisher
Granthaalayah Publications and Printers
Reference69 articles.
1. Abebaw Andarge Gedefaw, Clement Atzberger, Walter Seher, and R. M. (2019) 'Farmers Willingness to Participate In Voluntary Land', MDPI, 8(148), pp. 1-21. DOI : doi :10.3390/land8100148. Retrieved from https://doi.org/10.3390/land8100148
2. Alemu, G. T., Berhanie Ayele, Z. and Abelieneh Berhanu, A. (2017) 'Effects of Land Fragmentation on Productivity in Northwestern Ethiopia', Advances in Agriculture, 2017, pp. 1-9. DOI : 10.1155/2017/4509605. Retrieved from https://doi.org/10.1155/2017/4509605
3. Ali, D. A., Deininger, K., and Ronchi, L. (2019) 'Costs and Benefits of Land Fragmentation : Evidence from Rwanda', World Bank Economic Review, 33(3), pp. 750-771. DOI : 10.1093/wber/lhx019. Retrieved from https://doi.org/10.1093/wber/lhx019
4. Baye, T. G. (2018) 'Property Rights and Their Implications on Agricultural Productivity in Ethiopia : A History, 45(1). Retrieved from https://www.ajol.info/index.php/eje/article/view/181424
5. Belay, K. and Manig, W. (2004) 'Access to Rural Land in Eastern Ethiopia : Mismatch between Policy and Reality', Journal of Agriculture and Rural Development in the Tropics and Subtropics, 105(2), pp. 123-138. Retrieved from https://jarts.info/index.php/jarts/article/view/55