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8 years ago

Cropping pattern and cropping intensity

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Cropping pattern is influenced by a host of factors. It is not only the size of the owned land but other important factors such as subsistence pressure, infrastructural facilities, information base and marketing opportunities. We observe that the dominant cropping pattern in the 1980s was production of paddy followed by keeping the land fallow. This pattern claimed about one-thirds of the total cultivated land. And depicting an upward movement although, land under this pattern perked at about 40 per cent in recent years. Another pattern to notice is paddy followed by paddy. In comparable periods, the proportion of land under this pattern, on average, hovered around one-thirds of cultivated land. But there has been a significant decrease in the case of land under triple crops and, possibly, for this reason cropping intensity index has declined over time. 
Overall, the share of fallow land (after paddy or other crops) has increased in recent years. This is also an interesting development because (a) farmers have learnt that land also needs some rest and (b) economic solvency has reduced the urgency to pursue the earlier pattern. In any case, 70 per cent of the cultivated land in rural Bangladesh is used only for paddy production and only 18 per cent goes to non-paddy crops. It signifies that, crop diversification until now could not emerge as an attractive option for farmers engaged in the war of food security. 
Let us now look at the issue from the angle of farm size. First, in comparable periods of 1988 and recent past, the main cropping pattern for small farmers was paddy followed by paddy. That means, after harvesting one paddy crop, farmers used to prepare for growing another paddy crop. But by 2013, marginal departure from the traditional pattern could be observed: instead of going for another paddy, farmers began to keep the land fallow. Of course, this pattern had been a favourite for medium and large farmers for a pretty long time. It appears that small farmers, for the sake of food security, have been tilting towards paddy followed by fallow option rather than paddy followed by paddy option. Second, triple-cropped land seems to be almost on the verge of non-existence. In the past, there was a trend to grow another non-paddy crop after two consecutive paddy crops. The departure is definitely a sign of improvement as land is not being cultivated as intensively as before with adverse impacts on soil fertility. Third, we notice that, cropping diversification is until now largely a "golden deer". Whatever feeble attempts at crop diversification have been made so far, it was mostly by the small and medium farmers. And finally, an inverse relationship between farm size and cropping intensity can be observed. For small farmers, the intensity declined from 174 in 1988 to 163 in recent past; for large farmers, the index moved down from 169 to 139, respectively.
An examination of the cropping pattern and cropping intensity by irrigation status would provide another dimension of the issue under discussion. In areas where the main sources of irrigation are rainfalls and surface water, the cropping pattern is paddy cultivation followed by fallow. For example, this pattern has claimed 57 per cent of the cultivated land as against 36 per cent in the 1980s. But this pattern does not seem to suit areas where underground water is mostly used for irrigation purposes. The difference between the two areas in terms of cropping patterns is mainly caused by the timely availability of water for irrigation. Second, consecutive two paddy crops is the pattern mainly for users of underground water, although over time the trend has diminished somewhat. For example, in the distant past, 60 per cent of the land embraced this pattern - paddy followed by paddy - as against 46 per cent in recent times. In sharp contrast, however, in areas where rainwater or surface water is used, the pattern claims 15-20 per cent of land. The difference is mainly due to availability of water: underground irrigation is more regular but irrigation is erratic where surface water and rainfalls dominate. Third, possibly for the reasons mentioned just before, a favourite pattern for the users of rainwater and surface water is paddy followed by a non-paddy crop. Fourth, the proportion of triple-cropped land had always been low and over time it reduced further.  And finally, cropping intensity had always been highest in irrigated land, although it has been declining over time. The tendency to grow only one paddy in irrigated land has been declining but increasing in other modes.
In the very low-lying areas, the cropping pattern is paddy cultivation followed by keeping the land fallow, although the pattern is changing over time. The reason behind such pattern could be the early arrival of flood - called early flood. In medium and high land, the main pattern is consecutive two paddy crops i.e. paddy followed by paddy. On the other hand, in all topographic condition, the general pattern is to keep land fallow after growing one non-paddy cop. Crop diversification, in whatever degree takes place, is evident in high and medium land as early flood is unfriendly to vegetables, fruits and cash crops. That is why crop diversification is the lowest in low land and relatively high in medium and high land.
The cultivated land can be categorised into two main segments: (a) favourable zones and (b) unfavourable zones. In the favourable zones, water availability is somewhat certain; there is no salinity and no fear of drought or excessive floods. In unfavourable zones, the main determinant of cropping pattern is mostly the nature.  We observe that, cropping intensity has declined in all regions - the highest in unfavourable zones and the lowest in favourable zones. Interestingly, in drought-prone areas, cropping intensity has risen by about 20 per cent as compared to a decline in the favourable zones. 
This development could take place due to the fact that irrigation facilities have expanded in these regions to help the growth of HYV aman and boro paddy and bring more land under these crops. This is undoubtedly good news. But the bad news is that, as elsewhere, farmers in drought-prone areas have increasingly tilted towards growing only paddy and the increasing trend of crop diversification is almost a matter of past there.
The writer is a Professor of Economics at Jahangirnagar University. [email protected]
 

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