Map showing the
growing areas of major agricultural products.
Bangladesh has a
primarily agrarian economy. Agriculture is the single largest producing
sector of the economy since it comprises about 18.6% (data released on
November, 2010) of the country's GDP and employs around 45% of the total labor force. The
performance of this sector has an overwhelming impact on major macroeconomic
objectives like employment generation, poverty
alleviation, human resources development and food security.
Most
Bangladeshis earn their living from agriculture.
Although rice
and jute
are the primary crops, wheat is assuming greater importance. Tea is grown in the
northeast. Because of Bangladesh's fertile soil and normally ample water supply, rice can be
grown and harvested three times a year in many areas. Due to a number of
factors, Bangladesh's labor-intensive agriculture has achieved steady increases
in food grain production despite the often unfavorable weather conditions.
These include better flood control and irrigation,
a generally more efficient use of fertilizers, and the establishment of better
distribution and rural credit networks. With 35.8 million metric tons produced
in 2000, rice is Bangladesh's principal crop. National sales of the classes of insecticide
used on rice, including granular carbofuran, synthetic pyrethroids, and
malathion exceeded 13,000 tons of formulated product in 2003. The insecticides
not only represent an environmental threat, but are a significant expenditure
to poor rice farmers. The Bangladesh Rice Research Institute
is working with various NGOs
and international organizations to reduce insecticide use in rice.
In comparison
to rice, wheat output in 1999 was 1.9 million metric tons. Population pressure
continues to place a severe burden on productive capacity, creating a food deficit,
especially of wheat. Foreign assistance and commercial imports fill
the gap. Underemployment remains a serious problem, and
a growing concern for Bangladesh's agricultural sector will be its ability to
absorb additional manpower. Finding alternative sources of employment will
continue to be a daunting problem for future governments, particularly with the
increasing numbers of landless peasants who already account for about half the rural labor
force.
Food crops
Although rice
and jute are the primary crops, maize and vegetables are assuming greater importance. Due to the
expansion of irrigation networks, some wheat producers have switched to
cultivation of maize which is used mostly as poultry
feed. Tea is grown in the northeast. Because of Bangladesh's fertile soil and
normally ample water supply, rice can be grown and harvested three times a year
in many areas. Due to a number of factors, Bangladesh's labor-intensive
agriculture has achieved steady increases in food grain production despite the
often unfavorable weather conditions. These include better flood control and irrigation,
a generally more efficient use of fertilizers,
and the establishment of better distribution and rural credit networks. With
28.8 million metric tons produced in 2005-2006 (July–June), rice is
Bangladesh's principal crop. By comparison, wheat output in 2005-2006 was 9
million metric tons. Population pressure continues to place a severe burden on
productive capacity, creating a food deficit,
especially of wheat. Foreign assistance and commercial imports fill the gap. Underemployment
remains a serious problem, and a growing concern for Bangladesh's agricultural
sector will be its ability to absorb additional manpower. Finding alternative
sources of employment will continue to be a daunting problem for future
governments, particularly with the increasing numbers of landless peasants
who already account for about half the rural labor force.
Bangladesh is
the fourth largest rice
producing country in the world. National
sales of the classes of insecticide used on rice, including granular carbofuran,
synthetic pyrethroids,
and malathion
exceeded 13,000 tons of formulated product in 2003. The insecticides not only
represent an environmental threat, but are a significant expenditure to poor
rice farmers. The Bangladesh Rice Research Institute
is working with various NGOs
and international organizations to reduce insecticide use in rice.
Wheat is not a traditional
crop in Bangladesh, and in the late 1980s little was consumed in rural areas. During the
1960s and early 1970s, however, it was the only commodity for which local
consumption increased because external food aid
was most often provided in the form of wheat. In the first half of the 1980s,
domestic wheat production rose to more than 1 million tons per year but was
still only 7 to 9 percent of total food grain production. Record production of
nearly 1.5 million tons was achieved in FY 1985, but the following year saw a
decrease to just over 1 million tons. About half the wheat is grown on
irrigated land. The proportion of land devoted to wheat remained essentially
unchanged between 1980 and 1986, at a little less than 6 percent of total
planted area.
Wheat also
accounts for the great bulk of imported food grains, exceeding 1 million tons
annually and going higher than 1.8 million tons in FY 1984, FY 1985, and FY
1987. The great bulk of the imported wheat is financed under aid programs of
the United States,
the European Economic Community, and the World Food Programme.
Food grains are
cultivated primarily for subsistence. Only a small percentage of total
production makes its way into commercial channels. Other Bangladeshi food
crops, however, are grown chiefly for the domestic market. They include potatoes
and sweet
potatoes, with a combined record production of 1.9 million tons in
FY 1984; oilseeds,
with an annual average production of 250,000 tons; and fruits such as bananas,
jackfruit,
mangoes,
and pineapples.
Estimates of sugarcane
production put annual production at more than 7 million tons per year, most of
it processed into a coarse, unrefined sugar known as gur, and sold
domestically.