A Latent Class Approach To Investigating Consumer Demand For Genetically Modified Staple Food In A Developing Country

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A latent class approach to investigating consumer demand for genetically modified staple food in a developing country: The case of GM bananas in Uganda

Author: Enoch Kikulwe, Ekin Birol, Justus Wesseler, José Falck-Zepeda
language: en
Publisher: Intl Food Policy Res Inst
Release Date:
Genetically modified crops in Africa

Author: Falck-Zepeda, José Benjamin
language: en
Publisher: Intl Food Policy Res Inst
Release Date: 2013-10-02
A variable climate, political instability, and other constraints have limited agricultural development in African countries south of the Sahara. Genetically modified (GM) crops are one tool for enhancing agricultural productivity and food security despite such constraints. Genetically Modified Crops in Africa: Economic and Policy Lessons from Countries South of the Sahara investigates how this tool might be effectively used by evaluating the benefits, costs, and risks for African countries of adopting GM crops. The authors gather together studies on GM crops economic effects and impact on trade, how consumers view such crops, and other issues. They find that GM crops have had, on average, a positive economic effect in the nations where they were used and identify future steps for enhancing GM crop adoptions positive effects. Promising policy initiatives include making biosafety regulations that do not make GM crop development prohibitively expensive, fostering intraregional trade in GM crops, and providing more and better information about GM crops to consumers who might currently be skeptical of them. These and other findings in Genetically Modified Crops in Africa indicate ways biotechnology can contribute to economic development in Africa south of the Sahara.
Rice production responses in Cambodia

Author: Bingxin Yu, Shenggen Fan
language: en
Publisher: Intl Food Policy Res Inst
Release Date: