The Asian Development Bank (ADB) has approved a $50 million policy-based loan to help support the Government of Nepal’s reforms to improve food safety measures, enhance agricultural trade standards, and promote agricultural commercialisation in the country.
“Agriculture has a big potential to contribute significantly to Nepal’s growth and development, but the sector remains rooted on subsistence farming and food safety measures are impeding the prospect of trade with other countries,” said ADB senior public management economist Navendu Karan. “ADB’s assistance will help address these issues by making sure that Nepal’s agricultural products and processes are up to international standards.”
Agriculture plays a key role in Nepal’s economy, contributing 27 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) in 2019, with 55 per cent of the country’s working age population (above 15 years) engaged in subsistence agriculture, 61 per cent of whom are women. However, the sector’s productivity remains the lowest in South Asia, given the dominance of subsistence farming, poor adoption of suitable on-farm and post-harvest technology, lack of timely supply of quality inputs including fertilizer and seeds, and limited financial services and infrastructure.
Agricultural commercialisation, meanwhile, is constrained by the limited capacity of farmers to prepare bankable business proposals to seek formal financing. The country’s food safety measures are also not aligned with international standards, making it difficult to move agricultural commodities between Nepal and its trade partners, with exporters facing significant delays and higher transaction costs due to multiple food safety tests on both sides of the border.
The Food Safety and Agriculture Commercialisation Programme, comprised of a two-tranche, standalone policy-based loan, will improve food safety and quality monitoring systems in Nepal, particularly in enhancing the regulatory and institutional capacity for sanitary and phytosanitary monitoring. This will include alignment with accepted standards for pesticide residue levels for fruits and vegetables, among others.
The programme will promote agricultural commercialization by supporting the preparation of bankable business plans for selected commodities to widen farmers’ access to finance and business knowledge, while building their capacity in good agricultural practices. Institutional capacity of relevant government authorities will be enhanced to ensure sustainability of progress in the agriculture sector.
ADB has been Nepal’s key partner in the agriculture sector since the bank’s first sector engagement in 1971. Apart from the policy-based loan, ADB will also provide a $500,000 technical assistance grant to assist implementing agencies to comply with the policy conditions of the programme’s second tranche.
ADB is committed to achieving a prosperous, inclusive, resilient, and sustainable Asia and the Pacific, while sustaining its efforts to eradicate extreme poverty. In 2018, it made commitments of new loans and grants amounting to $21.6 billion. Established in 1966, it is owned by 68 members, 49 from the region.
“Agriculture has a big potential to contribute significantly to Nepal’s growth and development, but the sector remains rooted on subsistence farming and food safety measures are impeding the prospect of trade with other countries,” said ADB senior public management economist Navendu Karan. “ADB’s assistance will help address these issues by making sure that Nepal’s agricultural products and processes are up to international standards.”
Agriculture plays a key role in Nepal’s economy, contributing 27 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) in 2019, with 55 per cent of the country’s working age population (above 15 years) engaged in subsistence agriculture, 61 per cent of whom are women. However, the sector’s productivity remains the lowest in South Asia, given the dominance of subsistence farming, poor adoption of suitable on-farm and post-harvest technology, lack of timely supply of quality inputs including fertilizer and seeds, and limited financial services and infrastructure.
Agricultural commercialisation, meanwhile, is constrained by the limited capacity of farmers to prepare bankable business proposals to seek formal financing. The country’s food safety measures are also not aligned with international standards, making it difficult to move agricultural commodities between Nepal and its trade partners, with exporters facing significant delays and higher transaction costs due to multiple food safety tests on both sides of the border.
The Food Safety and Agriculture Commercialisation Programme, comprised of a two-tranche, standalone policy-based loan, will improve food safety and quality monitoring systems in Nepal, particularly in enhancing the regulatory and institutional capacity for sanitary and phytosanitary monitoring. This will include alignment with accepted standards for pesticide residue levels for fruits and vegetables, among others.
The programme will promote agricultural commercialization by supporting the preparation of bankable business plans for selected commodities to widen farmers’ access to finance and business knowledge, while building their capacity in good agricultural practices. Institutional capacity of relevant government authorities will be enhanced to ensure sustainability of progress in the agriculture sector.
ADB has been Nepal’s key partner in the agriculture sector since the bank’s first sector engagement in 1971. Apart from the policy-based loan, ADB will also provide a $500,000 technical assistance grant to assist implementing agencies to comply with the policy conditions of the programme’s second tranche.
ADB is committed to achieving a prosperous, inclusive, resilient, and sustainable Asia and the Pacific, while sustaining its efforts to eradicate extreme poverty. In 2018, it made commitments of new loans and grants amounting to $21.6 billion. Established in 1966, it is owned by 68 members, 49 from the region.
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