Economic analysis of commercial organic and conventional vegetable farming in Kathmandu Valley

Authors

  • Kamal Shrestha Himalayan College of Agricultural Sciences and Technology
  • Gautam Shrestha Nepal Agricultural Research Council (NARC), Regional Agricultural Research Station, Khajura, Banke
  • Pradyumna R Pandey Ministry of Agricultural Development (MoAD)

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3126/aej.v15i0.19816

Abstract

Economics of a farming system is the key determinant of its sustainability. Organic and conventional farming systems are two distinct types of production systems having contrasting farm management practices and output price as well. Furthermore, organic farming system is promoted for environmental protection and conventional farming system is cursed for the environmental degradation. The present study was conducted to compare the economics of organic and conventional vegetable production in Kathmandu valley. Thirty farmers each involved in commercial organic and conventional vegetable farming were selected randomly for the study. Data were collected through survey method using semi-structured questionnaire. The estimated per ropani per year cost of cultivation of vegetables in the organic farm (NPR 69,170) was lesser than in conventional farm (NPR 1,00,562). The gross return per ropani in a year in the organic vegetable farm (NPR 1,01,536) was significantly lesser than from conventional farms (NPR 1,35,747). Benefit to cost ratio (BCR) was higher in organic farm (1.47:1) in comparison to conventional farm (1.35:1). This study revealed that organic vegetable farming was more profitable than conventional vegetable farming in Kathmandu valley. To expand commercial agriculture: quality inputs, input and output price stability, co-operative or corporative marketing should be promoted.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.
Abstract
1297
PDF
827

Downloads

Published

2014-06-01

How to Cite

Shrestha, K., Shrestha, G., & Pandey, P. R. (2014). Economic analysis of commercial organic and conventional vegetable farming in Kathmandu Valley. Journal of Agriculture and Environment, 15, 58–71. https://doi.org/10.3126/aej.v15i0.19816

Issue

Section

Technical Paper