The Rice and Bean Research Imperative
Rice and beans are an inseparable pair of staple foods for millions of Latin Americans,
particularly in Brazil and parts of Central America, the Caribbean, and Andean Mountain
zone. Whether consumed separately or together, these crops figure importantly in the human
diet and in national economies across the entire region, and trends in their production
are a matter of immediate relevance to practically all of its inhabitants.
Though rice and bean production is still faced with many challenges, much of the news
is positive. Improved varieties of both crops have had a large economic impact in Latin
America, starting roughly two decades ago and continuing right to the present. In addition
to putting more cash in farmers pockets, the new varieties have improved rice and
bean supplies, helping the regions poorest consumers keep one of the worlds
great culinary combinations at the center of their diet.
The urgency of continued rice and bean research in Latin America is fed by two
disconcerting facts about the region.
- First, even though important economic gains were registered during the 1970s, these were
erased to a large extent in the so-called "lost decade" of the 1980s. Moreover,
a new set of policies, aimed at opening up national economies and reducing government
subsidies, has so far done little to better the lot of less-fortunate people. Nearly half
of Latin Americans still live below the poverty line, as defined by the Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the
United Nations.
- Second, because of grinding poverty and unrest in rural areas, urbanization and massive
immigration to industrialized countries continue at a rapid rate.
These trends pose a dire threat to the fragile economic and political gains of recent
years. To avert that threat requires, among other things, a renewed commitment to Latin
Americas agriculture, with significant investment at the international and national
levels.
About CIAT and its National Partners
The main purpose of this document is to summarize the progress and economic impact of
improved varieties of rice and beans released by national agricultural research programs
in almost every country of the region. In support of this work, they have received
experimental germplasm, training, and technical assistance from the International Center
for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT), which is headquartered in Cali, Colombia.
Most of this support is channeled to national programs through regional research
networks in which local rice and bean researchers have a vote and a voice. The networks
and CIATs international research programs enable participating countries to solve
common problems through joint efforts rather than wasting resources by working
individually toward the same ends.
Established 30 years ago, CIAT is one of 16 international centers supported by the
Consultative Group on International Agriculture (CGIAR), whose secretariat is located at World Bank headquarters in
Washington, D.C. The US Agency for International Development (USAID) is one of the groups
principal donors.
Although three of the CGIAR centers are located in Latin America, CIAT is the only one
that devotes most of its resources to agricultural research for this region. In addition
to rice and beans, the Center conducts research on cassava (a major tropical root crop)
and forage grasses and legumes, which serve as feed for livestock.
In the last 5 years, CIAT has integrated its crop research with new initiatives aimed
at improving the management of natural resources in key agroecosystems of tropical
America. This work includes research on soils and cropping systems, small-scale
agroenterprise development, and land management policies and strategies. In recent years
the Center has also become an internationally recognized leader in developing methods for
farmer participation in research.
Two Crops, two Cultures
As background to the record of rice and bean research impact, it is important to
understand how they became close dietary companions and acquired such large economic
significance in Latin America.
The story begins with Europes physical and cultural assault on the New World,
which quickly moved from the battlefield to the indigenous kitchen. One of the many
confrontations of taste that occurred there involved ricea foreign
introductionand beansa native staple. In some Latin American countries, people
still refer to the combination of rice and beans as "Moors and Christians,"
reflecting an early Spanish colonial perception of this common dish.
The rise of riceWithin a century and a half after the European conquest, the
cultivation and consumption of rice had become well established. The crop apparently
entered the New World from two directions, arriving through Spanish and Portuguese trade
with Africa and Asia. It took two centuries more, though, for the Old World cereal to
carve out its now predominant place in the Latin American diet. Not until the 20th century
did it become the regions most important grain crop for human consumption.
Today, rice supplies Latin American consumers with more calories than wheat, maize,
cassava, and potatoes. It is surpassed only by sugar as a source of energy in their diets.
By the 1990s per capita consumption of rice had reached 30 kilograms, up from 10 kilograms
in the 1920s.
The displacement by rice of starchy staples, such as cassava and plantain, has been
driven largely by urbanization throughout the region. Today, about 70 percent of Latin
Americans live in cities. Rice has clearly proved to be a more convenient food for them
than the bulkier and more perishable traditional crops.
Apart from its convenience, rice has many other dietary virtues. It is rich in vitamins
and minerals, low in fat and salt, and free of cholesterol.
Rice is a versatile crop, with varieties adapted to a wide range of climates, soils,
and moisture conditions. In Latin America about 55 percent of the crop (3.7 million
hectares) is concentrated in wetlands, and roughly two-thirds of that area is irrigated.
The other 45 percent (3.0 million hectares), referred to as "upland" rice, is
grown under rainfed conditions.
Most upland rice in Latin America is mechanized; only about a million hectares are
cultivated manually. Upland rice has served as a pioneer crop during this century, with
mechanized production spreading into Latin Americas vast savannas and manual
cultivation penetrating the margins of its tropical forests.
Irrigation provides the best conditions for rice production, so naturally irrigated
areas have registered the most gains in recent decades. Irrigated rice is grown mainly on
a commercial scale in Latin America, with almost universal adoption of modern varieties
and widespread use of agrochemicals for fertilization and pest control.
The native beanThe common bean is of New World origin. Archeological evidence
found in Mexico, Peru, and the USA suggests that the crop was domesticated at least 7,000
years ago. In modern times it has become the worlds most important food legume, far
outranking chickpeas, faba beans, and lentils. Latin America is still the most important
bean-producing region; its 8 million hectares account for nearly half of global output.
Since beans evolved in this region, they naturally occupy a central place in the human
culture that gave rise to the crop. Farmer selection of beans over the centuries has
produced a wide variety of seed colors, textures, and sizes to meet a wide array of
tastes.
Even the common name of the crop in Spanish varies: The most frequently used term is
frijolheard from Mexico to Panama, throughout the Caribbean, and in parts of
Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru. But elsewhere the common bean is called frejol, frisol,
poroto, habichuela, habilla, and caraota.
Beans are grown under even more diverse conditions than ricefrom sea level to
elevations of more than 3,000 meters. Moreover, in contrast with rice, the crop is grown
chiefly by small farmers without irrigation and using low levels of chemical inputs. Bean
production is often relegated to marginal environments, such as those characterized by
steep, erosion-prone slopes and by low soil fertility.
Though traditionally grown for subsistence, the common bean has in recent decades found
sizable markets, as Latin Americans have flocked to cities. Unlike some other traditional
staples, however, the crop has fit rather easily into urban life and eating habits. Rapid
growth of demand in cities has created new cash-earning opportunities for the small
farmers who grow beans.
In remaining faithful to the native bean, Latin American consumers have clearly made a
healthy choice. Because of the high protein content and generous amounts of dietary fiber,
complex carbohydrates, and other dietary essentials in beans, nutritionists characterize
them as a "near-perfect food." A single serving provides at least half the US
Department of Agricultures recommended daily allowance of folic acid (a B vitamin
that is especially important for pregnant women), 25 to 30 percent of the daily
recommended iron levels, 25 percent of the daily requirements of magnesium and copper, and
15 percent of potassium and zinc.
Widely known as the "poor mans meat," the crop provides an inexpensive
source of protein for low-income consumers. One hectare planted to traditional bean
varieties produces 123 kilograms of protein, compared to 3.4 kilograms of protein from
beef cattle raised on the same amount of land. Beans are the fourth most important source
of protein in Latin America. Their nutritional advantages make them particularly
beneficial in the diets of women and children.
Two Crops, two Research Strategies
Though highly complementary in nutritional terms, rice and beans clearly belong to two
quite distinct agricultural traditions. This in turn has required that crop scientists
adopt two different research strategies for helping improve the production of these crops.
The ongoing Green Revolution in riceIn the mid-1960s, Latin Americas entire
rice area was planted to tall traditional varieties, which gave low yields and responded
poorly to the chemical fertilizers introduced in that period. Through a movement that
began in Asia and became known as the "Green Revolution," modern rice research
largely replaced Latin Americas traditional races with higher yielding semidwarf
varieties, particularly in the irrigated environments. The new varieties yield better,
because they channel more of the extra nutrients provided by modest amounts of fertilizer
into the production of grain than into growth of stems and leaves.
Farmers rapidly adopted the new semidwarf varieties, developed and released by national
programs with help from two international centers, throughout the 1970s. But that was
merely the beginning of a process that continues to the present. Over the last 30 years,
national programs across the region have released, on average, a total of 10 new lowland
rice varieties each year. In all some 300 varieties have been released, most of them
targeted to irrigated conditions.
About 40 percent of the varieties have come from crosses made at CIAT and 11 percent
from the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) in the Philippines. The rest have been derived from germplasm
identified by national programs in Latin America, Africa, and Asia. Nearly 80 percent of
this germplasmthat both from international and national sourceshas reached
scientists in Latin American countries through an international rice testing network
coordinated by IRRI and CIAT. The network provides a way, not just for international
centers to distribute their products, but for national programs all over the developing
world to share their germplasm with one another.
The rapid spread of new semidwarf varieties in the 1970s naturally resulted in the
displacement of many traditional landraces from farmers fields. That in turn gave
rise to legitimate concerns about narrowing the genetic base of rice production and making
it more vulnerable to disease epidemics.
Since the early days of the Green Revolution, however, rice scientists in Latin America
have broadened the genetic base by drawing on germplasm from Africa and other sources. In
general, each of the new varieties has represented significant improvement for at least
one key trait, on top of the gains already achieved. Better resistance to diseases and
other stresses, for example, has stabilized rice yields and greatly reduced the need for
fungicide and pesticide applications. The rapid spread of these new varieties has been
facilitated by the effective organization of the commercial rice sector.
Improved beans for low-input agricultureAt an early date in bean research for
Latin America, scientists concluded that a Green Revolution-style transformation of the
crop was highly unlikely. In contrast with rice, beans were grown predominantly on a small
scale, often in complex combinations with other native staples (especially maize), and in
less favorable agricultural environments. Moreover, bean growers generally could not
afford to apply fertilizers and other chemical inputs to overcome the effects of poor
soils and the depredations of diseases and insect pests. A further consideration was wide
variation in consumer preferences with respect to seed color and texture, which
complicated the whole process of developing and disseminating improved seeds.
The very different circumstances of bean cultivation did not mean, however, that modern
crop science could do less to improve it. Rather, researchers would have to pursue a
different and perhaps more difficult improvement strategy than that for rice, one that
would take longer to show results.
In the mid-1970s, CIAT and its national partners embarked on intensive breeding
programs to develop a wide array of new bean varieties that would offer farmers distinct
advantages even under so-called "low-input" conditions. To accomplish this, bean
breeders placed particular emphasis on genetic resistance to combinations of widespread
diseases, principally common bacterial blight, bean common mosaic, bean golden mosaic,
anthracnose, and angular leaf spot. They also selected for higher yields under drought and
low soil fertility, especially low phosphorus. Another goal was early maturity, which
would enable farmers to fit the bean crop more easily into complex cropping systems.
Two circumstances gave this strategy a reasonably good chance of success. First was the
incredible array of genetic diversity available to bean breeders in their search for
disease resistance and other traits. This diversity is well represented in the bean gene
bank maintained at CIAT for experimentation by researchers and farmers and for the benefit
of consumers everywhere. The bank safeguards 26,500 samples of cultivated common beans and
close to 1,500 samples of wild beans.
The second favorable circumstance was the increasing market orientation of bean
production. This has given the small farmers who grow beans a powerful new incentive to
adopt appropriate improved varieties as an inexpensive means of intensifying production.
National programs have released about 180 new varieties originating from germplasm
provided by CIAT and an undetermined number based on germplasm from other sources. Given
the less commercial orientation of bean production, it is more difficult to monitor the
spread of improved varieties than in rice. Even so, information provided by national
programs suggests that the new seed is planted on at least 40 percent of Latin
Americas total bean-growing area. The rest is occupied by traditional landraces of
the crop.
The Record of Impact in Rice
To develop and deliver improved crop varieties and related technology
in Latin America has required substantial amounts of public
funds. These have been paid by national governments as well
as by donor agencies in the industrialized world that support
international agricultural research. Over the last decade,
public funds have become exceedingly scarce, especially in
the developing countries. It is thus vital that decision makers
have the means to determine the payoffs for society from public
investments in crop research, so they will have a firm quantitative
basis for deciding how to allocate dwindling research budgets.

Toward that end CIAT has worked in recent years with various institutions
to develop new crop databases and analytical methods. Under
a project funded by the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB),
for example, the Center has sought ways to anticipate the
probable impacts of research investments as well as to document
the impact already achieved. In this research CIAT has worked
closely with many national programs as well as the International
Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI),
which is headquartered in Washington, D.C., and the Inter-American
Institute for Cooperation in Agriculture (IICA),
based in San José, Costa Rica.
In the case of rice, IFPRI economists have applied an "economic surplus
model" to determine the stream of benefits to consumers and producers generated by
the adoption of new technology from 1966 to 1995 in the various production environments.
The outcomes of this and related analysis are summarized briefly below.
The modern semidwarf varieties developed and disseminated by CIAT, IRRI, and their
national partners today account for 93 percent of all wetland rice production in Latin
America; the figure is 98 percent for irrigated wetland rice. Altogether, the wetlands
represent about 80 percent of the regions total output of the crop.
The new varieties and accompanying improvements in crop management increased the
average rice yield in wetland areas from 3.3 tons per hectare in the mid-1960s to 4.6 tons
(5.0 tons for irrigated rice) in 1995. Mainly as a result of the yield gains, total
production doubled during that period to 20.6 million tons, making Latin America about 90
percent self-sufficient in rice. Meanwhile, the area planted to rice rose modestly, from
5.8 million hectares in the mid-1960s to 6.7 million in 1995.

More efficient production of the crop on
such a large scale has brought down its price by about 50 percent in real terms over the
last three decades. As a consequence, consumers have been the main beneficiaries of
technological change, receiving US$518 million per year since 1966. Price savings have
been especially helpful to the poor (as defined by FAO), since they spend half of their total income on food and rice
accounts for 15 percent of their total food purchases.
Despite lower prices, producers in irrigated areas have also captured large benefits,
amounting to $437 million per year. However, these gains have been offset somewhat by
losses in other production environments. Mechanized upland rice, for example, registered
net annual losses of $70 million between 1966 and 1995. The losses in manual upland rice
amounted to $5 million annually over the same period.
These were the result of falling rice pricesdue to productivity gains in
irrigated ricecombined with the inability of manual and mechanized upland rice
growers to match the technical progress of their counterparts in irrigated environments.
In other words rice production in irrigated areas simply proved more competitive than that
in the uplands.
Bad news for upland rice producers meant good news for the environment. The
discouraging economics of upland rice reduced growers financial incentive to spread
production further into the savannas and tropical forest margins. Irrigated rice thus
acted as a kind of safety valve, removing some of the pressure on these ecologically
fragile areas.
Were it not for the dramatic increase in yields of irrigated rice, Latin American
farmers would have had to at least double the area planted in order for production to
reach its current annual level of 20.6 million tons. Most of the area expansion would have
occurred in the savannas and forest margins, at a huge cost in terms of biodiversity loss,
deforestation, and contamination of water from overuse of agrochemicals.
The Record of Impact in Beans
Scientists have only recently been able to obtain sufficient reliable data on bean
production to apply the economic surplus model, as was done for rice. As a result, similar
data on the benefits flowing from investments in bean research are not yet available.
Overall trendsEven so, one cannot help but notice encouraging trends at the macro
level, as evidenced by FAO statistics. Over the last decade or so, total bean production
in Latin America has risen 25 percentto 5.3 million tons in 1993-95 from 4.2 million
tons in 1983-85. At the same time, total area has risen by only 2 percentto 8.1
million hectares from 7.9 millionand the annual rate of growth in area has actually
declined to -0.5 percent.
Increased production has thus resulted mainly from higher yields. The annual growth
rate in yield is now at about 2.7 percent (compared to 1.9 percent a decade ago), and this
is well above Latin Americas average rate of growth in population (1.9 percent).
With beans more readily available in the marketplace, per capita consumption has started
to rise as well, and much evidence points to a continuing increase in the regions
total demand for beans.
In some parts of Latin America, the changes have been even more dramatic than in the
region as a whole. For example, in the Andean Mountain countries (Bolivia, Colombia,
Ecuador, and Peru), bean production was essentially stagnant until the early 1990s. Rates
of growth in yield and production lagged well behind population growth. The outlook for
beans in the region was bleak, with trends in supply and demand pointing to large bean
deficits by the year 2000. But by 1995 bean production in these countries as a whole had
risen sharply, apparently as a result of higher yields.
Variety adoption studiesA growing body of evidence from field studies suggests
that improved varieties have contributed importantly to yield increases. A literature
database maintained on CIATs web site contains abstracts of about 40 such studies.
They have been designed mainly to determine the acceptability of new varieties to farmers
and consumers and their impact on bean yields in farmers fields.
For example, a 1990 survey carried out by CIAT economists in Perus northern
Cajamarca department documented the success of the variety Gloriabamba, released 3 years
earlier by Peruvian bean researchers. Despite the harsh growing conditions of this remote
semiarid region, 65 percent of small farmers were growing the variety on about 35 percent
of the total bean area, with an average yield increase of 27 percent. The additional
production made possible by Gloriabamba was estimated at 3,038 tons per year, worth $1.5
million.
A 1996-97 study conducted by CIAT in Perus Cusco department examined the adoption
and impact of five new varieties that had been developed in the late 1980s through farmer
participatory schemes. According to the study, 94 percent of farmers were growing the new
varieties. Moreover, these constituted 52 percent of the total bean germplasm available
and accounted for 64 percent of the total bean area. The study further determined that the
combination of improved germplasm and higher plant densities boosted average yields by 110
percent from 1985 to 1996.

The adoption studies have by no means been limited to the Andean countries. One of the
earliest analyses was conducted in Costa Rica and published by the journal Agricultural
Administration and Extension in 1986. This work cast doubt on the then conventional view
that technical change generally bypasses small farmers in Latin America. The study
documented widespread adoption of new bean varieties, together with a new and more
profitable bean production system.
Similarly, a series of surveys conducted in the early 1990s by CIAT and several
national organizations in Brazil found that improved varieties were being planted on 75
percent of the total bean production area in four states (Espírito Santo, Goias, Minas
Gerais, and Rio de Janeiro). Their economic impact, through additional production, was
estimated at $85 million annually.
Impact in the makingMany other positive developments are in evidence in the
Andean region, and some of these will be the focus of future adoption studies.
Small farmers in Perus barren coastal area, for example, are growing improved
varieties of beans and other grain legumes for exports valued at $2 million annually.
Unlike other crops cultivated in the area, such as rice and sugarcane, beans are ready for
harvest in less than 3 months, and they can be grown in winter, when temperatures drop and
water becomes scarce.
In Bolivias Eastern Plains, where bean production was not even a part of local
agricultural tradition, the crop was introduced during the early 1980s for production in
the winter. Previously, a lack of options during that period had forced farmers to seek
temporary work elsewhere. But now many of them stay home to produce beans for export,
mainly to Brazil, Colombia, and Japan. To increase returns from the enterprise, small
farmers belonging to a bean production cooperative (whose membership consists of about
3,500 farm families) added an export arm to their organization, and it now earns $2
million annually. The group has twice been recognized by the government for the high
quality of its product and for its success in opening new markets.
|
Adoption and yields of improved
bean varieties in Peru
|
| |
Cajamarca
|
Cusco
|
| Area planted in improved varieties (%) |
50
|
65
|
| Yield of traditional varieties (kg/ha) |
264
|
460
|
| Yield of improved varieties (kg/ha) |
711
|
840
|
In mountainous northern Ecuador, small
farmers have made similar gains. Particularly in the province of Imbabura, many growers
now derive much of their income from the production of beans for export to Colombia.
Maintaining the Momentum
Cases like those (involving beans, rice, and other crops) need to be multiplied many
times over if Latin America is to continue providing sufficient food at reasonable prices
for its burgeoning urban population. Such gains are also essential for reducing rural
poverty by raising the income farmers derive from the production and processing of crops
and livestock products.
More effective efforts to meet the needs of both urban and rural people are vital for
protecting the fragile economic and political gains of recent years and for reducing human
pressure on Latin Americas vast store of natural resources, especially its forests,
biodiversity, and fresh water.
Not just any kind of agricultural investment will do the job, however. A narrow focus
on commercial export crops, for example, or on crop diversification in areas where
narcotics production and processing are prevalent would bypass the majority of the
regions farmers.
Investments in agricultural research and development must also be directed to crops
that are important for large numbers of Latin American consumers and producers. To
guarantee handsome returns from those investments, they should be aimed particularly at
research on crops for which national and international institutions have already compiled
an impressive record of achievement and impact.
Based on the information presented in this report, rice and beans are clearly excellent
candidates for the wise investor of public funds.
US Interests in Rice and Bean Research
Latin Americas production of rice, beans, and other major crops is directly tied
to its food security, economic well-being, conservation of natural resources, and social
and political stability. A major failure on any of these fronts has large negative
consequences for US citizens in the short and long term. That is the main reason why the
country should invest more heavily in research for broad-based agricultural development in
Latin America.
Another compelling reason is that the USAs own rice and bean producers and
consumers benefit directly from the work of CIAT and its national partners. As
collaborators in this work, US scientists gain better access to tropical germplasm bearing
traits that are useful for rice and bean production in the temperate zone. They also glean
new knowledge from state-of -the-art research that improves the efficiency of US crop
breeding. Two examples of this collaboration are described below.
In the 1970s scientists in the USA became increasingly alarmed about the narrow genetic
base of the countrys major crops. Bean production, for examplewhich is spread
over 17 states but mainly Colorado, Michigan, Nebraska, and North Dakotadepended
heavily on germplasm whose prostrate growth habit made it susceptible to two major
diseases, white mold and root rots. Over the years, US bean researchers, in cooperation
with CIAT, have overcome those problems by introducing tropical germplasm with an upright
plant type into their breeding programs.
In the early 1990s, an epidemic of rice blastthe single most important disease of
the crop worldwide but not previously considered important in the USAcaused damage
worth millions of dollars in Arkansas, Louisiana, and Texas. A few years earlier,
researchers at Purdue University had established contact with CIAT researchers working on
the disease in Colombia. The Center had compiled a wealth of data on the disease and
developed with the Colombian national program a variety that shows durable blast
resistance. Using molecular marker techniques, CIAT and Purdue scientists have developed
quicker, more cost-effective ways to incorporate combinations of resistance genes into
commercial varieties, with potential benefits for the USA and rice-producing countries
around the world.
Various other projects under way at CIAT involve pioneering research that will enable
national programs to generate new rounds of impact from rice and bean varieties superior
to those now available. Cornell University is a key player in one such project. In it
scientists are using molecular maps and markers to detect genes for higher yield in wild
rice and then to transfer these into varieties of domesticated rice. This is one of the
most promising approaches for breaking through the yield plateau evident in rice
production worldwide.
A Partnership of Research Investors
Given that rice and bean research in Latin America benefits both the region and its
northern neighbors, what is a fair arrangement for providing public funds to support this
work? Until quite recently, donor countries and organizations in the developed world bore
virtually all the responsibility for funding international research on rice and beans.
CIATs work on these crops in Latin America has been generously supported over the
years, mainly by the governments of the USA, Canada, Switzerland, and the UK. Meanwhile,
national governments have covered most of the costs of local research programs.
In the case of beans, donor funds (especially from Switzerland) as well as national
resources have been channeled into two regional research networksone for Mexico,
Central America, and the Caribbean and another for the Andean zone. The networks are
voluntary associations of national agricultural research systems dedicated to
strengthening local research capacity and to speeding the transfer of improved technology
through regional cooperation.
The bad news for this research, as well as for the work on rice, is that donor support
has declined in recent years for a number of reasons. Industrialized nations have slashed
public spending and diverted resources to themes other than agriculture and to regions
(such as sub-Saharan Africa) whose problems they consider more urgent than those of Latin
America.
The good news is that, in the face of declining public support, new models for funding
research on rice and beans have begun to emerge. An especially innovative approach is the
Fund for Latin American and Caribbean Irrigated Rice (FLAR), which was established in
1995. It is a consortium of public research programs and private rice grower associations
in 10 countries that have banded together to fund and influence international rice
research. FLAR members are committed to the endeavor, because they have witnessed the
impact of international rice research in their own countries and believe it will continue
to yield good returns.
A similar logic has prompted a bean farmer association and two bean exporting firms in
eastern Bolivia to join forces with a local research institute and university to share the
costs of bean breeding and testing of new varieties.
In early August the Colombian government, through its Ministry of Agriculture and Rural
Development, signed an agreement, under which it will contribute funds over the next
5 years to collaborative international research with CIAT on crop improvement and other
tasks. This is quite an extraordinary financial commitment, given that the country is
faced with grave economic problems and a costly guerrilla war.
Clearly, Colombia and other Latin American countries no longer expect donor countries
to foot the whole bill for international agricultural research. But nor do they have
sufficient funds from public and private sources to fully finance the international
research agenda. That is why it is critical that the region continue to have investment
partners in the USA and other donor countries who believe in the importance of research on
Latin Americas staple crops and who know that the regions economic well-being
is inseparable from their own.
Information Sources
- CIAT. Various issues until 1994. Commodity trends series. Cali, Colombia.
- Dalrymple, D.G. 1986. Development and spread of high-yielding rice varieties in
developing countries. US Agency for International Development (USAID), Washington, D.C.
- Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations. Agricultural statistics
for various years. Rome.
- Pachico, D. and Borbon, E. 1986. Technical change in traditional small farm agriculture:
The case of beans in Costa Rica. Agricultural Administration and Extension 26
(1987):65-74.
- Ruiz de Londońo, N. and Pachico, D. 1997. Estudio de adopción de variedades de frijol
en Cusco, Perú. CIAT, Cali, Colombia.
- Ruiz de Londońo, N. and Janssen, W. 1990. La variedad de frijol Gloriabamba en Perú.
Working Document No. 61. CIAT, Cali, Colombia.
- Sanint, L.R. and Wood, S. 1996. Impact of rice research in Latin America and the
Caribbean during the past three decades. Paper presented at the International Conference
on the Impact of Rice Research. Bangkok, Thailand. International Rice Research Institute
(IRRI).
- Sanint, L.R.; Correa-Victoria, F.J.; and Izquierdo, J. 1998. The current situation of
rice production in Latin America and the Carribean. Paper presented to the International
Rice Commission. Cairo, Egypt. FAO.
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