Economic viability of sugarcane cultivation: A comparative analysis

Economic viability is one of the keystones of sugarcane sustainability. In today’s scenario, this means sugarcane growers who produce sugarcane sustainably must benefit from it. The economics of sugarcane cultivation is about finding logical, reasonable means of balancing individual economic se...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Vikas Bajrang Abnave
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Society for Sugarcane Research and Development 2021-08-01
Series:Journal of Sugarcane Research
Online Access:http://localhost/ojs-3.3.0-12/index.php/JSR/article/view/99805
_version_ 1811208037655904256
author Vikas Bajrang Abnave
author_facet Vikas Bajrang Abnave
author_sort Vikas Bajrang Abnave
collection DOAJ
description Economic viability is one of the keystones of sugarcane sustainability. In today’s scenario, this means sugarcane growers who produce sugarcane sustainably must benefit from it. The economics of sugarcane cultivation is about finding logical, reasonable means of balancing individual economic self-interest with ecological and social integrity. Despite the increase in area and production of sugarcane, recently some concerns are emerging regarding farm profitability, sustainable use of farm resources and hike in input prices which have a direct and indirect influence on the cost of cultivation of sugarcane. Therefore, the objective is to analyse and compare the economic viability of sugarcane cultivation in major sugarcane producing states of India. The result indicates that the cultivation of sugarcane is profitable for Maharashtra but it involves more risk in terms of relatively less net income, as compared to other states. Moreover, the return per rupee spent was observed positive in both tropical and sub-tropical regions. The Sugar Trap makes the growers to stick with sugarcane cultivation due to some of the benefits received from the sugarcane crop such as relatively high profit, secure market (guarantee of purchase), less chance of crop failure, subsidized inputs, production system is based on contract farming model, etc. The study reports that, due to the longer duration of the crop, there is a hike in operation cost which warrants a technical solution.
first_indexed 2024-04-12T04:15:31Z
format Article
id doaj.art-49fb05ed95704a0a99011bc38c5c7a00
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2249-927X
2582-4767
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-12T04:15:31Z
publishDate 2021-08-01
publisher Society for Sugarcane Research and Development
record_format Article
series Journal of Sugarcane Research
spelling doaj.art-49fb05ed95704a0a99011bc38c5c7a002022-12-22T03:48:24ZengSociety for Sugarcane Research and DevelopmentJournal of Sugarcane Research2249-927X2582-47672021-08-01102Economic viability of sugarcane cultivation: A comparative analysisVikas Bajrang Abnave0Institute for Social and Economic Change, Nagarbhavi, Bengaluru- 560072. Economic viability is one of the keystones of sugarcane sustainability. In today’s scenario, this means sugarcane growers who produce sugarcane sustainably must benefit from it. The economics of sugarcane cultivation is about finding logical, reasonable means of balancing individual economic self-interest with ecological and social integrity. Despite the increase in area and production of sugarcane, recently some concerns are emerging regarding farm profitability, sustainable use of farm resources and hike in input prices which have a direct and indirect influence on the cost of cultivation of sugarcane. Therefore, the objective is to analyse and compare the economic viability of sugarcane cultivation in major sugarcane producing states of India. The result indicates that the cultivation of sugarcane is profitable for Maharashtra but it involves more risk in terms of relatively less net income, as compared to other states. Moreover, the return per rupee spent was observed positive in both tropical and sub-tropical regions. The Sugar Trap makes the growers to stick with sugarcane cultivation due to some of the benefits received from the sugarcane crop such as relatively high profit, secure market (guarantee of purchase), less chance of crop failure, subsidized inputs, production system is based on contract farming model, etc. The study reports that, due to the longer duration of the crop, there is a hike in operation cost which warrants a technical solution. http://localhost/ojs-3.3.0-12/index.php/JSR/article/view/99805
spellingShingle Vikas Bajrang Abnave
Economic viability of sugarcane cultivation: A comparative analysis
Journal of Sugarcane Research
title Economic viability of sugarcane cultivation: A comparative analysis
title_full Economic viability of sugarcane cultivation: A comparative analysis
title_fullStr Economic viability of sugarcane cultivation: A comparative analysis
title_full_unstemmed Economic viability of sugarcane cultivation: A comparative analysis
title_short Economic viability of sugarcane cultivation: A comparative analysis
title_sort economic viability of sugarcane cultivation a comparative analysis
url http://localhost/ojs-3.3.0-12/index.php/JSR/article/view/99805
work_keys_str_mv AT vikasbajrangabnave economicviabilityofsugarcanecultivationacomparativeanalysis