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Farm Size and Efficiency in Irrigated Agriculture: the Case of the Zimbabwe Communal Areas

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354
Published: 
Friday, July 1, 1988
U.S. Agency for International Development
One of the principal socioeconomic issues in irrigation design is the size of holdings to be allocated to individual farm households. The major arguments for larger versus smaller plot sizes concern equity - allocating a given amount of irrigable land to larger or smaller numbers of poor farmers - and efficiency - obtaining the maximum economic returns from a given resource outlay.
Theme(s) & Sub-theme(s): 
Agriculture
Resource type: 
Case Study
Region & Countries: 
ZimbabweSub-Saharan Africa
Resource Scale: 
National

Related resources

Small-Scale and Smallholder Irrigation in Zimbabwe: Analysis of Opportunities for Improvements
Water Conservation in Irrigated Agriculture: Trends and Challenges in the Face of Emerging Demands
Western Irrigated Agriculture: Production Value, Water Use, Costs, and Technology Vary by Farm Size
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