BACKGROUND
In
the ESCAP region, out of a population of over 3 billion, more
than 800 million people still live on less than one dollar
a day. Seventy per cent of the poor live and work in rural
areas. In most developing countries in the region, the agricultural
sector still employs three quarters of the labour force in
rural areas. Even though the share of agriculture in many
countries’ GDP is steadily declining, it retains a disproportionally
high share of employment. It is also still the primary source
of employment for women in most developing countries.
A
common problem is that a number of countries experience stalling
or declining productivity levels in conventional agriculture.
The degradation of natural resources is one factor that is
posing a serious challenge to the productivity of the agricultural
sector. In light of this, ESCAP has been providing regional
forums for the exchange of experiences relating to good practices
and technical assistance in sustainable agriculture for many
years.
Now,
for the first time, ESCAP, as a regional intergovernmental
body, is drawing attention to the rapidly developing organic
farming sector in Asia. On the request of member governments,
we have been following global developments and examining the
status of organic agriculture in selected developing countries
in the region. We have looked at concepts and practices, export
potential, market developments and, first and foremost, success
cases where small and marginal farmers in the rural areas
were able to increase their livelihood through organic agriculture.
This
publication presents the results of this undertaking. A comprehensive
global and regional overview study is followed by country
reports on China, India, Malaysia, the Philippines, the Republic
of Korea, Sri Lanka and Thailand. All reports contain a number
of success cases, real life examples of how organic farming
has been a valid strategy to better the life of poor farming
families, albeit on a small scale. The outcome of a lively
and intensive regional workshop held in November 2001 is also
presented in this publication. Recommendations put forward
by the workshop participants are well worth studying in closer
detail. They indicate the great challenges and path ahead
in further developing the potential of the organic sector
to improve the lives of the rural poor in Asia. We hope that,
with this publication, we will be able to disseminate more
widely the positive interrelationship between improvement
in rural livelihoods and organic farming.