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Indian Cotton Yield Gains Could Limit Imports
Maurice
R. Landes

Thomas Vollrath, USDA/ERS
Adoption of hybrid Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) cotton
by Indian farmers is helping to boost cotton yields and may dampen
growth in the cotton that India imports to meet the needs of its
expanding textile industry. Bt cotton varieties are genetically
engineered to include a gene (from the soil bacterium Bacillus
thuringiensis) that enables the plant to produce its own natural
toxins to defend against bollworms and certain other pests. Bt
cotton hybrids were first approved for cultivation in India in
2002 and, by the 2004/05 crop year, Bt cotton accounted for 17
percent of India’s cotton area—some 1.5 million hectares.
The pace of adoption and yield gains appear poised to accelerate.
During May-June 2005, 14 new Bt varieties were approved, including
the first-ever varieties for heavily irrigated areas in North India.
Although it is too soon to be sure of overall impacts, Bt cotton
adoption appears likely to increase yields significantly. Recent
region-specific studies in India found that Bt hybrids improved
yields by 45-87 percent. The yield gains reported in India contrast
sharply with the U.S. experience, where the primary impact of Bt
cotton has been reduced costs. The main reason for the difference
is that Indian cotton farmers—most of whom operate small
holdings with limited resources—typically do not practice
optimal pest control. By controlling boring insects, Bt varieties
provide significant yield gains. Cost savings relative to non-Bt
varieties appear less substantial for Indian farmers because Bt
seed prices are relatively high compared with non-Bt seeds.
The scope is broad for increasing cotton yields in India, where
yields are below the world average and the lowest of the top-10
global producers. Although Bt technology does not address some
important yield constraints, including erratic rainfall, use of
uncertified seeds, and poor cultivation practices, improved pest
protection appears to be having an impact. Damage from bollworms
is a key yield constraint in all producing regions of India, particularly
the heavily irrigated and potentially high-yielding areas of North
India.
Because India’s 8-9 million hectares of cotton area is by
far the largest of any country in the world, yield gains could significantly
affect global markets. Rising incomes in India and increased exports
of cotton-based textiles associated with the end—in January
2005—of developed-country import quotas under the Multi-Fiber
Arrangement (MFA) are now boosting growth in India’s demand
for domestic and imported cotton. India is among several developing,
textile-producing countries expected to increase their shares of
global textile trade in the post-MFA environment. If India can supply
more of its expanding textile sector with domestically produced
cotton, opportunities for the United States and other cotton exporters
will decline.
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This article is drawn from...
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Growth
Prospects for India’s Cotton and Textile Industries,
by Maurice Landes, Stephen MacDonald, Santosh K. Singh, and Thomas
Vollrath, CWS-05d-01, USDA, Economic Research Service, June 2005.
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