Inequality and GM crops: a case-study of Bt cotton in India
2007
S. Morse | R. Bennett | Y. Ismael
Critics of genetically modified (GM) crops often contend that their introduction enhances the gap between rich and poor farmers, as the former group are in the best position to afford the expensive seed as well as provide other inputs such as fertilizer and irrigation. The research reported in this paper explores this <br />issue with regard to Bt cotton (cotton with the endotoxtin gene from Bacillus thuringiensis conferring resistance to some insect pests) in Jalgaon, Maharashtra State, India, spanning the 2002 <br />and 2003 seasons.Questionnaire-based survey results from 63 non-adopting and 94 adopting households of Bt cotton were <br />analyzed, spanning 137 Bt cotton plots and 95 non-Bt cotton plots of both Bt adopters and non-adopters. Key findings include: for these households, cotton income accounted for 85 to 88% of total household income, and is thus of vital importance results suggest that in 2003 Bt adopting households have significantly more income from cotton than do non-adopting households (Rp 66,872 versus Rp 46,351) inequality in cotton income, measured with the Gini coefficient (G), was greater amongst non-adopters than adopters the main reason for the lessening of inequality amongst adopters would appear to be the consistency in the performance of Bt cotton along with the preferred non-Bt cultivar of Bt adopters – Bunny. In light of these findings, the paper concludes that the issue of equality needs to be seen both in terms of differences between adopters and non-adopters as well as within each of the groups. <br />
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