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Library Agribusiness Indicators

Agribusiness Indicators

Agribusiness Indicators

Resource information

Date of publication
April 2015
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/21723

The purpose of this Agriculture Business Indicators Study was to isolate the success factors and construct
indicators that reflect the performance of the agriculture sector in Nigeria and that benchmark it in terms
directly comparable to agriculture sectors in other developing countries. Providing policy makers and public
officials with access to this type of empirical information is seen as way to stimulate and inform policy
dialogue about what reforms are needed and about how scarce public resources can be most effectively
invested. The indicators can be used to identify specifically where this investment can be used to leverage
commercialization through value addition, increasing the competitiveness of a country’s agricultural products
domestically, regionally, and in international markets. They can also inform decision makers and investors
about which policy measures are likely to be the most effective in enhancing food security, reducing poverty,
and encouraging sustainable forms of environmental management. To accelerate agricultural development
capable of spurring competitiveness of agricultural products in the domestic, regional, and international
markets and could enhance food security; poverty reduction and sustainable environmental management.
The study entailed a review of existing literature and the use of informal surveys to obtain information from a
variety of stakeholders and actors. The focus was on the key success factors that the Agribusiness Indicators
(ABI) team determined to be the most critical factors influencing agribusiness development in Sub-Saharan
African countries. The Nigeria study was informed by the outcomes of scoping missions which had been
conducted in three initial pilot countries: Ghana, Ethiopia and Mozambique.

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World Bank Group

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