New State Structure and Agriculture Governance: A Case of Service Delivery to Local Farmers in the Eastern Gangetic Plains of Nepal
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Experience of Federalism and Good Governance
2.1. General Experience
2.2. Nepal’s Experience
2.3. Good Governance and Federalism
3. Description of Study Methods and Approaches
3.1. Study Objectives and Location
3.2. Study Approach
4. General Findings
4.1. Importance of Agriculture in Post-Federalized Nepal
4.2. Government Policy and Priority
4.3. Extension Service Delivery
5. Field Study Findings
5.1. Agriculture and Food Security
5.2. Agricultural Extension Service
5.3. Coordination and Linkage
5.4. Program Priority and Performance
6. Discussions and Recommendations
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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District | Population | Availability * | Per Capita Availability ** | Requirement | Per Capita Requirement | Total Food Balance |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saptari | 676,782 | 71,685 | 106 | 122,497 | 181 | −50,812 |
Siraha | 672,354 | 64,816 | 96 | 121,696 | −56,880 | |
Dhanusha | 800,249 | 15,2801 | 191 | 144,845 | 7956 | |
Mahottari | 668,390 | 11,3783 | 170 | 120,979 | −7196 | |
Sarlahi | 846,863 | 13,6401 | 161 | 153,282 | −16,881 | |
Rautahat | 770,800 | 91,212 | 118 | 139,519 | −48,303 | |
Bara | 762,700 | 169,777 | 223 | 138,049 | 31,728 | |
Parsa | 660,914 | 148,164 | 224 | 119,625 | 28,539 | |
Total | 5,859,052 | 948,639 | 162 | 1,060,492 | −111,853 |
Program/Issue | Performance |
---|---|
1. Budget Priority and Spending |
|
2. Human Resource Management |
|
3. Subsidy Distribution |
|
4. Agriculture Development Strategy (ADS) Implementation | The ADS, which is a long-term post-2015 strategy for agriculture is unknown to the Province 2 Provincial Policy Commission, and MoLMAC has no ownership to implement it. None of the local governments were aware of the ADS and no programs of any kind were formulated to implement the ADS in the municipalities. The fishery super zone implemented in Dhanusha district in the name of the ADS was not found to be effective or free from political meddling. None of the CAESCs that were piloted in Rautahat, Sarlahi, or Sindhuli districts were operational. Last but not the least, many key indicators and targets of the ADS vision (such as food self-sufficiency, food trade, agricultural growth, soil organic matter improvement, and agri-business promotion) are not found moving even in the right direction so far. |
Indicator | Before Federalization | After Federalization | Potential Impacts on Agriculture | Recommendations |
---|---|---|---|---|
State Structural Units | National Government, Development Regions (5), Districts (75) VDCs (3915), and Municipalities (191) | Federal Government, Provinces (7) Districts (77), and local bodies (753) | Government (local) at door step. Easy access to services but more political complexity and costlier structures and unclear functions. | Since municipalities lack financial and technical knowhow to create their own cadre of extension officers and the technical staff to run the ASCs, the federal and provincial government should reform policies and budget allocation requiring LGs to avail services from AKCs and national agriculture research centers located within each province |
Government Tiers | 2—National and local (with LSGA 1999 Provision) | 3—Federal, provincial and local | Weak connection and coordination as all tiers of government are autonomous and independent from each other. | The onus is on LGs (mayors of the municipality) to reach out to province and center to direct their respective offices to work with LGs. |
Agricultural Functions | Led by separate regional directorates, district offices and service centers | Agriculture is put under the domain of Municipalities who were supposed to set up full-fledged ASC and CAESCs but have not done so. | Due to autonomy, priorities may be changed between the national, local, and provincial governments. Resources may be thinly distributed among various sectors. Agricultural extension may not receive priority. Possibility of overlapping of budget expenditure for the same program across three levels of governments. | Agriculture extension service should be made a co-operative extension service involving all three tiers of government and agriculture universities learning from a similar system prevailing in neighboring India where in the Krishi Vigyan Kendra (KVKs) are run jointly by ICAR and the state agriculture university. |
Coordination | Strong coordination along the line of command. Provisions for various coordination committees at central, regional, and district levels. | No line of command over province and local levels. Provision for provincial coordination council (PCC) led by the chief minister and district coordination committees in each district. | The PCC has too broad a mandate and is unlikely to meet frequently. Even if PCC is focused, organized, and has political will to better coordinate agricultural institutions, effectiveness may be low due to perception of independency. Coordination may not be effective due to differences in priority and lack of clear role | A separate coordination mechanism should be set up at the district level through the office of the elected District Coordination Committee (DCC) which is as per the provision made in the constitution. |
Human Resource Management (HRM) | Subject matter specialists in each district, farm, and training center. Local frontline extension workers in local service centers. All bonded by one civil service act and regulation | No subject matter specialists (SMSs) in municipalities. No agriculture service centers at the districts; AKC role is simply to act as a clearing house center covering 2 districts. Different Acts and regulations for provincial and local staff | Difficulty in achieving a full HR capacity due to lack of authority to give promotion and capacity building. Terms and conditions may differ between three levels of government agencies; AKCs should hire SMSs whose service the municipalities can avail by covering their costs since the municipalities are not in a position to provide integrated specialized technical services on crops, livestock, and fisheries to the farmers. Implication in effective and quality service delivery. | The AKCs should have subject matter specialists (SMSs) in all major topics in agriculture and livestock disciplines. There should be clear and harmonized policy of the central and provincial government requiring municipalities to avail the services of these SMSs by paying their operational costs. |
Supervision, Monitoring and Evaluation (SME) | SME clear along the line of command from the Ministry to department, region, district, and agricultural service center levels. | SME ends itself in each of the government body. No line of command along the hierarchy. | Negative effect on the quality of work performance; discontinuation in district-level progress report compilation and reporting; irregularity and corruption likely to increase due to decentralized authority to local- and ward-level officials and in absence of SME; local government agricultural staff may be deprived of regular technical guidance and be demotivated unless AKC is officially connected with them as specialized service centers. | SME should be independent and should be the responsibility of the Provincial Planning Commission (PPC); AKCs should be strengthened with clear mandate, adequate technical staff (SMSs) and budget. There should be clear separation of roles and responsibilities between provincial agriculture directorate and AKCs; AKCs should have autonomy to work with all three levels of government. |
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Dahal, H.; Karki, M.; Jackson, T.; Panday, D. New State Structure and Agriculture Governance: A Case of Service Delivery to Local Farmers in the Eastern Gangetic Plains of Nepal. Agronomy 2020, 10, 1874. https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy10121874
Dahal H, Karki M, Jackson T, Panday D. New State Structure and Agriculture Governance: A Case of Service Delivery to Local Farmers in the Eastern Gangetic Plains of Nepal. Agronomy. 2020; 10(12):1874. https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy10121874
Chicago/Turabian StyleDahal, Hari, Madhav Karki, Tamara Jackson, and Dinesh Panday. 2020. "New State Structure and Agriculture Governance: A Case of Service Delivery to Local Farmers in the Eastern Gangetic Plains of Nepal" Agronomy 10, no. 12: 1874. https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy10121874
APA StyleDahal, H., Karki, M., Jackson, T., & Panday, D. (2020). New State Structure and Agriculture Governance: A Case of Service Delivery to Local Farmers in the Eastern Gangetic Plains of Nepal. Agronomy, 10(12), 1874. https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy10121874