Dairy production, consumption and marketing in Bangladesh

This study was a part of RED-Imperial College joint research, conducted in July 2003. The broad objective of this study is to review the existing milk production, consumption and marketing situation in Bangladesh and to develop policy issues on improvement of milk marketing. It is revealed that m...

पूर्ण विवरण

ग्रंथसूची विवरण
मुख्य लेखकों: Halder, Shantana R, Barua, Proloy
स्वरूप: Research report
भाषा:English
प्रकाशित: BRAC Research and Evaluation Division (RED) 2020
विषय:
ऑनलाइन पहुंच:http://hdl.handle.net/10361/13642
id 10361-13642
record_format dspace
spelling 10361-136422020-01-20T21:01:23Z Dairy production, consumption and marketing in Bangladesh Halder, Shantana R Barua, Proloy Dairy production Consumption Marketing Bangladesh RED-Imperial College joint research BRAC NGO's Dairy farming Dairying -- Economic aspects -- Bangladesh. This study was a part of RED-Imperial College joint research, conducted in July 2003. The broad objective of this study is to review the existing milk production, consumption and marketing situation in Bangladesh and to develop policy issues on improvement of milk marketing. It is revealed that milk production in the country has been increasing but not sufficiently to meet the large demand. Like production, per capita consumption has also increased but its level across the country is still very low. Worryingly milk is another product where consumption appears to be declining for the poor as middle/upper income urban markets capture the available milk supply. The increase in collection networks both NGO and private have encouraged increased production but this has not increased consumption at the local level. In this case remoteness from markets can be an advantage nutritionally for poor producers, as they are likely to produce for home and neighbourhood consumption. Yet producers with good market access fail to fully benefit from the high urban demand, as the intermediaries capture the high margins. The most vulnerable to declining milk consumption are market dependent poor groups, the landless rural poor and slum dwellers. The urban market for processed and packaged milk products, though still very small, is expanding rapidly. Collection and distribution networks, together with chilling centres and refrigerated transport infrastructure are developing under private sector and NGO control. These provide hygienic, high quality products, whilst also providing a range of employment opportunities throughout the sector. If development could proceed so that further employment was generated whilst expanding availability to a wider range of consumers this could be a positive development. 2020-01-20T06:12:57Z 2020-01-20T06:12:57Z 2003-09 Research report Halder, S. R., & Barua, P. (2003, September). Dairy production, consumption and marketing in Bangladesh. Research Reports (2003): Economic Studies, Vol – XIX, 190–219. http://hdl.handle.net/10361/13642 en application/pdf BRAC Research and Evaluation Division (RED)
institution Brac University
collection Institutional Repository
language English
topic Dairy production
Consumption
Marketing
Bangladesh
RED-Imperial College joint research
BRAC
NGO's
Dairy farming
Dairying -- Economic aspects -- Bangladesh.
spellingShingle Dairy production
Consumption
Marketing
Bangladesh
RED-Imperial College joint research
BRAC
NGO's
Dairy farming
Dairying -- Economic aspects -- Bangladesh.
Halder, Shantana R
Barua, Proloy
Dairy production, consumption and marketing in Bangladesh
description This study was a part of RED-Imperial College joint research, conducted in July 2003. The broad objective of this study is to review the existing milk production, consumption and marketing situation in Bangladesh and to develop policy issues on improvement of milk marketing. It is revealed that milk production in the country has been increasing but not sufficiently to meet the large demand. Like production, per capita consumption has also increased but its level across the country is still very low. Worryingly milk is another product where consumption appears to be declining for the poor as middle/upper income urban markets capture the available milk supply. The increase in collection networks both NGO and private have encouraged increased production but this has not increased consumption at the local level. In this case remoteness from markets can be an advantage nutritionally for poor producers, as they are likely to produce for home and neighbourhood consumption. Yet producers with good market access fail to fully benefit from the high urban demand, as the intermediaries capture the high margins. The most vulnerable to declining milk consumption are market dependent poor groups, the landless rural poor and slum dwellers. The urban market for processed and packaged milk products, though still very small, is expanding rapidly. Collection and distribution networks, together with chilling centres and refrigerated transport infrastructure are developing under private sector and NGO control. These provide hygienic, high quality products, whilst also providing a range of employment opportunities throughout the sector. If development could proceed so that further employment was generated whilst expanding availability to a wider range of consumers this could be a positive development.
format Research report
author Halder, Shantana R
Barua, Proloy
author_facet Halder, Shantana R
Barua, Proloy
author_sort Halder, Shantana R
title Dairy production, consumption and marketing in Bangladesh
title_short Dairy production, consumption and marketing in Bangladesh
title_full Dairy production, consumption and marketing in Bangladesh
title_fullStr Dairy production, consumption and marketing in Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed Dairy production, consumption and marketing in Bangladesh
title_sort dairy production, consumption and marketing in bangladesh
publisher BRAC Research and Evaluation Division (RED)
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/10361/13642
work_keys_str_mv AT haldershantanar dairyproductionconsumptionandmarketinginbangladesh
AT baruaproloy dairyproductionconsumptionandmarketinginbangladesh
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