Kathmandu, April 25 (RSS): Although agriculture has been a major sector of the country's economy as the main source of livelihood, employment, and economic and social transformation, it has been found that the country has been importing a huge quantity of goods.
The agriculture sector has more than
one-third contribution in the country's gross domestic product and more than the two-thirds population is dependent on agriculture.
In the economic survey 2077/78 BS,
the contribution of the agriculture sector to the GDP was estimated to be 25.8 percent.
Statistics of the National Bureau
of Statistics show that the contribution of agro sector to the GDP would be 27
percent in the current fiscal year.
According to the Bureau, fruits
worth Rs 11.70 billion were imported during the nine-month of the current
fiscal year. Although the contribution of agriculture is remarkable in the country's
economic sector, swathes of arable land have remained barren.
A large amount of money received as
remittance goes abroad in imports as the agriculture production has not been
increased significantly due to the subsistence agriculture.
Most of the land in the hilly
region is uncultivated. Seven percent of the total cultivable land of the
country is uncultivated.
Foodgrains worth nearly Rs 60 billion
have been imported. Similarly, 1.8 million kilograms of tobacco and tobacco
products were imported.
The huge volume of imports gives the message that the domestic production is very negligible. Two thousand youths go for foreign employees on a daily basis. As per informal data, nearly four million youths are abroad in course of foreign employment.
Spending of a large chunk of money
from remittance in consumer goods means the remittance is not utilized in
productive sectors and it has also not created an industrial environment.
According to Nepal Rastra Bank
(NRB), the central bank of the country, nearly 75 percent of the money
received from remittances is spent on purchasing consumer goods.
Various studies show that failure to utilize remittance in economic prosperity will not result in a long-term and strategic impact on the national economy.
As per the details on the status of
imports and exports in the first nine months of the current fiscal year
released by the Department of Customs, the country has spent billions on imports
of consumer goods and even the agriculture products that can be produced within
the country itself are being imported by spending the valuable foreign
currency.
It is seen that billions of foreign currency go abroad in import of
major food grains such as rice, maize, millet, etc as well as fruits.
The country imported fresh and dry
fruits worth more than 11 billion in the first nine months of the current
fiscal year, 2021/22, the Department stated.