Crop diversification has emerged as a viable strategy to enhance farm income, reduce production risk, and promote sustainability under smallholder farming systems. This study examines the economic feasibility of crop diversification by comparing diversified cropping patterns with traditional monocropping practices among smallholder farmers. Using primary and secondary data, the analysis evaluates key economic indicators such as cost of cultivation, gross and net returns, benefit–cost ratio, income stability, and risk mitigation. The findings reveal that diversified farming systems generally incur slightly higher initial input costs but generate significantly higher net returns and more stable incomes due to better resource utilization, reduced dependency on a single crop, and improved resilience against price and climatic fluctuations. Crop diversification also contributes to employment generation and efficient use of land, labor, and capital at the farm level. The study concludes that crop diversification is economically feasible and advantageous for smallholder farmers, provided there is adequate access to institutional credit, extension services, markets, and supportive policy interventions. Promoting crop diversification can thus play a crucial role in strengthening livelihood security and ensuring sustainable agricultural development in smallholderdominated agrarian economies.
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Ramesh Kumar
Dr. Meena
Sterling Research Group
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Kumar et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69a75a8bc6e9836116a207ed — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18384171