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Helping farmers in the lean season

In northern rural Bangladesh, the autumn lean season is the most difficult time of year, especially in Rangpur, where close to half of the 15.8 million residents live below the poverty line.

Seasonal Migration to Increase Incomes of Poor Households in Bangladesh

Benefits and costs of addressing Bangladesh’s seasonal hunger challenges

    Seasonal Migration

    In northern rural Bangladesh, the autumn lean season is the most difficult time of year, especially in Rangpur, where close to half of the 15.8 million residents live below the poverty line. The landless poor primarily work as day laborers on neighboring farms, but while waiting for crops to mature in the fields, there is no farm work to be done. Wages fall, and at the same time, food becomes scarce because harvest is still months away, so the price of rice goes up.

    Proposed Strategy 

    Strategy Takas of benefits per taka spent
    Seasonal migration stipends 4

    Seasonal Migration to Increase Incomes of Poor Households in Bangladesh

    New research by Mushfiq Mobarak, a Yale University economist, and Agha Ali Akram, a postdoctoral fellow with Evidence Action, suggests that helping people from rural areas migrate to work seasonally in urban centers can help families overcome the lean season. Spending on these programs can provide social benefits of four takas for each taka spent.

    During the preharvest lean season between September and November when farmers wait for the crop to grow, job opportunities in the village are scarce, wages fall, prices rise and this combination leads to widespread vulnerability amongst the landless poor."

    - Ahmed Mushfiq Mobarak & Agha Ali Akram

    Helping farmers in the lean season

    In a series of op-eds published in The Daily Star and Prothom Alo, Bjorn Lomborg outlined the key findings of the path-breaking research produced by the Bangladesh Priorities project.

    Helping people from rural areas migrate to work seasonally in urban centers can help families overcome the lean season."

    - Bjorn Lomborg

    What's the smartest solution for Bangladesh?

    A stipend for a bus ticket and a few meals can do 4 takas of benefits for each taka spent. What would you choose for Bangladesh if you could decide future spending? After reviewing 1,000s of pages of peer-reviewed research an Eminent Panel ranked 72 solutions from the best to the worst in terms of delivering the most social, economic and environmental value for money. Find out what they ranked the highest here.