A farmer in Lumbini Province, Nepal, explained that the loss of U.S.-funded technical support meant she had to make production decisions on her own, which led to less predictable yields. She said: “We have lost the mentor who used to guide us in crop production.”
Date: 5/26
Region: South Asia
Country: Nepal
Topic: Food & Farming
Policy Lens: Economic & Trade Interests
Entry Type: Field Observation
Additional Context: This information was collected as part of The Aid Report's original feature story, "'I had no choice but to go abroad': US aid cuts hit Nepal’s farmers." Reporter Yam Kumari Kandel looked into the effects of the termination of USAID's agricultural initiative Feed the Future on the lives of rural farming communities. This observation is attributed to Bhagirathi Khadka, a farmer in a village in Rapti-Sonari Rural Municipality, Lumbini Province.
Feed the Future was the U.S. government's flagship global food security initiative, working to raise farm incomes and strengthen supply chains globally. Related programs first began in Nepal in 2013. The program mentioned started in 2023 and was planned to contiue through 2028 with $24.5 million expected over the life of the project. The program provided farmers with mentorship related to agricultural techniques and machinery, as well as subsidies for the production of certain goods such as maize. For some farmers, like Khadka, this support allowed her to scale up production and earn enough to accumulate savings.
Source: Devex

