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Title: | Factors affecting customers’ decision towards the adoption of internet Banking: reference to the customers in Colombo city |
Authors: | Mirzan, Shahul Hameed |
Keywords: | Sustainability pillars Farm aspects Circumstances |
Issue Date: | 18-Nov-2015 |
Publisher: | Department of Postgraduate Diploma in Management, Faculty of Management and Commerce, South Eastern University of Sri Lanka Oluvil, Sri Lanka. |
Citation: | Thesis, Faculty of Management and Commerce, 2015. |
Abstract: | A key challenge facing dairy farming is to meet the increasing demand for dairy products from a growing and more affluent global population in a period of unprecedented socioeconomic and environmental change. In order to address this challenge, policies are currently placing emphasis on ‘sustainable intensification’ (SI), i.e. producing ‘more’ outputs and services with ‘less’ resources and environmental impacts. Determining whether or not SI can deliver greater yet sustainable dairy production requires an understanding of the relationships between sustainability pillars and farms under particular farming systems and circumstances. Trade-offs between pillars and aspects are inevitable within a farming system. The role of livestock in agriculture in Sri Lanka is complex and significantly different from that of industrialized nations. Although the livestock sub-sector has contributed only around 1.2% to the national Gross Domestic Product (GDP), has been a crucial source of high-quality protein, minerals, and vitamins to the population, by way of milk, meat, and eggs. For many rural smallholder farmers, livestock is a ‘living bank’ that serves as a financial reserve for periods of economic distress. The current status of the dairy industry in Sri Lanka is far below expectations, local production of milk has been able to meet only 40% of the demand. Whilst there have been many political, technical, and socio-economic factors contributing to the virtual stagnation of the dairy industry in the country, the very low farm gate price being one of the major contributors to this, it appears that the sector cannot continue to survive as a subsistence-based activity, because it is only a secondary source of income to the farming community. It is apparent that if dairy farming is to be a profitable the venture, there is a need for the smallholder farmers to consider dairying as a commercial enterprise and at the same time link with the large-scale dairy farms. This would require major policy changes, with a strong commitment and sustained implementation strategy by the government in partnership with the private. The objective of this research is to investigate the determinants of a sustainable dairy farming system in the coastal area of Eastern Province in Sri Lanka. A structured questionnaire was used to collect the data from 300 dairy farmers. The data was collected to fulfill the requirements of variables such as socio, economic factors, environmental, circumstance, and the farm aspect. It was found that there were significant positive vi relationship between dairy farm sustainability and factors such as socio, economic factors, environmental, circumstance, and the farm aspect. It is recommended to promote I liquid milk market, upgrade the native herd, focus import policy and fiscal policy on dairy products, promote livestock production among vulnerable groups, stronger extension services and human capital development, improvement of feed resource, develop a viable commercial dairy industry, financial support for dairy farm expansion, allocation of permanent grazing/pasture land, design proper training programs, a concept development on a good understanding of socio-economic and biophysical factors in any farming system and frequent monitoring and sustainable feedback mechanisms. |
URI: | http://ir.lib.seu.ac.lk/handle/123456789/5351 |
Appears in Collections: | Master of Business Administration |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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Factors affecting customers.pdf | 969.61 kB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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