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Water Resource Potential in Northern India: Constraints and Analyses of Price and Non-Price Solutions

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Abstract

The paper examines the linkages between water depletion, continuous population growth and economic development viewed primarily as agricultural development. This is done within a framework of a dynamic simulation model of ecological-economic type over extended periods of time. It is found that intensive agriculture, driven by an increase in the cropping intensity as a result of increase in area under paddy crop, has led to an increased gap between the demand for and supply of water resources, in particular subsurface resources. The consequent fall in water table may lead to constraints in the use of water. This has strong inequity implications in the resource use as well as threats to future of agricultural development in the region. It is revealed that a mix of interventions based on price solutions, non-price solutions and institutional set up are decisive in bringing a sustainable development and use of resource. The paper concludes with emphasising the role of state/government in achieving the desired goal.

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Bathla, S. Water Resource Potential in Northern India: Constraints and Analyses of Price and Non-Price Solutions. Environment, Development and Sustainability 1, 105–121 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1010098508624

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