Abstract
The article analyzes the structural crisis of Moroccan agriculture by linking slow production growth to rising food dependence and the increasing weight of agricultural imports. It criticizes the state’s technical choices, especially the heavy emphasis on dam-based irrigation and forms of modernization that favored selected sectors while leaving much of basic food production and small-scale farming behind. The author reviews the limits of hydro-agricultural investment, mechanization, and input-intensive modernization, and argues that these policies deepened external dependence and internal imbalances. In response, the paper calls for alternative development paths better suited to national needs, food security, and the realities of peasant agriculture.
Recommended Citation
Raki, Mohamed
(1982)
"The Crisis of Moroccan Agriculture: State Strategy and Alternatives,"
Revue Marocaine de Droit, d'Economie et de Gestion (Moroccan Journal of Law, Economics and Management): Vol. 1:
Iss.
2, Article 13.
Available at:
https://scholarhub.univh2c.ma/remadeg/vol1/iss2/13