This site uses cookies, as explained in our terms of use. If you consent, please close this message and continue to use this site.
Ishaan Kochhar & Amina Maharjan
1 min Read
Nepal is experiencing a massive out-migration of the youth and labour migration is becoming an important factor in securing an alternative livelihood. Census data of 2011 indicates that 13 of the 19 districts of the Gandaki Basin have an absentee population of over 10%. It is a well-known fact that agriculture and remittance are the two main pillars of the economy in Nepal contributing to over 60% of the GDC. There is attribution here of the current state of agriculture in Nepal, to the absentee population in the basin.
There is a common Nepalese saying: ‘Panch padhyo halo chhodyo, Das padhyo thalo’, which literally translates to: ‘Those educated up to Grade Five leave the plough and those educated up to Grade Ten leave the village’. In a country like Nepal, where agriculture is the backbone of the economy, it is the main livelihood source for more than 80% of the rural population. Agriculture is portrayed as the occupation of uneducated and unskilled people. Therefore, educated youth prefer to migrate in search of better employment opportunities. A worrisome phenomenon has been observed in recent years, especially in the mid hills, of fertile agriculture lands being abandoned. At the same time, rural-urban mobility is having serious implications for downstream areas. Whatever studies on human mobility exist in Nepal, they do not give a clear picture of its scale and also often fail to analyse ground realities. So, there is little scientific evidence to support this narrative. To make it evident, we have used a mix of macro-scale top-down approaches (using geospatial and remote sensing) and bottom-up qualitative methods (in-depth interviews, focus groups discussion and participatory research).
<<READ MORE>>
Share
Stay up to date on what’s happening around the HKH with our most recent publications and find out how you can help by subscribing to our mailing list.
Related Content
Many experts and researches have claimed that women suffer the impacts of climate change more than men do. This is ...
From April to May early this year, I was in Myanmar supporting our partners as they conducted an ethnobotancial survey ...
Schoolchildren from the Himalayan valley of Langtang in north-central Nepal, 200 km north of Kathmandu, are acutely perceptive of the ...
In Haitang, off-farm wage labour outside the community has, for some years, been an important income-generating strategy. As the drought ...
An age old question that plagues our society is: where are the women? In my recent field visit to Sinduli, ...
In Nepali, the word dobato means a point where two roads diverge. The village of Dobato in Ilam District, eastern ...
Kathmandu, the Nepali capital, is a city with 100 percent reach to the national grid, but it is reeling under ...
“You won’t have to walk. I’ll drop you off at the doorstep of a homestay in Dallekh,” the driver said ...