Abstract

This work analyses the main research trends (subjects, methodology used, countries of the authors and data) in the economics of irrigation water during the last 10 years (2000-2009). For this purpose, a quantitative methodology has been used which is new to this sphere, based on the review of a representative sample of 332 papers published in the 15 most important journals focused on this field of science indexed in the databases of theInstitute for Scientific Information (ISI), the Science Citation Index (SCI) and the Social Science Citation Index (SCCI). The results obtained confirm: a) the notable growth in the number of papers published, especially in the last three years, b) the high degree of collaboration between authors, including those of different origin, for their performance c) the prominence of the USA, Australia, India and Spain as the countries of the first authors and origin of the data, d) the greater attention given to subjects related with «investment project analysis», «production planning» and, especially, «production function and productivity of water», and e) the predominance of empirical studies that use basic analysis approaches (cost analysis, investment evaluation, etc.).

Highlights

  • It is no coincidence that from the origin of the first human civilisations (Mesopotamia, Egypt, etc.) the same driving force was concealed; irrigated agricul-ture

  • The subject area that includes the highest number of papers is Water Resources (37.7%), followed by Agronomy (22.9%), Agricultural Economics and Policy (19.9%) and Agriculture Multidisciplinary (19.6)

  • This work has analysed the state of scientific research on the economics of irrigation water, using for this a methodology that is new in this sphere

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Summary

Introduction

The use of water in agriculture has been a basic element for the survival and economic and social progress of humanity This explains why, since the irrigated area of the world has not ceased to grow, Review. The increase in the population accompanied by growth in the irrigated area has led to greater pressure on the available water resources, making water a scarce resource and susceptible to alternative uses by other non-agricultural users. Both circumstances characterise irrigation water as an economic asset, an object of attention of economic science

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