World Bank Praises UP’s Resilient Farming Model
World Bank President Ajay Banga has commended Uttar Pradesh for creating a successful resilience-based agriculture model that effectively supports small farmers through digital systems and cooperative frameworks.
Key Takeaways
- UP’s digital agriculture ecosystem praised as replicable model
- World Bank to double agri-business funding to $9 billion annually by 2030
- Digital systems identified as crucial glue for resilient farming
- Focus on transforming agriculture into job creation engine
Digital Transformation in Action
During his address at the World Bank’s AgriConnect event, Banga shared his firsthand experience from Uttar Pradesh: “A couple of months ago I was in Uttar Pradesh and I saw all this come together. The foundation, the cooperatives, resilience, and most importantly, the glue that held it together, the digital system, and it delivered. Proof of concept is, it works, and we need to scale it. That’s the ecosystem we want to replicate wherever possible.”
Ambitious Funding Targets
The World Bank aims to significantly increase its agricultural investments, targeting $9 billion annually in agri-business commitments by 2030 – double the current levels. This includes mobilizing an additional $5 billion from private sector sources to support agricultural transformation.
Collaborative Approach
Banga emphasized the importance of sharing successful models across regions, stating: “Stealing shamelessly and sharing seamlessly is how we will succeed together.” He stressed that resilience must be built into agricultural systems from the beginning rather than added as an afterthought.
Broader Economic Implications
The World Bank chief highlighted the urgent need to transform agriculture into a driver of jobs and income, particularly as 1.2 billion young people in developing countries will enter the workforce over the next 10-15 years. With only 400 million jobs expected to be created based on current trends, Banga warned this gap “will either power the global economy or spill over into unrest and migration.”
The AgriConnect initiative focuses on scaling proven approaches including infrastructure development, skill building, land system reforms, and helping smallholders access markets while building climate resilience.



