Profitability Analysis of Dates in District Kech, Balochistan

Authors

  • Tahira Sadaf Institute of Agricultural and Resource Economics, University of Agriculture, Faisalabad, Pakistan Author
  • Ayesha Rouf Institute of Agricultural and Resource Economics, University of Agriculture, Faisalabad, Pakistan Author
  • Nazia Tabasam Institute of Agricultural and Resource Economics, University of Agriculture, Faisalabad, Pakistan Author
  • Neelam Rana Institute of Agricultural and Resource Economics, University of Agriculture, Faisalabad, Pakistan Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.70843/ijass.2026.06101

Keywords:

Date palm, Profitability analysis, Balochistan, Marketing margins, Farm-to-market infrastructure, Cultivation constraints, Cost–benefit ratio

Abstract

Pakistan ranks seventh among the world’s leading date-producing countries, with Balochistan contributing 53% of national production (225,000 tons from 43.3 thousand hectares). District Kech alone accounts for 59% of the province’s total output. This study assessed the profitability of date cultivation using primary data from 80 farmers in Kech. Major date-producing areas include Turbat and Panjgoor for high-quality dates, while Begum Jangi leads in cultivated area and output, followed by Halini, Hussaini, Goknah, and others. The total cultivation cost was estimated at Rs. 69.9 thousand per acre. Key cost components included land preparation (Rs. 14.8 thousand), orchard establishment (Rs. 19.5 thousand), operational expenses (Rs. 45.8 thousand), and marketing (Rs. 31.8 thousand). Purchase of palm suckers represented the largest share of establishment costs, while transportation dominated marketing expenses. Average yield was 77.3 maunds per hectare, with trees aged 10–20 years being most productive. Washakar fetched the highest market price, followed by Begum Jangi and Konzenabad, whereas Halini was mainly used for producing hydrated dates (Chhuhara). Net returns were Rs. 13.7 thousand per acre, with a cost–benefit ratio of 1:2.98, indicating overall profitability. Marketing analysis showed a consumer price spread of Rs. 3.5 thousand per maund. Retailers received the highest share (42.1 paisa per rupee spent), followed by middlemen (35.9 paisa) and growers (22 paisa). Growers had the lowest cost–benefit ratio (1:0.27), highlighting inefficiencies in the marketing chain. Key challenges included poor farm-to-market infrastructure, high transportation costs, limited market facilities, inadequate irrigation, lack of processing units, and absence of cold storage facilities.

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Published

2026-03-03

How to Cite

Sadaf, T., Rouf, A., Tabasam, N., & Rana, N. (2026). Profitability Analysis of Dates in District Kech, Balochistan. International Journal of Advanced Social Studies, 6(1), 1-12. https://doi.org/10.70843/ijass.2026.06101