Enhancing food production is a requirement for food security, particularly in a developing context. Innovation and techniques to lower input cost is one aspect that
is needed to make the systems more resilient. Here we do a comparative costs and benefits analysis between agroecological and conventional farming practices in
agroforestry parklands in two communes in Burkina Faso. Social and environmental concerns are included to highlight the requirements of the local context. A structured
surveys and trials of maize and cowpea crops were carried out over two cropping seasons in the two agriculture practices. Result showed that agroecological practices
are slightly costlier in terms of labor capital. However, in terms of inputs, input costs for both crops are higher in conventional farming (380 ± 2 U S $ and 115 ± 4 U S $) than in
agroecological farming (285 ± 15 U S $ and 56 ± 1 U S $) for maize and cowpea crops, respectively. For cowpea production, the cost-benefit ratio was higher in agroecology
than in conventional farming (2.37 ± 0.07 and 2.06 ± 0.05, respectively). In contrast, maize cultivation with conventional farming favored over agroecological farming
(1.18 ± 0.02 and 0.99 ± 0.03 respectively). Agroecological practices should be promote and integrate into local agriculture policies for rural development, human and animal
health and a sustainable production on agroforestry parklands.
Farmers perception; cost-benefit analysis; cowpea; maize; sustainable production