Cover image for Subsistence agriculture and economic development
Title:
Subsistence agriculture and economic development
Publication Information:
New Jersey, NJ : AldineTransaction, 2008
Physical Description:
xiii, 481 p. : ill. ; 26 cm.
ISBN:
9780202362250
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30000010201244 HD1417 W47 2008 Open Access Book Proceedings, Conference, Workshop etc.
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Summary

Summary

One of the more perplexing problems of economic development is helping subsistence farmers break away from production simply for home consumption to become commercial farmers, producing more and more for sale in the marketplace. Although subsistence farms occupy 40 percent of the worlds cultivated land and support half of mankind, facts about them and programs to increase their output are scattered. Subsistence Agriculture and Economic Development provides a unique overview of these difficulties and their significance to economic development. It is the first book to subject subsistence agriculture to rigorous multi-disciplinary examination and to bring to light new theory and empirical evidence directed toward solving the problem.This volume contains original chapters by forty leading social scientists and agricultural specialists who summarize contemporary theory, fact, and policy on the problems of developing agriculture from subsistence to a commercial basis. Each contributor speaks from one or more of the relevant standpoints of economics, sociology, agronomy, political science, anthropology, and social psychology. There emerges a clear, meaningful picture of the subsistence farmer and the problems involved in changing his attitudes, methods of production, and economic and social environment.Broad in scope, documented with pertinent case studies, and far-reaching in its guidelines for future research and policy, this work should be read by all concerned with increasing food production and with economic development. This is an area of special concern in the uses of food products as the basis for new energy resources - an issue of increasing importance in the advancing use of ethanol as a fuel drawn from corn products.


Author Notes

Clifton R. Wharton, Jr. has been CEO and chairman of TIAA-CREF. He has also been a director for Ford Motor, Time, the New York Stock Exchange, Harcourt General, Equitable Life, Tenneco, Federated, and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and has served under six presidents of the United States in a foreign policy post.


Table of Contents

John D. Rockefeller 3rdArthur T. MosherClifton R. Wharton, Jr.Raymond FirthAbraham M. WeisblatSelo SoemardjanDavid E. PfannerNicholas Georgescu-RoegenDaniel ThornerH. MyintT. W. SchultzEverett M. RogersGelia CastilloLeonard W. DoobD. H. PennyChihiro NakajimaRaj KrishnaAnthony M. TangJin H. ParkJohn W. MellorCarl K. EicherJere R. BehrmanMerrill J. BatemanE. K. Fisk and R. T. ShandWilliam O. JonesMilton L. BarnettWilliam H. NichollsDale W. JorgensonBruce F. JohnstonVernon W. RuttanV. M. DandekarJ. Leonard JoyM. L. DantwalaAllan R. Holmberg and Henry F. DobynsSyed A. RahimJose Paulo Ribeiro and Clifton R. Wharton, Jr.Delbert T. MyrenClifton R. Wharton, Jr.
Prefacep. v
Contributorsp. ix
Introduction: The Challenge of Population and Foodp. 3
1 The Development Problems of Subsistence Farmers: A Preliminary Reviewp. 6
2 Subsistence Agriculture: Concepts and Scopep. 12
Part I The Subsistence Farmer, Agrarian Cultures, and Peasant Societies
3 Social Structure and Peasant Economy: The Influence of Social Structure Upon Peasant Economiesp. 23
Comment: An Economist's View of Social Structure Interaction with the Subsistence Economyp. 37
Comment: The Influence of Social Structure on the Javanese Peasant Economyp. 41
Case Study: A Semisubsistence Village Economy in Lower Burmap. 47
4 The Institutional Aspects of Peasant Communities: An Analytical Viewp. 61
Comment: Old and New Approaches to Peasant Economiesp. 94
Comment: The Peasant Economies of Today's Underdeveloped Areasp. 99
Case Study: New Evidence on Farmer Responses to Economic Opportunities from the Early Agrarian History of Western Europep. 105
5 Motivations, Values, and Attitudes of Subsistence Farmers: Toward a Subculture of Peasantryp. 111
Comment: A Critical View of a Subculture of Peasantryp. 136
Comment: Testing Theories Concerning a Subculture of Peasantryp. 142
Case Study: Growth of "Economic Mindedness" Among Small Farmers in North Sumatra, Indonesiap. 152
Part II The Economic Behavior of Subsistence Farmers
6 Subsistence and Commercial Family Farms: Some Theoretical Models of Subjective Equilibriump. 165
Comment: Models of the Family Farmp. 185
Comment: On Subjective Equilibrium of the Subsistence Farmerp. 190
Case Study: Effects of Increasing Commercialization on Resource Use in Semi-Subsistence Farms in South Koreap. 196
7 The Subsistence Farmer in Traditional Economiesp. 209
Comment: The Subsistence Farmer in Traditional Economiesp. 227
8 Supply Relationships in Peasant Agriculture: Editor's Introductionp. 229
Case Study: Supply Response and the Modernization of Peasant Agriculture: A Study of Four Major Annual Crops in Thailandp. 232
Case Study: Supply Relations for Perennial Crops in the Less-Developed Areasp. 243
Part III Theories of Change and Growth
9 The Early Stages of Development in a Primitive Economy: The Evolution from Subsistence to Trade and Specializationp. 257
Comment: The Demand for Food, Leisure, and Economic Surplusesp. 275
Case Study: Subsistence and Transition among the Ibaloi in the Philippinesp. 284
10 Development in Agrarian Economies: The Role of Agricultural Surplus, Population Pressures, and Systems of Land Tenurep. 296
11 The Role of Agriculture in Economic Development: Classical versus Neoclassical Models of Growthp. 320
Comment: Sectoral Interdependence, Structural Transformation, and Agricultural Growthp. 348
Comment: Two Sector Models and Development Policyp. 353
Part IV Developing Subsistence Agriculture
12 Transforming Traditional Agriculture: Editor's Introductionp. 363
Comment: Questions of Economic Analysis and the Consequences of Population Growthp. 366
Comment: Diagnosis, Prediction, and Policy Formulationp. 376
Case Study: The Problems of a Subsistence Farm Economy: The Indian Casep. 382
13 The Execution of Agricultural Development: Case Studies of Planned Change: Editor's Introductionp. 387
Case Study: The Cornell Program in Vicos, Perup. 392
Case Study: The Comilla Program in East Pakistanp. 415
Case Study: The ACAR Program in Minas Gerais, Brazilp. 424
Case Study: The Rockefeller Foundation Program in Corn and Wheat in Mexicop. 438
Part V Research Priorities on Subsistence Agriculture
14 The Issues and a Research Agendap. 455
Indexp. 469