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Rural Agriculture and Economic Development

The document discusses trends in rural poverty and agriculture. It notes that 2/3 of the world's poorest live in rural areas engaged in subsistence farming. Agriculture has traditionally played a passive role but must now support rural development. There are two types of world agriculture - highly efficient in developed countries and inefficient, low-productivity subsistence farming in developing countries. The document outlines stages of agricultural development from subsistence to mixed farming to specialized commercial farming and discusses factors that have hindered transitions like land fragmentation, population growth, and monopolistic landowners. It analyzes the complex relationship between agriculture and rural livelihood diversification.

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Mija Diro
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
334 views3 pages

Rural Agriculture and Economic Development

The document discusses trends in rural poverty and agriculture. It notes that 2/3 of the world's poorest live in rural areas engaged in subsistence farming. Agriculture has traditionally played a passive role but must now support rural development. There are two types of world agriculture - highly efficient in developed countries and inefficient, low-productivity subsistence farming in developing countries. The document outlines stages of agricultural development from subsistence to mixed farming to specialized commercial farming and discusses factors that have hindered transitions like land fragmentation, population growth, and monopolistic landowners. It analyzes the complex relationship between agriculture and rural livelihood diversification.

Uploaded by

Mija Diro
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

MARCH 26, 2020 - high risks and uncertain rewards

Trends - fragmentation and subdivision of


- 2/3 of the world’s poorest are peasant land in Asia
located in rural areas and engaged - overpopulation
primarily in subsistence agriculture - 3 major interrelated forces
(basic concern is survival) that molded traditional
- stagnation and retrogression in pattern of land ownership
economic development in rural into its present fragmented
areas – often the cause of poverty, condition i
growing inequality, rapid population - intervention of
growth & unemployment European rule –
Role of agriculture colonizers
Traditionally – passive and supportive: to (sharecroppers and
provide sufficient low-priced food and tenant farmers )
manpower to expanding industrial economy - progressive
Recently – agricultural sector and rural introduction of
economy play in an important part in any monetized
overall strategy of economic progress; transactions and rise
integrated rural development in power of
- Accelerated output growth – money-lender
technological, institutional and price - rapid growth of Asian
incentive changes populations
- Rising domestic demand for Economics of Agricultural Development
agricultural output 1. Subsistence farming
- Diversified, non-agricultural, - Farming for family consumption
labor-intensive rural development (staple foods)
activities - Low output and productivity
2 Kinds of World Agriculture - Minimal capital investment
- highly efficient agriculture - Land and labor – main factors of
(developed countries) – high production
productivity and output - Labor is unemployed for most of the
- inefficient and low-productivity year
agriculture (developing countries) – - Harsh and static environment
mainly subsistence farming - Highly risky and uncertain
particularly family farm ● Sharecropping and interlocking
Stagnation of LDC agriculture factor markets
Productivity - Occurs when peasant farmer uses
Land productivity – measured as kilograms landowner’s farmland in exchange
of grain harvested per hectare of agricultural for share of food output
land - Leads to inefficiency
Output growth – technological and biological - Screening hypothesis – charge high
improvements effective rents for pure rental
Peasant agriculture
contracts than sharecropping ● Direct and indirect supports to small
contracts farms in agriculture
- Interlocking factor markets – ● Perception: sector still discriminated
landowner is also employer, loan in public policy?
officer, customer which gives him ● Responses to this discrimination
monopoly power through several decades of RD
2. Transition to mixed and diversified thinking
farming Diversification strategy within
- Output – staple crops, cash livelihoods approach – movement away
crops (fruits vegetables, from ‘agriculture first’ strategy that focused
coffee, tea) and simple on a small farm as main platform for poverty
animal husbandry reduction
- Use of simple labor-saving Agriculture performance vis-à-vis
devices (small tractors, diverse rural livelihoods
mechanical seeders, Three dimensions of this complex
animal-operated steel plows) relationship:
- Use of better technology Dimension 1: ‘Rural growth linkages’ model
(seeds, fertilizers and simple - Refers to the different linkages from
irrigation) agriculture that result in the
- Marketable surplus formation and growth of rural
- Minimize impact of staple non-farm enterprises (RNFE) in rural
crop failure and improve areas.
income security - RNFE - important sub-sector and for
3. Specialized: Modern commercial many years in poverty reduction
farming policy
- Most advanced stage of - Key assumption in argument for
individual holding in a mixed RNFE?
market economy - Focus of policy: diversify sector
- Specialized farming – pure away from agriculture
commercial profit; high Dimension 1 approaches:
productivity - Consumer goods and services -
- Resource utilization expenditure linkages
- Capital formation, - Inputs and services to agricultural
technological progress, production - backward linkages
scientific research and - Processing and marketing services
development related to farm outputs - forward
- Cultivated fruit, vegetable linkages
farms, vast wheat and - Studies on growth multipliers reveal:
cornfields consumption linkages dominate
● ‘Agriculture first’ strategy as the forward and backward linkages in
most dominant approach to explaining total effects
Research and Development Dimension 2: effects on agriculture of
household-level diversification
- Positive effects on agriculture as
sub-sector benefits from input and
output linkages in rural economy
Dimension 3: Role of on-farm
diversification in contrast to off-farm

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