Agri Versus Industry Dev Eco
Agri Versus Industry Dev Eco
Agri Versus Industry Dev Eco
Contribution of Agriculture: Providing more food to the rapidly expanding population Providing productive employment Improving welfare of the rural people
An agriculture and employment based strategy requires three basic complementary elements for economic development. These are:
i) Accelerated output growth through technological, institutional, and price changes designed to raise the productivity of small farmers, ii) Rising domestic demand for agricultural output derived from an employment-oriented urban development strategy,
iii) Diversified, non-agricultural, labour-intensive rural development activities that directly and indirectly support and are supported by the farming community.
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When traditional family farmers and cultivators resist change, is there behavior stubborn and irrational, or are they acting rationally within the context of their particular economic environment? Are economic and price incentives sufficient to elicit output increases among farmers, or are institutional and structural changes in rural farming systems also required? Is raising agricultural productivity sufficient to improve rural life, or must there be concomitant offfarm employment creation along with improvements in educational, medical, and other social services?
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Types of farming
The highly efficient agriculture of the developed countries, where substantial productive capacity and high output per worker permit a very small number of farmers to feed entire nations, and The inefficient and low-productivity agriculture of developing countries, where in many instances the agricultural sector can barely sustain the farm population.
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This becomes clear from the productivity gap of developed and the developing nations. In 1960 the per capita production of agricultural output was US $680 in developed countries whereas the same was only US $52 in underdeveloped countries i.e., about 13 times. By 2000 the productivity gap has been widened to 50:1.
8. No effective social security, unemployment insurance, etc. 9. Traditional food crops are the preferred crops for cultivation.
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Latin America
Latifundios (>12) Medium-sized farms (4 to12) Family farms (2 to 4) Minifundios (< 2)
Concentration of land among a few Latifundios Minifundios comprises about 90% of farms, however, occupy only about 17% of agril land.
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However, if we look at the productivity, performance of latifundios were poor with respect to Poor intensity of cropping Poor utilization of resources Minifundios in Argentina, Brazil, and Chile yield more than twice the value of output per hectare under cultivation in comparison to Latifundios.
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A few important factors contributed here. These are Most latifundios used their land holding as a symbol of power and prestige rather their potentiality to contribute to total agricultural output. Cost of supervising hired labour in latifundios is much more than the family labour of minifundios.
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Asia
However, in Asian nations, according to Gunnar Myrdal three factors responsible for the present state of fragmented land holdings. 1. The intervention of European rule 2. Introduction of monetized transactions and the rise of moneylenders 3. The rapid growth of population.
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Asian Pattern
Landlords Sharecroppers Tenant Farmers Money lenders Absentee landlords
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Pattern in Africa
Subsistence farming in the village community, Existence of additional land in excess to immediate requirements, The rights of each family in a village to have access to land and water in the immediate territorial vicinity.
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agriculture.
With development of a country, share of
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development
Kuznets called it factor contribution of agriculture
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Role of Industry
Industrialization is a prerequisite for economic
development of any country. With development, role of industry in economy increase and role of agriculture decrease.
Agriculture provide raw materials to different agrobased industries, provide surplus labour to industry
Saved foreign currencies earn through export of different agricultural product may be utilised for import of capital goods Increase in agricultural productivity increases rural income that lead to increase in demand for nonagricultural goods and services
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Increase in agril productivity lead to large marketable surplus and redistribution of income in favour of the rural sector Increased rural savings may be made available for industrial use by different financial institutions Industrialisation generates demand for products such as milk, vegetables, eggs, poultry, etc., which indirectly may increase agril productivity Industrialisation increase availability of capital for agricultural sector Industrialisation followed by urbanisation generates good job opportunity for the rural people
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Urbanisation provides good facility for education, healthcare, communication, and also change the attitude of people for professionalism
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