Agricultural
Transformation
and Rural
Development
Overview
 Agriculture’s role in Economic Development
 Self-sufficiency and Dwindling Food Supplies
 Land Tenure and Reform
 Technology of agricultural production
 Mobilization of Agricultural Inputs
 Rural Development Efforts
 Agricultural Price Policy
Introduction
 Understanding the nature of agriculture is fundamental
to understanding the development.
 Income distribution, extreme poverty and the rural
poor
 Human capital: Nutrition, food production and
distribution
 Contribution of agricultural exports to development
 Agriculture is one industry among many, but it
is an industry with a difference.
 At early stages of development, this sector
employs far more people than all others.
 Agricultural activities have existed for
thousands of years, and so the rural economy
is “tradition bound”.
 Crucial importance of land as a factor of
production and the influence of the
weather/climate.
 It is the only sector that produces food and
there are no substitutes for food.
Agriculture’s role in Economic
Development
 Most of the people in poor countries make their living
from the land.
 Most developing countries must rely on their own
agricultural sectors to produce the food consumed by
their people
 Farmers must produce enough to feed themselves as
well as the urban population.
 The rural sector is virtually the only source of
increased labour for the urban sector.
• The agricultural sector can be a major source of
capital for modern economic growth.
 Agricultural exports are a key source of foreign
exchange with which to import capital equipment
and intermediate goods.
 The rural population is an important market for the
output of the urban sector.
Self-sufficiency
 Food self-sufficiency and the National Defense
argument
 Dependence on food imports
 Food as a strategic good
Dwindling World Food Supplies
 History does not support the view that world supplies of
exportable food are steadily diminishing.
World Cereal Exports
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
1962 1966 1970 1974 1978 1980 1985 1988 1992 1996 2002
Year
metric
tonnes,
millions
 The issue is not about running out of surplus land,
but our ability to increase the yields of existing
arable land to meet the needs of an increasing
population.
 Research shows that the planet is not close to its
biological limit.
 The real danger of a long-term food crisis arises
from a different source – internal social and
economic barriers to technical progress in
agriculture.
Food Supply and Famine
 Famine is far more a problem of food distribution
than of food production.
 The central issue is not what caused the crop
failure (drought or civil war) but why no one
intervened to assist those who lost the means to
survive.
Jean Dreze and Amartya Sen blame
“negligence or smugness or callousness on
the part of the non-responding authorities.”
 Market forces are often not sufficient to the task of
relieving a famine.
 Governments and NGOs must play a role.
 Famines rarely happen where a nation is
democratic or governed by some other form of
pluralistic politics, where there are open channels
for communication and criticism such as a free
press.
 Mechanisms to end starvation:
 Free food shipments to distribution points
 Food-for-work programs
 The distribution problem must be tackled before
increasing agricultural production.
Land Tenure and Reform
 The property rights that matters most in the
agricultural sector is the right over the use of land.
 If that right is well defined as well as exclusive,
secure, enforceable, transferable, then farmers have
the incentive to invest and work the land efficiently.
 Prevailing land-tenure arrangements are important for
the welfare of farming families and for political
stability.
 Patterns of Land Tenure
 Land tenure refers to the way people own land
and how they rent it to others.
 Serfdom:
 prevails in only a few remote areas.
 a local aristocrat owns a piece of land and
allows local peasants to cultivate it in
exchange for a part of the harvest.
 Peasants and their families are often tied to the
land for life.
 Large-scale modern farming or ranching
 Large crop or cattle-raising acreage
 Plantation agriculture
 Latifundos
 Family farms or independent peasant proprietors
 Tenancy
 Sharecropping
 Absentee landlords
 Communal farming
 Collectivized agriculture
 Tenure and Incentive
 Land tenure arrangements have a major impact on
agricultural productivity.
 From an incentive standpoint, the family-owned farm
would seem to be ideal, however they do not benefit
from economies of scale.
 When property rights for the farmer are not well defined
or secure they have little incentive to invest in
improvements or even to maintain existing irrigation and
drainage systems.
 Farm labourers are paid wages and typically do not
benefit at all in any rise in production. One solution is
piece-rate pay at harvest time.
 Communal and collectivized farming suffer from the
“free-rider” problem because property rights are not
exclusive.
 Work-points in collectivized farming
 Land Reform
 Reform of rent contracts
 Rent reduction
 Land to the tiller with compensation
 Land to the tiller without compensation
 The Politics of Land Reform
 The main motive is usually political
 Mexico, China and Zimbabwe
 Land reform legislation is extremely difficult to
enforce in the absence of deep commitment
from the government.
 Land Reform and Productivity
 Land reform has greatest positive impact on productivity
where the previous system was one of small peasant
farms with high rates of insecure tenancy and absentee
landlords.
 Land reform has the opposite impact if it results in the
breaking up of large, highly efficient modern estates or
farms and redistribution of land to small peasant
proprietors with little knowledge about modern
techniques and the lack of capital to pay for them.
 Land Reform and Income Distribution
 Usually there is only impact on income distribution if
the land is taken from the landlords without
compensation or without anything close to full
compensation.
Technology of Agricultural Production
 Traditional Agriculture
 Evidence suggest that these farmers are efficient
given existing technology
 Traditional technology changes very slowly
 The techniques here are not stagnant but evolve
over time with experimentation.
 Slash-and-Burn Cultivation
 Trees are slashed and fire is used to clear land. This
is a form of shifting cultivation or farm fallow
cultivation.
Ghana
Madagascar
The burnt tree stumps are
left in the grown. Cultivation
seldom involves more than
poking holes in the ground
and dropping seeds into
them.
This system requires a large
amount of land to support a
small number of people, as
after a year or two, yields fall
off drastically and new land
must be cleared.
 The Shortening of the Fallow
 The evolution from slash-and-burn to permanent
cultivation, growing one crop on a piece of land
once per year and shortening the period of time
that the land is left fallow.
 Crops are rotated and fertilizer is assed to
restore nutrients to the soil.
 Farming within a fixed technology
 The improvements in technique that occur
happened over too long an interval of time to
have anything but a marginal impact on rural
standards of living.
 Modernizing Agricultural Technology
 Specific inputs and techniques can be combined
to increase production.
 Mobilization of agricultural inputs and
techniques
 There is no universally best technology for
agriculture
 Japan vs. United States
1. The Mechanical Package
 Tractors, combines, and other forms of machinery are
used primarily as substitutes for labour that has left the
farm for the cities.
The Biological Package and the Green
Revolution
 Yields are raised through the use of improved plant
varieties such as hybrid corn or new varieties of rice.
 The dramatic effect on yields brought about by the
new varieties is referred to as the Green Revolution.
 New varieties raise yields only if combined with
adequate and timely water supplies and increased
amounts of chemical fertilizer.
The Mechanical Package The Biological Package
Machinery is a good substitute
for labour, so increasing
machinery leads to a rise in
agricultural output
There is little substitutability
between water supply and
chemical fertilizer, so
increasing fertilizer does not
lead to a rise in output.
Machinery Chemical fertilizer
Labour Water
Supply
a
b
a
b
Consumption of Chemical Fertilizer in Developing
Countries
0
10000
20000
30000
40000
50000
60000
70000
80000
1969 1979 1984 1988 1993 2002
Year
1,000
metric
tonnes
of
nutrient
Latin America
Far East
Near East
Africa
Source: Food and Agricultural Organization: www.fao.org
Food Production per Capita in Developing
Countries
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
1975 1985 1997 2001 2003
Year
(indices
2001
=
100)
World
South America
Asia
Africa
Source: Food and Agricultural Organization: www.fao.org
Mobilization of Agricultural Inputs
In what ways can a rural society provide itself with
the necessary amounts of labour, capital and
improved techniques?
1. Rural Public Works Projects
 Mobilization of labour to create rural capital
(e.g. roads and irrigation systems)
 Difficulty lies in the lack of connection between
those who did the work and those who reap the
benefits.
2. Rural Banking and Micro Credit
 Farmers often need credit to take full advantage of
their production opportunities.
 They typically face unfavourable interest rates. Rural
money-lenders often charge over 100% interest.
 Urban commercial banks are usually absent.
 Women in particular have difficulty obtaining credit
when they farm land registered in the name of an
absentee husband.
2. The Grameen Bank Model
 It targets the poorest of the poor, particularly rural
women
 No collateral is required
 The borrower is required to join a group from the
same village where members provide support to
each other and ensure repayment.
 Bank personnel work with the poor women.
 The bank is not profitable on its own and often
requires subsidies from international aid agencies.
 Those who repay their loans are eligible for further
credit.
3. Bank Raykat Indonesia (BRI)
 Revamped incentive system for rural lending
and saving
 Charged interest rates that cover costs and allow
for some profit but still much lower than rural
money-lenders.
 Led to a large rise in rural lending and an even
greater increase in rural saving
 While they did not target the poorest of the
poor, farmers and small rural businesses that
previously had no access to credit were able to
obtain loans.
 System survived the Asian financial crisis of
1997.
4. Extension Services
 These institutions provide the key link between
research laboratories or experimental farms and the
rural population.
 Relies heavily on the extension worker’s ability to
communicate and instill trust in the farmers.
5. Credit Cooperatives
 Small farmers pool funds from which one or two
farmers may borrow.
 Farmers take turns borrowing.
 Those not borrowing but supplying funds earn interest
and are encouraged to save more.
 Farmers’ savings tend to be small and the cooperatives
financially weak.
 Economic, social and political conflicts in the village
may make it impossible to maintain the cooperative.
6. The Development of Rural Markets
 In developing countries, the existence of an
effectively operating market cannot be taken for
granted.
 The to an increasing role for the market is
specialization, and specialization depends on
economies of scale.
 In LDCs, the single greatest barrier to taking advantage of
economies of scale is transportation costs.
 Therefore, improvements in the transportation system can
have a major impact on productivity.
 Farmers in LDCs often limit their dependence on
the market because of the risk it entails.
 Farmers face uncertainty in the price of crops between
planting and harvesting.
 Most farmers avoid becoming dependent on a single
cash crop and instead devote part of the land to meeting
family food requirements.
 Well-intentioned government intervention can
worsen matters. For high-cost rural trading
network, the government often substitutes an even
higher-cost bureaucratic control of the movement
of goods.
7.Roadblocks and Speed-bumps
 Land reform, the creation of effective rural credit,
marketing and extension systems as well as
government investment in infrastructure, especially
agricultural research take a long time.
 Changes in land tenure can be blocked by powerful
interests.
 New plant varieties suitable to local conditions may take
decades to develop.
 Government intervention in agricultural pricing
can a have an immediate and profound impact.
8. Agricultural Price Policy
 The Multiple Role of Prices
 Prices paid to farmers in relation to prices paid for
inputs have a major impact on how much is produced
 Prices combined with quantities sold determine farmers’
cash income.
 Prices of agricultural products are major determinants of
the cost of living of urban residents
 The prices of agricultural products are often controlled
by government marketing boards to earn profits for the
government (in a disguised form of taxation).
 The Impact of Subsidies
 Conflict between urban consumers and rural
producers over agricultural prices.
 Urban residents are in a better position to lobby
the government to their side resulting in
depressed prices for farmers.
 Subsidizing farmers in developed countries
results in surplus production which is often
exported at below world market prices to
developing countries, further depressing prices.
 Overvalued Exchange Rates

DEV'T ECONOMICS II - Chapter 4_1.pptx

  • 1.
  • 2.
    Overview  Agriculture’s rolein Economic Development  Self-sufficiency and Dwindling Food Supplies  Land Tenure and Reform  Technology of agricultural production  Mobilization of Agricultural Inputs  Rural Development Efforts  Agricultural Price Policy
  • 3.
    Introduction  Understanding thenature of agriculture is fundamental to understanding the development.  Income distribution, extreme poverty and the rural poor  Human capital: Nutrition, food production and distribution  Contribution of agricultural exports to development
  • 4.
     Agriculture isone industry among many, but it is an industry with a difference.  At early stages of development, this sector employs far more people than all others.  Agricultural activities have existed for thousands of years, and so the rural economy is “tradition bound”.  Crucial importance of land as a factor of production and the influence of the weather/climate.  It is the only sector that produces food and there are no substitutes for food.
  • 5.
    Agriculture’s role inEconomic Development  Most of the people in poor countries make their living from the land.  Most developing countries must rely on their own agricultural sectors to produce the food consumed by their people  Farmers must produce enough to feed themselves as well as the urban population.  The rural sector is virtually the only source of increased labour for the urban sector.
  • 6.
    • The agriculturalsector can be a major source of capital for modern economic growth.  Agricultural exports are a key source of foreign exchange with which to import capital equipment and intermediate goods.  The rural population is an important market for the output of the urban sector. Self-sufficiency  Food self-sufficiency and the National Defense argument  Dependence on food imports  Food as a strategic good
  • 7.
    Dwindling World FoodSupplies  History does not support the view that world supplies of exportable food are steadily diminishing. World Cereal Exports 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 1962 1966 1970 1974 1978 1980 1985 1988 1992 1996 2002 Year metric tonnes, millions
  • 8.
     The issueis not about running out of surplus land, but our ability to increase the yields of existing arable land to meet the needs of an increasing population.  Research shows that the planet is not close to its biological limit.  The real danger of a long-term food crisis arises from a different source – internal social and economic barriers to technical progress in agriculture.
  • 9.
    Food Supply andFamine  Famine is far more a problem of food distribution than of food production.  The central issue is not what caused the crop failure (drought or civil war) but why no one intervened to assist those who lost the means to survive. Jean Dreze and Amartya Sen blame “negligence or smugness or callousness on the part of the non-responding authorities.”
  • 10.
     Market forcesare often not sufficient to the task of relieving a famine.  Governments and NGOs must play a role.  Famines rarely happen where a nation is democratic or governed by some other form of pluralistic politics, where there are open channels for communication and criticism such as a free press.  Mechanisms to end starvation:  Free food shipments to distribution points  Food-for-work programs  The distribution problem must be tackled before increasing agricultural production.
  • 11.
    Land Tenure andReform  The property rights that matters most in the agricultural sector is the right over the use of land.  If that right is well defined as well as exclusive, secure, enforceable, transferable, then farmers have the incentive to invest and work the land efficiently.  Prevailing land-tenure arrangements are important for the welfare of farming families and for political stability.
  • 12.
     Patterns ofLand Tenure  Land tenure refers to the way people own land and how they rent it to others.  Serfdom:  prevails in only a few remote areas.  a local aristocrat owns a piece of land and allows local peasants to cultivate it in exchange for a part of the harvest.  Peasants and their families are often tied to the land for life.  Large-scale modern farming or ranching  Large crop or cattle-raising acreage
  • 13.
     Plantation agriculture Latifundos  Family farms or independent peasant proprietors  Tenancy  Sharecropping  Absentee landlords  Communal farming  Collectivized agriculture
  • 14.
     Tenure andIncentive  Land tenure arrangements have a major impact on agricultural productivity.  From an incentive standpoint, the family-owned farm would seem to be ideal, however they do not benefit from economies of scale.  When property rights for the farmer are not well defined or secure they have little incentive to invest in improvements or even to maintain existing irrigation and drainage systems.  Farm labourers are paid wages and typically do not benefit at all in any rise in production. One solution is piece-rate pay at harvest time.  Communal and collectivized farming suffer from the “free-rider” problem because property rights are not exclusive.  Work-points in collectivized farming
  • 15.
     Land Reform Reform of rent contracts  Rent reduction  Land to the tiller with compensation  Land to the tiller without compensation  The Politics of Land Reform  The main motive is usually political  Mexico, China and Zimbabwe  Land reform legislation is extremely difficult to enforce in the absence of deep commitment from the government.
  • 16.
     Land Reformand Productivity  Land reform has greatest positive impact on productivity where the previous system was one of small peasant farms with high rates of insecure tenancy and absentee landlords.  Land reform has the opposite impact if it results in the breaking up of large, highly efficient modern estates or farms and redistribution of land to small peasant proprietors with little knowledge about modern techniques and the lack of capital to pay for them.  Land Reform and Income Distribution  Usually there is only impact on income distribution if the land is taken from the landlords without compensation or without anything close to full compensation.
  • 17.
    Technology of AgriculturalProduction  Traditional Agriculture  Evidence suggest that these farmers are efficient given existing technology  Traditional technology changes very slowly  The techniques here are not stagnant but evolve over time with experimentation.  Slash-and-Burn Cultivation  Trees are slashed and fire is used to clear land. This is a form of shifting cultivation or farm fallow cultivation.
  • 18.
    Ghana Madagascar The burnt treestumps are left in the grown. Cultivation seldom involves more than poking holes in the ground and dropping seeds into them. This system requires a large amount of land to support a small number of people, as after a year or two, yields fall off drastically and new land must be cleared.
  • 19.
     The Shorteningof the Fallow  The evolution from slash-and-burn to permanent cultivation, growing one crop on a piece of land once per year and shortening the period of time that the land is left fallow.  Crops are rotated and fertilizer is assed to restore nutrients to the soil.  Farming within a fixed technology  The improvements in technique that occur happened over too long an interval of time to have anything but a marginal impact on rural standards of living.
  • 20.
     Modernizing AgriculturalTechnology  Specific inputs and techniques can be combined to increase production.  Mobilization of agricultural inputs and techniques  There is no universally best technology for agriculture  Japan vs. United States
  • 21.
    1. The MechanicalPackage  Tractors, combines, and other forms of machinery are used primarily as substitutes for labour that has left the farm for the cities.
  • 22.
    The Biological Packageand the Green Revolution  Yields are raised through the use of improved plant varieties such as hybrid corn or new varieties of rice.  The dramatic effect on yields brought about by the new varieties is referred to as the Green Revolution.  New varieties raise yields only if combined with adequate and timely water supplies and increased amounts of chemical fertilizer.
  • 23.
    The Mechanical PackageThe Biological Package Machinery is a good substitute for labour, so increasing machinery leads to a rise in agricultural output There is little substitutability between water supply and chemical fertilizer, so increasing fertilizer does not lead to a rise in output. Machinery Chemical fertilizer Labour Water Supply a b a b
  • 24.
    Consumption of ChemicalFertilizer in Developing Countries 0 10000 20000 30000 40000 50000 60000 70000 80000 1969 1979 1984 1988 1993 2002 Year 1,000 metric tonnes of nutrient Latin America Far East Near East Africa Source: Food and Agricultural Organization: www.fao.org
  • 25.
    Food Production perCapita in Developing Countries 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 1975 1985 1997 2001 2003 Year (indices 2001 = 100) World South America Asia Africa Source: Food and Agricultural Organization: www.fao.org
  • 26.
    Mobilization of AgriculturalInputs In what ways can a rural society provide itself with the necessary amounts of labour, capital and improved techniques? 1. Rural Public Works Projects  Mobilization of labour to create rural capital (e.g. roads and irrigation systems)  Difficulty lies in the lack of connection between those who did the work and those who reap the benefits.
  • 27.
    2. Rural Bankingand Micro Credit  Farmers often need credit to take full advantage of their production opportunities.  They typically face unfavourable interest rates. Rural money-lenders often charge over 100% interest.  Urban commercial banks are usually absent.  Women in particular have difficulty obtaining credit when they farm land registered in the name of an absentee husband.
  • 28.
    2. The GrameenBank Model  It targets the poorest of the poor, particularly rural women  No collateral is required  The borrower is required to join a group from the same village where members provide support to each other and ensure repayment.  Bank personnel work with the poor women.  The bank is not profitable on its own and often requires subsidies from international aid agencies.  Those who repay their loans are eligible for further credit.
  • 29.
    3. Bank RaykatIndonesia (BRI)  Revamped incentive system for rural lending and saving  Charged interest rates that cover costs and allow for some profit but still much lower than rural money-lenders.  Led to a large rise in rural lending and an even greater increase in rural saving  While they did not target the poorest of the poor, farmers and small rural businesses that previously had no access to credit were able to obtain loans.  System survived the Asian financial crisis of 1997.
  • 30.
    4. Extension Services These institutions provide the key link between research laboratories or experimental farms and the rural population.  Relies heavily on the extension worker’s ability to communicate and instill trust in the farmers.
  • 31.
    5. Credit Cooperatives Small farmers pool funds from which one or two farmers may borrow.  Farmers take turns borrowing.  Those not borrowing but supplying funds earn interest and are encouraged to save more.  Farmers’ savings tend to be small and the cooperatives financially weak.  Economic, social and political conflicts in the village may make it impossible to maintain the cooperative.
  • 32.
    6. The Developmentof Rural Markets  In developing countries, the existence of an effectively operating market cannot be taken for granted.  The to an increasing role for the market is specialization, and specialization depends on economies of scale.  In LDCs, the single greatest barrier to taking advantage of economies of scale is transportation costs.  Therefore, improvements in the transportation system can have a major impact on productivity.
  • 33.
     Farmers inLDCs often limit their dependence on the market because of the risk it entails.  Farmers face uncertainty in the price of crops between planting and harvesting.  Most farmers avoid becoming dependent on a single cash crop and instead devote part of the land to meeting family food requirements.  Well-intentioned government intervention can worsen matters. For high-cost rural trading network, the government often substitutes an even higher-cost bureaucratic control of the movement of goods.
  • 34.
    7.Roadblocks and Speed-bumps Land reform, the creation of effective rural credit, marketing and extension systems as well as government investment in infrastructure, especially agricultural research take a long time.  Changes in land tenure can be blocked by powerful interests.  New plant varieties suitable to local conditions may take decades to develop.  Government intervention in agricultural pricing can a have an immediate and profound impact.
  • 35.
    8. Agricultural PricePolicy  The Multiple Role of Prices  Prices paid to farmers in relation to prices paid for inputs have a major impact on how much is produced  Prices combined with quantities sold determine farmers’ cash income.  Prices of agricultural products are major determinants of the cost of living of urban residents  The prices of agricultural products are often controlled by government marketing boards to earn profits for the government (in a disguised form of taxation).
  • 36.
     The Impactof Subsidies  Conflict between urban consumers and rural producers over agricultural prices.  Urban residents are in a better position to lobby the government to their side resulting in depressed prices for farmers.  Subsidizing farmers in developed countries results in surplus production which is often exported at below world market prices to developing countries, further depressing prices.  Overvalued Exchange Rates