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Towards a Strategy for Rural Development

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Technological Change and Innovation- no scope for improvement by ... Dismantling of economic communes or collectives. Reallocation of land use for family farms ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Towards a Strategy for Rural Development


1
Towards a Strategy for Rural Development
  • Some Main Requirements

2
Principal Sources of Agricultural and Rural
Progress
  • Technological Change and Innovation- no scope
    for improvement by moving into new land. Two
    major sources
  • 1. Mechanized agriculture to replace human
    labor but mechanized equipment may not be suited
    to land and it displaces workers creating
    unemployment
  • 2. Inputs for Green Revolution hybrid seeds,
    water control (irrigation), chemicals
    (fertilizers, pesticides, insecticides)

3
Principal Sources of Agricultural and Rural
Progress
  • Appropriate Institutional and Government Economic
    Policies
  • Inputs are scale neutral useful at a variety of
    scales
  • But too often large landowners have better access
    to these inputs and low interest government loans
    while smallholders turn to moneylenders
  • Low prices for output provide no incentive for
    farmers to produce surplus
  • Must create incentives for small farmersthis
    often means less government intervention

4
Three Conditions for Rural Development
  • 1. Land reform- farm structures and land tenure
    patterns need to be adapted to increasing food
    production and promoting benefits of agrarian
    progress
  • Highly unequal structure of land ownership
    probably single most important determinant in
    explaining inequitable distribution of income

5
Three Conditions for Rural Development
  • 2. Supportive Policies- need government policies
    that provide incentives and opportunities and
    access to needed inputs
  • Must be corresponding changes in rural
    institutions that control production (banks,
    moneylenders)
  • Must be corresponding changes in supporting
    government services (credit, education, rural
    transport and feeder roads)

6
Three Conditions for Rural Development
  • 3. Integrated Development Objectives
  • Simultaneous changes needed in income,
    employment, education, housing, health and
    nutrition
  • Lessening of rural-urban imbalances in income
    opportunities
  • Capacity of rural sector to sustain and
    accelerate these improvements over time

7
Land Reform
  • What is land reform? Reorganization of
    landholding and tenure structures
  • Accomplished in two ways
  • A. Expropriation-with or without compensation of
    privately owned estates to benefit small scale
    peasantry and landless
  • B. Consolidation of excessively small or
    fragmented holdings
  • Agrarian reform- is closely related involving
    redistribution of land but also provision of
    roads, rural electricity, rural credit, extension
    services

8
Experiments in Land Reform
  • Zimbabwe- in 1980s state attempted to eliminate
    dualist structure where white farmers had major
    interests
  • Resettlement aimed to provide landless families
    displaced by war with land on former European
    farms
  • But by 1990s only 52 thousand families were
    moved schemes fragmented
  • Mugabe government has expropriated European farms
    and the backlash has been for these farmers to
    move to Zambia

9
Experiments in Land Reform
  • Indonesia- Transmigration Program
  • Dutch initiated in early 1900s where families
    were recruited in Java, Bali and Lombok and
    resettled to the Sumatra, Kalimantan and Sulawesi
  • Over 4 million people moved but results have been
    uneven poor land, environmental damage,
    necessity to find off farm employment
  • Program was terminated in 2001

10
Experiments in Land Reform
  • Cuba- At end of Cuban Revolution in 1959 sugar
    companies controlled 20 percent of farmland
  • Staged expropriation of large farming units to
    state control
  • Enlargement of small scale private sector gave
    land ownership to all tenants, sharecroppers and
    squatters
  • Provided basis for socialist agricultural
    development and provision of health services and
    education
  • But has this system succeeded in bringing better
    livelihoods to Cuban families??

11
Vietnam -Economic Reform or RenovationDoi Moi
  • Dismantling of economic communes or collectives
  • Reallocation of land use for family farms
  • Opening country to foreign direct investment-
    recognize value of market mechanism
  • Reform of banking sector
  • Establish real interest ratesgtgtgtSavings
  • Direct subsidies to State Owned Enterprises
    (SOEs) ended
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