Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Preface
- Preamble How the Farmers Outwitted the Bureaucrats: A True Tale
- 1 Why Country People are not Peasants
- 2 The Vain Search for Universal Generalizations: 1. The Relevance of Economic Inequality
- 3 The Vain Search for Universal Generalizations: 2. The Poor Quality of Official Statistics
- 4 The Vain Search for Universal Generalizations: 3. Historicist Fallacies
- 5 Pause: How can the Impasse be Resolved?
- 6 The Logical Necessity for Economic Inequality within Rural Communities
- 7 The Farming Household: its Defects as a Statistical Unit
- 8 The Need to be Indebted
- 9 The Flexibility of Inheritance Systems
- 10 The Neglect of Farm-Labouring Systems
- 11 Misconceptions about Migration
- 12 The Neglect of Women
- 13 The Sale of Farmland
- 14 Rural Class Stratification?
- Postscript Doomsday Economics
- Glossary and Place Names
- References
- Index
2 - The Vain Search for Universal Generalizations: 1. The Relevance of Economic Inequality
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Preface
- Preamble How the Farmers Outwitted the Bureaucrats: A True Tale
- 1 Why Country People are not Peasants
- 2 The Vain Search for Universal Generalizations: 1. The Relevance of Economic Inequality
- 3 The Vain Search for Universal Generalizations: 2. The Poor Quality of Official Statistics
- 4 The Vain Search for Universal Generalizations: 3. Historicist Fallacies
- 5 Pause: How can the Impasse be Resolved?
- 6 The Logical Necessity for Economic Inequality within Rural Communities
- 7 The Farming Household: its Defects as a Statistical Unit
- 8 The Need to be Indebted
- 9 The Flexibility of Inheritance Systems
- 10 The Neglect of Farm-Labouring Systems
- 11 Misconceptions about Migration
- 12 The Neglect of Women
- 13 The Sale of Farmland
- 14 Rural Class Stratification?
- Postscript Doomsday Economics
- Glossary and Place Names
- References
- Index
Summary
One of the few important socio-economic generalizations which may safely be made about rural tropical economies is that a significant degree of economic inequality always exists within any rural community in which cash circulates. This inequality may be so pronounced that the economic behaviour and motivations of the poorest farmers are entirely different from, even the mirror images of, those of the richest. Yet the economists' need for generalizations relating to all farmers in the village necessarily ignores this essential fact. This means that contrary to appearances the village community as a whole, not the household, is effectively the unit of investigation. I shall justify my ‘inequality generalization’ in Chapter 6. In this chapter I try to expose the confusion resulting from ignoring village inequality by reference first to a recent textbook; then to an attempt by two economists to verify various hypotheses by means of fieldwork; and finally to the work of some world-renowned development economists.
The textbook is Agriculture and Economic Development by S. Ghatak andK. Ingersent (1984), in general a respectable work which may come close to achieving the authors' ambitious aim of being ‘essential as a main text for courses on development economics and agricultural economies’. I start with Chapter 2, ‘Structure and Characteristics of Agriculture in LDCs’, in which (pp.5 et seq.) the authors examine the main attributes of ‘traditional agriculture’, defined as ‘the characteristic farming type in countries where agriculture is the dominant employer (including those who are self-employed)’.
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- Information
- Development Economics on TrialThe Anthropological Case for a Prosecution, pp. 16 - 29Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1986