Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 February 2009
The grain output in China in 1974 was not only, as Robert Michael Field noted in The China Quarterly No. 65, “ far larger than output claimed for any previous year ” ; it was also far larger than the estimates made by most western economists concerned with China. Such observers, believing that agricultural production in China was “ stagnating,” had estimated Chinese grain output for 1974 as being between 255 and 259 million tons. Peking's announcement that 1974 grain output was 274-9 million tons thus set up a contradiction: either those western economists had been far off the mark in their extrapolations of growth or the Chinese figure was somehow misleading. Field opts for the second explanation.
1. For example. Benedict Stavis, “How China is solving its food problem” Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars, July/September 1975, p. 24.
2. See China: A Reassessment of the Economy, Joint Economic Committee of U.S. Congress, pp. 329 and 351.