Author : Roumasset, James
According to conventional wisdom, the ideal form of pro-poor economic development is through investment in agriculturally-led growth. In the early stages of growth, increased production decreases food prices and shifts out the demand for labor. Inasmuch as poor households disproportionately consume food and earn a relatively large share of their income from labor, both mechanisms benefit the poor. Agricultural economists typically recommend a panoply of government interventions to go along with the investments in new technology and infrastructure, including price-supports and stabilization schemes, credit and input subsidies, and crop insurance. The interventionist policy recommendations, however, are based on a variety of misconceptions and misinterpretations about farmer behavior and rural institutions.
Subject:
credit; marketing; lending institutions; policy failures
Material : serials
Serial Title : Asian Journal of Agriculture and Development (AJAD)
Publisher : SEARCA
Publication Date : 2004
ISSN : 1656-4383 (print); 2599-3879 (online)
Internet Resource: https://ajad.searca.org/article?p=12
PR-AS
2004
SEARCA AJAD 2004 1-1-4
SEARCA Library
Printed; electronic