Sustainability of Rice Production in ThailandNova Publishers, 2001 - 235 من الصفحات Contents: Introduction; Access to Land: Patterns of Land Holding and Land Ownership; Rural Labour Markets and Off-Farm Employment; Capital Formation; Access to Rural Credit; Conclusion; Index. |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-5 من 73
الصفحة vi
... Capital Formation 3.0 Introduction 3.1 The Failure of the Green Revolution 3.1.1 Irrigation and Water Management 3.1.2 Adoption of Improved Varieties 3.1.3 Fertilizer Use and Factor Prices 55555 57 57 59 59 60 64 65 72 72 82 86 86 89 94 ...
... Capital Formation 3.0 Introduction 3.1 The Failure of the Green Revolution 3.1.1 Irrigation and Water Management 3.1.2 Adoption of Improved Varieties 3.1.3 Fertilizer Use and Factor Prices 55555 57 57 59 59 60 64 65 72 72 82 86 86 89 94 ...
الصفحة ix
... capital , the majority in the form of short - term debt held by the private sector . Because the Central Bank maintained the basket peg system introduced in the mid - 1980s , which , in practice , fixed the baht to the US dollar , Thai ...
... capital , the majority in the form of short - term debt held by the private sector . Because the Central Bank maintained the basket peg system introduced in the mid - 1980s , which , in practice , fixed the baht to the US dollar , Thai ...
الصفحة x
... capital outflows . Afterwards , a severe liquidity shortage occurred in the entire financial system , which , in turn , severely damaged the potentials of the real sector . The Thai economy further contracted by 0.4 percent in 1997 and ...
... capital outflows . Afterwards , a severe liquidity shortage occurred in the entire financial system , which , in turn , severely damaged the potentials of the real sector . The Thai economy further contracted by 0.4 percent in 1997 and ...
الصفحة xii
... capital both within and outside the farm business . The challenges that rice growers had to face include the following major issues , which are some of the central issues discussed in this book : Land scarcity • Labor shortages • Yield ...
... capital both within and outside the farm business . The challenges that rice growers had to face include the following major issues , which are some of the central issues discussed in this book : Land scarcity • Labor shortages • Yield ...
الصفحة xiii
... capital markets in Thailand are characterized by multiple imperfections such as segmentation , asymmetric information , and high transaction costs . As a result , putting land on the sale market or purchase land is often an unattainable ...
... capital markets in Thailand are characterized by multiple imperfections such as segmentation , asymmetric information , and high transaction costs . As a result , putting land on the sale market or purchase land is often an unattainable ...
المحتوى
1 | |
2 | |
16 | |
The Role of Land Rental Markets | 35 |
14 Conclusion | 53 |
Rural Labor Markets and OffFarm Employment | 57 |
Definitional Issues | 59 |
22 Family Demographics and the Household Supply of Labor | 65 |
33 Conclusion | 154 |
Access to Rural Credit | 157 |
41 General Structure of Credit Markets | 159 |
42 The Bias in Farmers Access to Credit | 174 |
43 Access to Credit and Capital Formation | 190 |
44 Conclusion | 200 |
Conclusion | 203 |
Industrialization Labor Shortage and Adjustment in the Labor Market | 207 |
23 Scale of Farming Land Tenure and Labor Intensity | 72 |
24 Choice of Technology and Factor Proportions | 86 |
25 Interactions between Rural and Urban Labor Markets | 92 |
26 Conclusion | 104 |
Capital Formation | 107 |
31 The Failure of the Green Revolution | 108 |
32 The Success of Mechanization | 135 |
The Process of Technical Innovation | 208 |
Performance of Agricultural Credit | 211 |
Scope for Government Intervention | 213 |
References | 217 |
Index | 227 |
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
according activities adoption agricultural amount appears areas associated average banks borrowers capital Central collateral compared contracts costs countries crop cultivation demand depends distribution economic effect employment existing expected expenses factors family labor farm fertilizer forest formal groups growth harvesting higher hired labor holdings households important income increased industrial institutional intensity interest investment irrigation labor force labor market land larger lenders less limited loans lower machines mechanization needs off-farm operations opportunities owners ownership pattern Percent Pitchit population production Project province purchase ratio regions relatively rent requires result Rice Farmers rice farming rural season Second sector secure small farms sources Suphan Buri supply survey Table techniques tenants tend tenure Thai Thailand titled tractors transactions urban usually wage workers yields
مقاطع مشهورة
الصفحة 78 - In words, the firm maximizes profits where the marginal product of labor is equal to the real wage paid by the firm.1 Using calculus we now derive the monopolists labor demand curve.
الصفحة 122 - ... this would make a dramatic difference. The origins of the crisis in rural Asia are to be found not in demography but more likely in the structure of the economy. (c) Stagnation of agricultural production Not so many years ago it was widely believed that agricultural production in Asia was undergoing a 'green revolution' as a result of the introduction of higher yielding varieties of rice and wheat. Today this optimism has all but vanished and been replaced by the view that production has been...
الصفحة 94 - In the first place, an unlimited supply of labour may be said to exist in those countries where population is so large relatively to capital and natural resources, that there are large sectors of the economy where the marginal productivity of labour is negligible, zero, or even negative. Several writers have drawn attention to the existence of such "disguised...
الصفحة 77 - ... of the marginalist approach: Among the forces that drive a small farmer to more intensive effort the most important one, of course, is his need for survival. There is a certain basic minimum of consumption that a poor peasant family has to have without which it will be simply wiped out. It is only understandable that such a poor peasant family, depending on a small piece of land, submerged in a vast population of surplus labour in the countryside, and thus not having any alternative sources of...
الصفحة 171 - The interest rate which an individual is willing to pay may act as one such screening device: those who are willing to pay high interest rates may, on average, be worse risks; they are willing to borrow at high interest rates, because they perceive their probability of re-paying the loan to be low. As the interest rate rises, the average 'riskiness' of those who borrow increases, possibly lowering the bank's profits.
الصفحة 57 - ... the most important single factor influencing a developing country's ability to absorb a growing labour force into productive employment is the type of strategy pursued for developing its agricultural sector' [Johnson and Cownie, 1969, p.
الصفحة 100 - ... concentration, the more likely it is that landowners will cease to be price takers in the labour market. Furthermore, second, the greater is land concentration, the more labour is likely to be on offer at any and all wage rates. Naturally, conditions will vary from one locality to another, and within localities the bargaining strength of different persons will vary, with the result that the price paid for the 'same' factor of production - land, labour, finance capital - will differ markedly from...
الصفحة 100 - This view undoubtedly is correct as far as it goes, but it is possible to go further. First, there is no such thing as 'the' price of a factor of production in rural areas: different groups of people often face radically different sets of relative factor prices. In a formulation which we find helpful, price 'distortions...
الصفحة 172 - ... behavior; they will withdraw credit if the terms of the loan appear to be violated. In developing countries potential lenders vary greatly in their costs of direct screening and monitoring. For some lenders, such costs are low; information is a by-product of living near the borrower or being part of the same kinship group or a party to some other transaction with him. Thus, village lenders often do considerable monitoring, while banks may find it virtually impossible to do so, which partially...
الصفحة 64 - One of the critical advantages of mechanization is that it often implies that the pace and quality of output are primarily determined by machine specifications rather than by the quality of the operator's effort.