05398oam 2200697I 450 991082201410332120240402074731.01-135-21189-21-315-03643-61-135-21182-510.4324/9781315036434 (CKB)2670000000529548(EBL)1645456(SSID)ssj0001131870(PQKBManifestationID)12491749(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001131870(PQKBWorkID)11145472(PQKB)10046701(MiAaPQ)EBC1645456(OCoLC)878138926(EXLCZ)99267000000052954820180331e20131997 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrClass, state and agricultural productivity in Egypt a study of the inverse relationship between farm size and land productivity /Graham Dyer ; foreword by Terence J. Byres1st ed.Abingdon, Oxon :Routledge,2013.1 online resource (229 p.)Library of Peasant Studies ;Number 15First published in 1997 by Frank Cass & Co. Ltd.0-7146-4245-2 0-7146-4707-1 Includes bibliographical references and indexes.Cover; Half Title; Title Page; Copyright Page; Table of Contents; List of Tables; Acknowledgements; Foreword; INTRODUCTION The Present study: Nature and Rationale; I The Nature of the Inverse Relationship and its Apparent Policy Implications; Introduction; I.1 Some apparent policy implications; I.2 Conceptual, statistical and methodological problems; I.3 The inverse relationship vindicated and some conjoint relationships; Summary and conclusions; Notes to Chapter I; II Theoretical Approaches to the Inverse Relationship: Qualitative and Quantitative Factor Differences; IntroductionII.1 Management and labour quality hypothesesII.2 Land fertility hypothesis; II.3 Labour intensity and labour market dualism: the Sen model; II.4 A critique of the marginalist approach; Summary and conclusions; Notes to Chapter II; III A Class-Based Approach and the Breakdown of the Inverse Relationship in the Dynamic Context; Introduction; III.1 Beyond the marginalist approach; III.2 The inverse relationship in the context of backward agriculture; III.3 The static nature of the Sen approach and the breakdown of the inverse relationship in the dynamic context; Summary and conclusionsNotes to Chapter IIIIV The Evidence for an Inverse Relationship between Farm Size and Productivity in Egypt: A Shadow Debate; Introduction; IV.1 Some evidence for an inverse relationship in Egypt: Shepley, Radwan, Wilson and Mabro; IV.2 Aggregation and land heterogeneity: Crouch et al.; IV.3 The inverse relationship denied in Egypt: Platt and Commander; Summary and conclusions; Notes to Chapter IV; V The Political Economy of the Contemporary Egyptian Countryside; Introduction; V.1 Agrarian reform and the consolidation of the rich peasantry; V.2 The agrarian elite and the co-operative systemV.3 Rich peasants and co-operative creditV.4 Implications with respect to the diffusion of modern technology of rich peasant bias in credit; V.5 The dominance of the rich peasantry and the political sphere; Summary and conclusions; Notes to Chapter V; VI A Disaggregated Analysis of the ILO Data: Technical Change and the Inverse Relationship in Egypt; Introduction; VI.1 The ILO survey and its characteristics; VI.2 Analysis and results: (i) The Radwan regression and its questionable nature - the need for a more disaggregated approachVI.3 Analysis and results: (ii) A digression on technological change in Egyptian agriculture, uneven development and regional heterogeneityVI.4 Analysis and results: (iii) A disaggregated analysis and evidence of transition; Summary and conclusions; Notes to Chapter VI; VII A Closer Look at the Inverse Relationship in the Context of Agrarian Transition: Evidence from Fieldwork in Rural Egypt; Introduction; VII.1 Fieldwork methodology and problems; VII.2 An inverse relationship village in Giza; VII.3 The roots of the inverse relationship in Shubak; Summary and conclusions; Notes to Chapter VIIVIII A Positive Relationship Village in Qena and the Emerging Comparative Picture in the Context of Egyptian Agrarian TransitionThe inverse relationship between farm size and productivity is accepted as a ""stylized fact"" of agriculture in developing countries. This study uses Egyptian fieldwork data to examine factors creating this relationship, and the impact of economic and technological change on the relationship.Library of peasant studies ;Number 15.Farms, Size ofEgyptAgricultural productivityEgyptPeasantsEgyptAgriculture and stateEgyptFarms, Size ofAgricultural productivityPeasantsAgriculture and state338.1/6Dyer Graham1958,1722064MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910822014103321Class, state and agricultural productivity in Egypt4122128UNINA