Challenging the claim that Palestine's peasant economy
progressed during the 1920s and 1930s, Amos Nadan skillfully
integrates a wide variety of sources to demonstrate that the period
was actually one of deterioration on both the macro (per capita)
and micro levels. The economy would have most likely continued its
downward spiral during the 1940s had it not been for the temporary
prosperity that resulted from World War II. Nadan argues that this
deterioration continued despite the British authorities' channeling
of funds from the Jewish sector and the wealthier Arab sectors into
projects for the Arab rural economy. The British were hoping that
Palestine's peasants would not rebel if their economic conditions
improved. These programs were, on the whole, defective because the
British chose programs based on an assumption that the peasants
were too ignorant to manage their farms wisely, instead of working
with the peasants and their own institutions.
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