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The Peasant Family and Rural Development in the Yangzi Delta, 1350-1988 (Paperback)
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The Peasant Family and Rural Development in the Yangzi Delta, 1350-1988 (Paperback)
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How can we account for the durability of subsistence farming in
China despite six centuries of vigorous commercialization from 1350
to 1950 and three decades of collectivization between 1950 to 1980?
Why did the Chinese rural economy not undergo the transformation
predicted by the classical models of Adam Smith and Karl Marx? In
attempting to answer this question, scholars have generally treated
commercialization and collectivization as distinct from population
increase, the other great rural change of the past six centuries.
This book breaks new ground in arguing that in the Yangzi delta,
China's most advanced agricultural region, population increase was
what drove commercialization and collectivization, even as it was
made possible by them. The processes at work, which the author
terms involutionary commercialization and involutionary growth,
entailed ever-increasing labor input per unit of land, resulting in
expanded total output but diminishing marginal returns per workday.
In the Ming-Qing period, involution usually meant a switch to more
labor-intensive cash crops and low-return household sidelines. In
post-revolutionary China, it typically meant greatly intensified
crop production. Stagnant or declining returns per workday were
absorbed first by the family production unit and then by the
collective. The true significance of the 1980's reforms, the author
argues, lies in the diversion of labour from farming to rural
industries and profitable sidelines and the first increases for
centuries in productivity and income per workday. With these
changes have come a measure of rural prosperity and the genuine
possibility of transformative rural development. By reconstructing
Ming-Qing agricultural history and drawing on twentieth-century
ethnographic data and his own field investigations, the author
brings his large themes down to the level of individual peasant
households. Like his acclaimed The Peasant Economy and Social
Change in North China (1985), this study is noteworthy for both its
empirical richness and its theoretical sweep, but it goes well
beyond the earlier work in its inter-regional comparisons and its
use of the pre- and post-1949 periods to illuminate each other.
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