Seavoy insists that development economics is a failed discipline
because it does not recognize the revolutionary difference between
subsistence and commercial social values. Seavoy demonstrates that
commercial labor norms are essential for producing assured food
surpluses in all crop years and an assured food surplus is
essential for sustaining the development process.
The commercialization of food production is a political process,
as in the term political economy. If peasants have a choice, they
will not voluntarily perform commercial labor norms. Central
governments must overcome peasant resistance to performing
commercial labor norms by various forms of coercion. The most
historically effective coercions are deprivation of peasant control
of land use by foreclosure and eviction for excessive subsistence
debts. Landless peasants are forced to become supervised paid
laborers. Coercion is most effective when it is linked to money
rewards for peasants who voluntarily transform themselves into
yeomen cultivators or farmers. These commercially motivated
cultivators and storekeepers become the resident commercializing
agents in peasant villages who administer the central government's
coercive and inducement policies. Based on extensive examples and
field observation, this book is designed for use in courses that
explore problems of economic development. Scholars and government
policy makers will find the analysis equally provocative.
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