Principles of Agricultural Economics
Principles of Agricultural Economics
Date
1989
Authors
DAVID COLMAN AND TREVOR YOUNG
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Abstract
Economists emphasise the importance of the agricultural sector
in the development process and there is wide agreement that a necessary
condition for economic growth is an agricultural transformation which
ensures a large and increasing domestic agricultural surplus. However, it
has not always been the case that agriculture has been seen to play such
a significant role. In the 1950s the emphasis in development policy was
placed on urban industrial growth, with the agricultural sector being
regarded as a residual source of inputs (mainly labour) for the
manufacturing sector. There was a shift of emphasis in the 1960s when the
importance of' balanced growth' was stressed, which entailed recognition
of the need for a certain pattern of agricultural growth to complement that
of other sectors. It was also at this time that the contributions of
agriculture to the development process were more sharply identified in the
work of Kuznets (1961), Mellor (1966) and others, and the positive role
of agriculture as an engine of development became accepted. Subsequent
events in the 1970s and 1980s have reinforced the need for more attention
to be paid to agricultural development policy. The series of 'oil shocks'
which raised oil prices had serious consequences for the trade balances of
non-oil exporting countries and caused them to focus attention on their
trading accounts in agricultural products. This necessity was intensified by
a growing tendency in some Less Developed Countries (LDCs) to increase
food imports as demand growth outstripped that of supply.