Premature Deagriculturalisation? Land inequality and rural dependency in Limpopo Province, South Africa

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Authors

Eastwood, Robert
Kirsten, Johann F.
Lipton, Michael

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Routledge

Abstract

Cross-national regressions reveal abnormally low agricultural workforce shares, given GNP, in developing countries that had historically concentrated land into large capital-intensive farms. We argue that such deagriculturalisation was premature, since its concomitant labour shedding has undesirable outcomes. In a new South African survey, a large proportion of rural households (and working-age persons) was ‘dependent’, relying for income almost wholly on either migrant remittances or pensions. A separate group (with less poverty and unemployment) relied mainly on local, including own-farm, income. The group was heavily over-represented in one of the three regions, where many more households had significant land.

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Keywords

Agricultural workforce, Deagriculturalisation, Developing countries

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Eastwood, R., Lipton, M. & Kirsten, J.F. (2006). Premature deagriculturalisation? Land inequality and rural dependency in Limpopo Province, South Africa. Journal of Development Studies, 42(8), 1325-1349. [http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=article&issn=0022-0388&volume=42&issue=8&spage=1325 ]