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The Author(s) 2014

Abstract

Empirical evidence indicates that in Latin America and the Caribbean, households on less favored, or marginal, agricultural land form a "residual" pool of rural labor. Although the modern sector may be the source of dynamic growth through learning-by-doing and knowledge spillovers, patterns of labor, land and other natural resources use in the rural economy matter in the overall dynamics of structural change. The concentration of rural populations on marginal land is essentially a barometer of economy-wide development. As long as there is abundant marginal land for cultivation, they serve to absorb rural migrants, increased population, and displaced unskilled labor from elsewhere in the economy. Moreover, the economy is vulnerable to the "Dutch disease" effects of a booming primary products sector. As a consequence, productivity increases and expansion in the commercial primary production sector will cause manufacturing employment and output to contract, until complete specialization occurs. Avoiding such an outcome and combating the inherent dualism of the economy require both targeted polices for the modern sector and traditional agriculture on marginal land. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT] Erratum DOI: 10.1007/s40503-014-0007-1

Details

Title
Structural change, marginal land and economic development in Latin America and the Caribbean
Author
Barbier, Edward B; Bugas, John S
Pages
1-29
Publication year
2014
Publication date
Feb 2014
Publisher
Economica
ISSN
21983526
e-ISSN
2196436X
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1771284789
Copyright
The Author(s) 2014