Working Paper

An Ecological and Historical Perspective on Agricultural Development in Southeast Asia

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collection.link.5
https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/9
collection.name.5
Policy Research Working Papers
dc.contributor.author
Hayami, Yujiro
dc.date.accessioned
2015-07-28T18:20:23Z
dc.date.available
2015-07-28T18:20:23Z
dc.date.issued
2000-03
dc.date.lastModified
2021-04-23T14:04:07Z
dc.description.abstract
According to Myint's "vent-for-surplus" theory, development of the economies of Indonesia, the Philippines, and Thailand from the nineteenth century on depended on the natural advantage of large tracts of unused "empty land" with low population density and abundant natural resources of the type typically found in Southeast Asia and Africa at the outset of Western colonization. When these economies were integrated into international trade, hitherto unused natural resources (primary commodities the indigenous people had not valued) became the source of economic development, commanding market value because of high import demand in Western economies. The major delta of Chao Phraya River was the resource base of vent-for-surplus development with rice in Thailand; tropical rain forests filled that role in Indonesia and the Philippines with respect to the production of tropical cash crops. This basic difference underlay differences in the distribution of farm size: the unimodal distribution of peasants or family farms in Thailand and the coexistence of peasants and large estate farms or plantations specializing in tropical export crops in Indonesia and the Philippines. Differences in agrarian development were also shaped by different policies toward the elites preemption of unused land. Under Spanish colonialism, the elite preempted unused land in the Philippines wholesale, bifurcating land distribution between non-cultivating landlords and sharecroppers in lowland rice areas, and between plantation owners and wage laborers in upland areas. In Indonesia, the Dutch government granted long-term leases for uncultivated public land to foreign planters, but prevented alienation of cultivated land from native peasants, to avoid social instability. In Thailand, concessions were granted for private canal building, but the independent kingdom preserved the tradition of giving land to anyone who could open and cultivate it. Relatively homogenous land-owning peasants dominated Thailand's rural sector. As frontiers for new cultivation closed, the plantation systems initial advantage (large-scale development of land and infrastructure) began to be outweighed by its need to monitor hired labor. The peasant system, based on family labor needing no supervision, allowed Thailand's share of the world market in tropical cash crops to grow, as Indonesia and the Philippines lost their traditional comparative advantage. Moreover, land reform in the Philippines made land markets inactive, with resulting distortions in resource allocation and serious underinvestment in agriculture.
en
dc.identifier
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2000/03/437870/ecological-historical-perspective-agricultural-development-southeast-asia
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/22312
dc.language
English
dc.language.iso
en_US
dc.publisher
World Bank, Washington, DC
dc.relation.ispartofseries
Policy Research Working Paper;No. 2296
dc.rights
CC BY 3.0 IGO
dc.rights.holder
World Bank
dc.rights.uri
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/
dc.subject
AGRIBUSINESS
dc.subject
AGRICULTURAL COMMODITIES
dc.subject
AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT
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AGRICULTURAL GROWTH
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AGRICULTURAL INTENSIFICATION
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AGRICULTURAL LABOR
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AGRICULTURAL LAND
dc.subject
AGRICULTURAL OUTPUT
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AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION
dc.subject
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS
dc.subject
AGRICULTURE
dc.subject
ARABLE LAND
dc.subject
BANANAS
dc.subject
CASH CROPS
dc.subject
CINNAMON
dc.subject
COASTAL PLAINS
dc.subject
COASTS
dc.subject
COCOA
dc.subject
COCONUTS
dc.subject
COFFEE
dc.subject
COMMODITY
dc.subject
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE
dc.subject
CONTRACT FARMING
dc.subject
COPRA
dc.subject
COTTAGE INDUSTRIES
dc.subject
COTTON
dc.subject
CROP
dc.subject
CROP PRODUCTION
dc.subject
CROPLAND
dc.subject
CROPPING
dc.subject
CULTIVABLE LAND
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CULTIVATED LAND
dc.subject
DEVELOPMENT RESEARCH
dc.subject
DISEASES
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DRAINAGE
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DRY SEASON
dc.subject
ECOLOGICAL CONDITIONS
dc.subject
ECOLOGICAL FACTORS
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ECOLOGICAL ZONES
dc.subject
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
dc.subject
ECONOMIC GROWTH
dc.subject
EQUIPMENT
dc.subject
ESTATE CROPS
dc.subject
EXPLOITATION
dc.subject
EXPORT CROPS
dc.subject
FAO
dc.subject
FARM
dc.subject
FARM HOUSEHOLDS
dc.subject
FARM INCOME
dc.subject
FARM LAND
dc.subject
FARMER
dc.subject
FARMERS
dc.subject
FARMING
dc.subject
FARMS
dc.subject
FLOOD PLAINS
dc.subject
FLOODING
dc.subject
FOOD CROPS
dc.subject
FRUITS
dc.subject
GNP
dc.subject
GREEN REVOLUTION
dc.subject
HARVESTING
dc.subject
IMPORTS
dc.subject
INCOME
dc.subject
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
dc.subject
INDIGENOUS PEOPLE
dc.subject
INTEGRATION
dc.subject
IRRIGATION
dc.subject
IRRIGATION SYSTEMS
dc.subject
LABOR FORCE
dc.subject
LAMB
dc.subject
LAND ACCESS
dc.subject
LAND DISTRIBUTION
dc.subject
LAND OWNERSHIP
dc.subject
LAND PRODUCTIVITY
dc.subject
LAND REFORM
dc.subject
LAND RESOURCES
dc.subject
LANDS
dc.subject
LONG-TERM CONTRACTS
dc.subject
MAIZE
dc.subject
MARGINAL PRODUCTIVITY
dc.subject
MARKETING
dc.subject
MULTIPLE CROPPING
dc.subject
NATURAL RESOURCES
dc.subject
OIL
dc.subject
OPPORTUNITY COSTS
dc.subject
PALM OIL
dc.subject
PEPPER
dc.subject
PLANTATION
dc.subject
PLANTATIONS
dc.subject
PLANTING
dc.subject
POTATOES
dc.subject
PRIVATE PROPERTY
dc.subject
PRODUCE
dc.subject
PRODUCERS
dc.subject
PRODUCT QUALITY
dc.subject
PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS
dc.subject
PRODUCTIVITY OF LAND
dc.subject
PROPERTY RIGHTS
dc.subject
QUALITY STANDARDS
dc.subject
RAINFALL
dc.subject
RAINFED FARMING
dc.subject
RESEARCH AGENDA
dc.subject
RESERVOIR
dc.subject
RESOURCE ALLOCATION
dc.subject
RICE
dc.subject
RICE AREAS
dc.subject
RICE CULTIVATION
dc.subject
RICE PRODUCTION
dc.subject
RICE VARIETIES
dc.subject
ROOTS
dc.subject
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
dc.subject
SEEDLINGS
dc.subject
SHIFTING CULTIVATION
dc.subject
STRATIFICATION
dc.subject
STREAMS
dc.subject
SUGAR
dc.subject
SUGAR CANE
dc.subject
SUGARCANE
dc.subject
TEA
dc.subject
TECHNOLOGICAL FACTORS
dc.subject
TERRACING
dc.subject
TEXTILES
dc.subject
TREE CROPS
dc.subject
TREES
dc.subject
TROPICAL CROPS
dc.subject
TROPICAL PRODUCTS
dc.subject
TROPICAL RAIN FORESTS
dc.subject
UPLAND FORESTS
dc.subject
UPLAND RICE
dc.subject
WAGES
dc.subject
WATER SUPPLY
dc.title
An Ecological and Historical Perspective on Agricultural Development in Southeast Asia
en
dc.type
Working Paper
en
okr.date.disclosure
2010-07-01
okr.doctype
Publications & Research
okr.doctype
Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
okr.docurl
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2000/03/437870/ecological-historical-perspective-agricultural-development-southeast-asia
okr.globalpractice
Agriculture
okr.globalpractice
Environment and Natural Resources
okr.googlescholar.linkpresent
yes
okr.identifier.doi
10.1596/1813-9450-2296
okr.identifier.externaldocumentum
000094946_00041308371141
okr.identifier.internaldocumentum
437870
okr.identifier.report
WPS2296
okr.language.supported
en
okr.pdfurl
/IB/2000/05/02/000094946_00041308371141/additional/106506322_20041117153512.pdf
en
okr.region.administrative
East Asia and Pacific
okr.region.country
Indonesia
okr.region.country
Malaysia
okr.region.country
Philippines
okr.region.country
Thailand
okr.region.country
Vietnam
okr.region.geographical
Southeast Asia
okr.sector
Other Agriculture
okr.sector
Agriculture, fishing, and forestry
okr.topic
Crops and Crop Management Systems
okr.topic
Water Resources :: Wetlands
okr.topic
Water Resources :: Water Conservation
okr.topic
Agricultural Knowledge and Information Systems
okr.topic
Agriculture :: Agricultural Research
okr.topic
Environment :: Environmental Economics & Policies
okr.unit
Rural Development, Development Research Group

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