//--> //--> //-->
Toggle navigation
Logout
Change account settings
EN
DE
ES
FR
A-Z
Beta
About EconBiz
News
Thesaurus (STW)
Research Skills
Help
EN
DE
ES
FR
My account
Logout
Change account settings
Login
Publications
Events
Your search terms
Search
Retain my current filters
~institution:"International Association of Agricultural Economists - IAAE"
~isPartOf:"Occasional Paper Series No. 2"
~subject:"Food Security and Poverty"
Search options
All Fields
Title
Exact title
Subject
Author
Institution
ISBN/ISSN
Published in...
Publisher
Open Access only
Advanced
Search history
My EconBiz
Favorites
Loans
Reservations
Fines
You are here:
Home
Search: subject:"Farm Management"
Narrow search
Delete all filters
| 3 applied filters
Year of publication
From:
To:
Subject
All
Food Security and Poverty
Farm Management
10
Community/Rural/Urban Development
4
Agribusiness
3
International Development
3
Agricultural Finance
2
Agricultural and Food Policy
2
1960 and 1967
1
1968a and 1968b
1
1971
1
1973
1
354 (35.4 percent of the 1966 number of operators) and a gross entry of 87
1
395 (30.3 percent of the 1966 operators). Thus
1
397 (14.9 percent)
1
527 (7 .5 percent) which was due to a gross exit of 129
1
922 (35.5 percent of the 1971 operators) and a gross entry of 102
1
957 (which was 24.0 percent of the number of 1971 operators) (table 2). Similarly
1
A common characteristic of rural change in most countries has been the net flow of human resources from the farm to the nonfarm sector. Off-farm work by farm family members has been identified as an important factor influencing this flow (Baumgartner
1
Crop Production/Industries
1
Hathaway
1
Hathaway and Perkins
1
Kaldor and Edwards
1
Labor and Human Capital
1
Land Economics/Use
1
Perkins
1
Perkins and Hathaway
1
Research and Development/Tech Change/Emerging Technologies
1
and 1976 Censuses of Agriculture (table 1). The data are ideally suited to the study at the micro level of the impact of off-farm work on the movement of farmers to the nonfarm sector. The first important point to note is that the relatively small change in the number of farmers between census periods is comprised of a surprisingly large rate of gross entry and gross exit. From 1966 to 1971
1
and Szabo.) The purpose of this paper is to investigate the interrelationships between offfarm work and entry to and exit from farming. Data are drawn from a longitudinal micro data file on Canadian farmers from the 1966
1
the net change in the 1971 to 1976 period was a decline of 27
1
the number of census farm operators in Canada declined by 64
1
the number of gross entrants and gross exiters is so large that the determinants of both gross entry and gross exit must be understood in order to comprehend the changes at the urban-rural interface. The analysis of this paper is constrained to the impact of off-farm work.
1
which was due to a gross exit of 152
1
more ...
less ...
Online availability
All
Free
1
Type of publication
All
Book / Working Paper
1
Language
All
Undetermined
1
Author
All
Abalu, George
1
D'Silba, Brian
1
Institution
All
International Association of Agricultural Economists - IAAE
Published in...
All
Occasional Paper Series No. 2
2009 Conference, August 16-22, 2009, Beijing, China
3
2012 Conference, August 18-24, 2012, Foz do Iguacu, Brazil
3
1990 Symposium, Agricultural Restructuring in Southern Africa, July 24-27, 1990, Swakopmund, Namibia
1
Source
All
RePEc
1
Showing
1
-
1
of
1
Sort
Relevance
Date (newest first)
Date (oldest first)
1
SMALL SCALE FARMING AND THE WORLD FOOD PROBLEM: AN APPRAISAL WITH LESSONS FROM NORTHERN NIGERIA
Abalu, George
;
D'Silba, Brian
-
International Association of Agricultural Economists - IAAE
-
1981
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10011167808
Saved in:
Results per page
10
25
50
100
250
A service of the
zbw
×
Loading...
//-->