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Macro structure perspectives in India agriculture

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: New Delhi; Gian Pub.; 1989Description: 130 pISBN:
  • 8121202418
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 338.1 CHA
Summary: Indian economy is still predominantly agricultural. But a marked deficiency of literature on Indian agriculture, however, persists. Most works on agriculture would rely rather on per-conceived assertions than on empirical analysis. Further, they fail to analyse the structural similarities and differences between regions within a comparative perspective. The present volume is attempt to make up for this deficiency. The author has tried to build up a macro-structural perspective of Indian agriculture by inter-relating some of his recent studies on various aspects of Indian agriculture. These studies shed new light on such pher.cmera as the growth of agricultural labour population, the inter-relationship between the pattern of land distribution, tenancy and farm efficiency, mode of cultivation and its relation to production, the influence of various economic factors on the cropping pattern, etc. These studies, based on voluminous secondary data for the country as a whole and West Bengal in some particular cases, reveal that certain popularly held views about the macro structure of Indian agriculture do not stand critical empirical validation. The book, therefore, will be of much interest to planners, economists, the students of agricultural economics and economics of development.
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Books Books Gandhi Smriti Library 338.1 CHA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 42764
Total holds: 0

Indian economy is still predominantly agricultural. But a marked deficiency of literature on Indian agriculture, however, persists. Most works on agriculture would rely rather on per-conceived assertions than on empirical analysis. Further, they fail to analyse the structural similarities and differences between regions within a comparative perspective.

The present volume is attempt to make up for this deficiency. The author has tried to build up a macro-structural perspective of Indian agriculture by inter-relating some of his recent studies on various aspects of Indian agriculture.

These studies shed new light on such pher.cmera as the growth of agricultural labour population, the inter-relationship between the pattern of land distribution, tenancy and farm efficiency, mode of cultivation and its relation to production, the influence of various economic factors

on the cropping pattern, etc. These studies, based on voluminous secondary data for the country as a whole and West Bengal in some particular cases, reveal that certain popularly held views about the macro structure of Indian agriculture do not stand critical empirical validation. The book, therefore, will be of much interest to planners, economists, the students of agricultural economics and economics of development.

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