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China's New-Age Small Farms and Their Vertical Integration: Agribusiness or Co-ops?

The future of Chinese agriculture lies not with large mechanized farms but with small capital-labor dual intensifying family farms for livestock-poultry-fish raising and vegetable-fruit cultivation. Chinese food consumption patterns have been changing from the old 8:1:1 pattern of 8 parts grain, 1 p...

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Published in:Modern China 2011-03, Vol.37 (2), p.107-134
Main Author: Huang, Philip C. C.
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Language:English
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description The future of Chinese agriculture lies not with large mechanized farms but with small capital-labor dual intensifying family farms for livestock-poultry-fish raising and vegetable-fruit cultivation. Chinese food consumption patterns have been changing from the old 8:1:1 pattern of 8 parts grain, 1 part meat, and 1 part vegetables to a 4:3:3 pattern, with a corresponding transformation in agricultural structure. Small family-farming is better suited for the new-age agriculture, including organic farming, than large-scale mechanized farming, because of the intensive, incremental, and variegated hand labor involved, not readily open to economies of scale, though compatible with economies of scope. It is also better suited to the realities of severe population pressure on land. But it requires vertical integration from cultivation to processing to marketing, albeit without horizontal integration for farming. It is against such a background that co-ops have arisen spontaneously for integrating small farms with processing and marketing. The Chinese government, however, has been supporting aggressively capitalistic agribusinesses as the preferred mode of vertical integration. At present, Chinese agriculture is poised at a crossroads, with the future organizational mode for vertical integration as yet uncertain.
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C.</creatorcontrib><title>China's New-Age Small Farms and Their Vertical Integration: Agribusiness or Co-ops?</title><title>Modern China</title><addtitle>Mod China</addtitle><description>The future of Chinese agriculture lies not with large mechanized farms but with small capital-labor dual intensifying family farms for livestock-poultry-fish raising and vegetable-fruit cultivation. Chinese food consumption patterns have been changing from the old 8:1:1 pattern of 8 parts grain, 1 part meat, and 1 part vegetables to a 4:3:3 pattern, with a corresponding transformation in agricultural structure. Small family-farming is better suited for the new-age agriculture, including organic farming, than large-scale mechanized farming, because of the intensive, incremental, and variegated hand labor involved, not readily open to economies of scale, though compatible with economies of scope. It is also better suited to the realities of severe population pressure on land. 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source International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); JSTOR Archival Journals and Primary Sources Collection; PAIS Index; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sage Journals Online; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Agribusiness
Agricultural Policy
Agriculture
Agriculture - economics
Agriculture - education
Agriculture - history
Agrofood industry
Asian Continental Ancestry Group - education
Asian Continental Ancestry Group - ethnology
Asian Continental Ancestry Group - history
Asian Continental Ancestry Group - legislation & jurisprudence
Asian Continental Ancestry Group - psychology
Capital
China
China (People's Republic)
China - ethnology
Collective farms
Commerce - economics
Commerce - education
Commerce - history
Consumption
Cooperatives
Crop economics
Crops
Economies of scale
Economies of scope
Family Farms
Farm economics
Farming
Farms
Food consumption
Food Industry - economics
Food Industry - education
Food Industry - history
Food Supply - economics
Food Supply - history
Food Technology - economics
Food Technology - education
Food Technology - history
Grain
History of medicine
History, 20th Century
History, 21st Century
Horizontal integration
Horticulture
Humans
Integrated agricultural systems
Integration
Labor
Labour
Land
Marketing
Organic Agriculture - economics
Organic Agriculture - education
Organic Agriculture - history
Organic farming
Peoples Republic of China
Population
Rural Health - history
Rural Population - history
Small Farms
Social Change - history
Social Integration
Vegetables
Vertical integration
title China's New-Age Small Farms and Their Vertical Integration: Agribusiness or Co-ops?
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