This paper examines the role of agriculture and rural development, in general, in the most successful countries of Asia, termed, by the World Bank, the East Asian Miracle. The basic hypothesis of the paper is that agricultural growth and rural development play a vital role in the sustained industrialized and economic growth of many Asian countries that are still heavily agricultural. The authors explore the hypothesis both conceptually and quantitatively and refer to certain key features of Asian-country experiences.Non-PRIFPRI1TM
As an economy develops, agriculture faces distinctly different problems: food insecurity, sectoral i...
Developing Asia as a whole has taken remarkable strides since the food crises of the 1960s. Improvem...
The 'green revolution' has been seen as the answer to the problem of matching growth of food product...
This paper examines the role of agriculture and rural development, in general, in the most successfu...
No country has been able to sustain a rapid transition out of poverty without raising productivity i...
This paper re-examines Asia’s agricultural and rural transformations in the context of economywide s...
No country has been able to sustain a rapid transition out of poverty without raising productivity i...
With few exceptions industrial policy explanations of the industrial export successes in East Asia a...
Structural change is a cornerstone of long-term economic development, according to economic theory a...
In most countries in sub-Saharan Africa at present, the majority of the population is engaged in agr...
The economies of the world’s poorest countries are overwhelmingly agrarian; those of rich countries ...
The purpose of this paper is not to inquire into the role of agricultural sector in the economic gro...
This working paper discusses the different Asian experiences of the Green Revolution from the late 1...
This article examines the role of agriculture in economic development in three Asian countries Japan...
This chapter re-examines Asia’s agricultural and rural transformations in the context of economy-wid...
As an economy develops, agriculture faces distinctly different problems: food insecurity, sectoral i...
Developing Asia as a whole has taken remarkable strides since the food crises of the 1960s. Improvem...
The 'green revolution' has been seen as the answer to the problem of matching growth of food product...
This paper examines the role of agriculture and rural development, in general, in the most successfu...
No country has been able to sustain a rapid transition out of poverty without raising productivity i...
This paper re-examines Asia’s agricultural and rural transformations in the context of economywide s...
No country has been able to sustain a rapid transition out of poverty without raising productivity i...
With few exceptions industrial policy explanations of the industrial export successes in East Asia a...
Structural change is a cornerstone of long-term economic development, according to economic theory a...
In most countries in sub-Saharan Africa at present, the majority of the population is engaged in agr...
The economies of the world’s poorest countries are overwhelmingly agrarian; those of rich countries ...
The purpose of this paper is not to inquire into the role of agricultural sector in the economic gro...
This working paper discusses the different Asian experiences of the Green Revolution from the late 1...
This article examines the role of agriculture in economic development in three Asian countries Japan...
This chapter re-examines Asia’s agricultural and rural transformations in the context of economy-wid...
As an economy develops, agriculture faces distinctly different problems: food insecurity, sectoral i...
Developing Asia as a whole has taken remarkable strides since the food crises of the 1960s. Improvem...
The 'green revolution' has been seen as the answer to the problem of matching growth of food product...