Skip to product information
1 of 1

Poverty as Subsistence

Regular price $70.00
Regular price $70.00 Sale price $70.00
Sold out
Poverty as Subsistence explores the "propertizing" land reform policy that the World Bank advocated throughout the transitioning countries of Eurasia, expecting poverty reduction to result from dis...
Read More
  • 21 February 2023
View Product Details

Poverty as Subsistence explores the "propertizing" land reform policy that the World Bank advocated throughout the transitioning countries of Eurasia, expecting poverty reduction to result from distributing property titles over agricultural land to local (rural) populations. China's early 1980s land reform offered support for this expectation, but while the spread of propertizing reform to post-communist Eurasia created numerous "subsistence" smallholders, it failed to stimulate entrepreneurship or market-based production among the rural poor. Varga argues that the World Bank advocated a simplified version of China's land reform that ignored a key element of successful reforms: the smallholders' immediate environment, the structure of actors and institutions determining whether smallholders survive and grow in their communities. With concrete insights from analysis of the land reform program throughout post-communist Eurasia and multisited fieldwork in Romania and Ukraine, this book details how and why land reform led to subsistence and the mechanisms underpinning informal commercialization.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $70.00
Pages: 218
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Series: Emerging Frontiers in the Global Economy
Publication Date: 21 February 2023
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781503633049
Format: Hardcover
REVIEWS Icon
"The creation of private property in land on the farms of post-communist Europe and Central Asia failed to produce a class of commercially-minded entrepreneurial farmers. Mihai Varga shows us why. This is a major book on post-communist agrarian change, with important insights of much wider contemporary relevance."—Haroon Akram-Lodhi, Trent University
Mihai Varga is a Lecturer and Senior Research Fellow in Sociology at the Eastern Europe Institute, Freie Universität Berlin. He was a Max Weber Fellow in 2011-2012 and his research focuses on economic crises and their political and socioeconomic consequences.
Introduction: Poverty Reduction through Land Transfers
1. Pro-poor Reforms: The Propertizing Paradigm
2. Pro-poor Land Reform In Eurasia
3. The Reform Continuum: From China to Russia
4. Smallholders: A Fieldwork Study of Resilience and Resistance
5. Resilience: Survival and Growth of Smallholder Agriculture
6. Resistance: Smallholders against Commercialization
Conclusions: The Limits of Pro-poor Land Reform