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Chinese Agriculture in the 1930s: Investigations into John Lossing Buck’s Rediscovered ‘Land Utilization in China’ Microdata PDF

324 Pages·2019·4.826 MB·English
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chinese agriculture in the 1930s Investigations into John Lossing Buck’s Rediscovered ‘Land Utilization in China’ Microdata Edited by Hao Hu, Funing Zhong, and Calum G. Turvey Chinese Agriculture in the 1930s Hao Hu • Funing Zhong Calum G. Turvey Editors Chinese Agriculture in the 1930s Investigations into John Lossing Buck’s Rediscovered ‘Land Utilization in China’ Microdata Editors Hao Hu Funing Zhong College of Economics and College of Economics and Management Management Nanjing Agricultural University Nanjing Agricultural University Nanjing, China Nanjing, China Calum G. Turvey Cornell University Ithaca, NY, USA ISBN 978-3-030-12687-2 ISBN 978-3-030-12688-9 (eBook) https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-12688-9 © The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s) 2019 This work is subject to copyright. All rights are solely and exclusively licensed by the Publisher, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, specifically the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on microfilms or in any other physical way, and transmission or information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafter developed. The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc. in this publication does not imply, even in the absence of a specific statement, that such names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and therefore free for general use. The publisher, the authors and the editors are safe to assume that the advice and information in this book are believed to be true and accurate at the date of publication. Neither the publisher nor the authors or the editors give a warranty, express or implied, with respect to the material contained herein or for any errors or omissions that may have been made. The publisher remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Cover credit © Chronicle / Alamy Stock Photo Cover designed by Fatima Jamadar This Palgrave Macmillan imprint is published by the registered company Springer Nature Switzerland AG. The registered company address is: Gewerbestrasse 11, 6330 Cham, Switzerland To our wives P reface This book is comprised of a number of papers drawn from the works of John Lossing Buck’s 1937 publication of Land Use in China. Buck’s study was based on a survey of 16,786 farms, 168 localities, and 38,256 farm families in 22 provinces in China between 1929 and 1933. It was a land- mark study in the sense that no previous widescale study had attempted to provide a geographic and economic map of Chinese agriculture. Although frequent references have been made to Buck’s study, these focused on the three statistical volumes prepared by Buck and his col- leagues. That work was prepared by abacus, and the final written volume was driven largely by the statistical information and cross-tabulations that could be taken at the time. Where does this book fit in? Around the year 2000 a number of paper- wrapped packages were uncovered at the Nanjing Agricultural University (NJAU). The packages contained the actual paper spreadsheets with the individual farm records of some 10,000+ farm households collected by Buck and his team. Immediate efforts were taken by a team of Chinese and Japanese scholars to preserve the records, first by photographic repro- duction and then a years-long effort to digitize the data into a useable electronic format. From around 2007, enough data had been recorded to deploy modern economic thought and econometric analysis to start bring- ing the data to life. It would take nearly another decade to complete the digitization effort, check and verify the data, and prepare it in a form that could be used to empirically, and statistically, evaluate the economics of vii viii PREFACE Chinese agriculture in the 1930s. This book contains 14 chapters, includ- ing the introduction and conclusion. Three chapters are historical in nature. Chapter 2 provides a biopic of Buck, how he arrived in China with a degree in agriculture from Cornell University as an agricultural mission- ary, landed a faculty position at the University of Nanjing to start a pro- gram of study in agricultural economics, started to implement small- and large-scale surveys, including those that led to his two books, Chinese Farm Economy in 1930 and Land Utilization in China in 1937, and his broader efforts to improve and understand Chinese agriculture. The socioeconomic and political conditions facing Chinese farmers in the Republican era were largely normalized in Buck’s studies—taken as given and understood. But in the modern era it is difficult to truly understand and interpret Buck’s work without some semblance of understanding of the calamities, catastrophes, and conflicts in the Republican era generally, and the period of study, 1929–1933 in particular. Chapter 3 provides an overview of these conditions. As illustrated by the many footnotes to English language periodicals, this chapter was prepared and compiled from contemporaneous news reports. We had some hesitation about including this chapter in the book, but ultimately decided to err on the side of caution so that the works that follow can be placed in a proper context by the reader. Chapter 4 may be viewed as a case study of economic archaeology. In this chapter the authors summarize the many years of effort put into com- piling and checking the discovered microdata. It details, as accurately as possible, what is believed to have happened to the data records over the years, the circumstances under which they were discovered, the efforts at data recovery, and finally the painstaking efforts at ensuring that once digi- tized, the data matched the actual summaries provided in Buck’s statistical volumes. Incredibly, the efforts confirmed the accuracy of Buck’s tables, even to the point of standardizing weights and measures. Importantly, the chapter identifies the specific variables actually recovered. Unfortunately, for reasons unknown, many of the original worksheets were not recov- ered, so that the chapters that follow faced several data constraints that may affect statistical and econometric reliability. The remaining chapters represent the analyses done to date. Chapter 5 addresses some of the reliability issues. Noting that some academics questioned Buck’s survey techniques, Funing Zhong, Hao Hu, and Qun Su undertook a comparison of Buck’s data with other data sources and PREFACE ix conclude that the criticisms are not justified, and that Buck’s data falls within the ranges of previously documented metrics. Perhaps one of the more important contributions of this study is the ability to compare a historical representation of Chinese agriculture in the 1930s to the present era. Much, of course, has changed since the Republican era, including the transformative post-revolutionary period between 1949 and 1978, and the reform era that followed. The remaining chapters are thematically ordered in terms of tenancy, labor and labor efficiency, agricultural production and production effi- ciency, and credit, all of which were important economic issues facing Chinese agriculture in the 1930s. On farm tenancy and labor, Chap. 6 by Minjie Yu and Hao Hu exam- ines tenancy issues; Chap. 7 by Hao Hu and Weiwei Zheng evaluates regional differences in surplus agricultural labor; Chap. 8 by Hao Hu and Zhongwei Yang investigates poverty and inequality by providing measures of the Gini coefficient and Engel coefficients. Production and production efficiency are explored in Chap. 9 where Hisatoshi Hoken and Qun Su examine the data using Box–Cox transfor- mation to determine if there is evidence for an inverse relationship between crop yields and farm size. Chapter 10 by Hao Hu and Minjie Yu tackles the problem of economies of size and scale by generating production coef- ficients on land and labor to determine elasticities and the substitution between land and labor. Credit issues are explored in Chap. 11, by Calum G. Turvey and Hong Fu, who estimate the endogeneity between credit supply, credit demand in relation to agricultural productivity, and special expenditures on wedding and funerals. The last two chapters before concluding provide comparative analy- ses between agricultural conditions in the 1930s and the modern era. Chapter 12 by Hao Hu and Feng Zhang examines cropland utilization and productivity, and Chap. 13, by Hao Hu and Funing Zhong, pro- vides a comparison of the two eras in terms of changes in agricultural production including cropping structures, labor productivity, technol- ogy and so on. The book concludes with Chap. 14. These chapters represent what we believe to be the initial round of analysis; no doubt more studies will be forthcoming. All told, the chapters either provide new insights into Republican-era agriculture or confirm existing observations. As is normal with an edited volume, the chapters x PREFACE represent the individual and independent works of the contributing authors. Our role as editors was to edit and streamline the papers into a reasonable flow, and we thank the authors for their cooperation through- out this process. Nanjing, China Hao Hu Nanjing, China Funing Zhong Ithaca, NY Calum G. Turvey a cknowledgments We have many people to thank. The empirical works provided in this book were the end result of years of preparation. Writing the actual chapters was probably the easiest part, so much is owed to the many scholars and stu- dents who contributed to the funding, preservation, and compilation of the data. Atop this list is Professor Sumio Kuribayashi of Tokyo International University (TIU), who as principal researcher led the initial team to preserve Buck’s data. This was a five-year effort starting in 2002 and ending around 2007. Professor Kuribayashi arranged the first tranche of funding from the Grants-in-Aid Program of the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) under project # 15402020. Under his lead the original preservation study with Professors Hao Hu, Funing Zhong, Yingheng Zhou, and Qun Su from NJAU took root. This included an exchange program, with Takashi Osato from TIU and Wei Wei Liu from Nanjing Agricultural University being the first to partake. Over the years that followed, further funding was provided by a grant from the National Social Sciences Foundation of China for the project Research on Construction of Agricultural Production System and Agricultural Products Consumption Pattern Characterized by Low Carbon Emission (Grant No. 10zd&031). It is also supported by a grant for the Construction of Buck’s Survey Database, a Major Research Program of Humanities and Social Sciences, NJAU (Grant No. SKZD201201). There are many students and faculty at NJAU to thank, but more than any we thank Weiwei Zheng and Minjie Yu who, as graduate students, undertook the tremendous burden of organizing dozens of undergraduate xi

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