19 2 月, 2025
撰写的 WID.world

Despite rising productivity, inequality within the agricultural sector has increased since 1950

One of the most striking changes in recent history has been the global shift from agricultural to non-agricultural employment. However, we know little about whether or how this structural transformation is connected to inequality, another hallmark of modern economic growth.

In this paper, Matthew Fisher-Post studies the dynamics of productivity growth and income distribution within the agricultural sector, using more comprehensive survey data that include not only household farm income, but also capital income and corporate profits in the sector.

Key findings:

  • Agricultural productivity has increased since 1950, even as workers have left agriculture for other sectors, but this explains very little of the overall increase in inequality in recent decades.
  • While between-sector inequality has declined since 1980, within-sector inequality has been increasing. Agriculture remains largely a household business, and the corporate sector has not been expanding significantly. However, data suggests a strong link between overall inequality and the size of the corporate sector in agriculture.
  • Agricultural income inequality is still lower than overall income inequality – though households in agriculture remain significantly poorer.
  • Social protection programs for rural populations are both insufficient and poorly targeted.
  • There is an urgent need to expand comprehensive agricultural household income surveys globally. In particular, the lack of long-run, individual-linked data on corporate-sector profits in agriculture, means that it remains difficult to understand the magnitudes of capital income accruing to top earners in the sector.

AUTHOR

  • Matthew Fisher-Post, Paris School of Economics & United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization

 

MEDIA CONTACT

  •  Alice Fauvel, Communications Manager, alice.fauvel[at]psemail.eu ; press[at]wid.world

 

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