image description
# 839811
USD 38.00 (Book Not in Ready Stock, will take 45-60 days to source and dispatch)
- +

The Paradox of Agrarian Change : Food Security and the Politics of Social Protection in Indonesia

Author :  John F. McCarthy (et al.)

Product Details

Country
Singapore
Publisher
NUS Press, Singapore
ISBN 9789813251830
Format PaperBack
Language English
Year of Publication 2023
Bib. Info xxii, 466p. : illustrations ; 23cm.
Product Weight 702 gms.
Shipping Charges(USD)

Product Description

A detailed study of agrarian change, the persistence of food insecurity, and the most significant policy to address poverty in rural Indonesia. Economic growth in the middle-income countries of Southeast Asia over the past few decades has been widely praised for reducing poverty in both absolute and relative terms. Indonesia is a prime example. But while poverty has declined in Indonesia, patterns of food poverty persist across Indonesia. What explains this troubling paradox? How does it relate to Indonesia’s enthusiastic embrace of the “entitlements revolution,” the use of direct cash transfers as a tool for reducing poverty and building social inclusion? This book analyzes the nature and social consequences of economic development and agrarian change processes in rural Indonesia in relation to the scope and effectiveness of Indonesia’s social protection programs. The findings are based on a series of extensive ground-up case studies in Indonesian communities in a variety of eco-agrarian settings that seek to understand the drivers of food insecurity and vulnerability at a household level. The results show that while high-value farming, diversification, and migration may offer a means of economic progress for poor households, opportunities for accumulation are limited. This, the authors show, is due to the way class, gender, and power work in remote local contexts, and the fact that much surplus income is used for enhanced consumption and changing lifestyles. There are few signs of the classical structural transformation of the countryside which has historically been considered the most decisive pathway out of rural poverty. The authors conclude that social assistance is unlikely to counter the persistence of rural poverty, food insecurity, and precarity in the absence of other redistributive strategies that shift the structural drivers of inequality.

Content Details

1. Rural poor - Indonesia. 2. Food security - Indonesia. 3. Poverty - Government policy - Indonesia. 4. Economic assistance, Domestic - Indonesia.

Product added to Cart
Copied