Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Preface
- Preamble How the Farmers Outwitted the Bureaucrats: A True Tale
- 1 Why Country People are not Peasants
- 2 The Vain Search for Universal Generalizations: 1. The Relevance of Economic Inequality
- 3 The Vain Search for Universal Generalizations: 2. The Poor Quality of Official Statistics
- 4 The Vain Search for Universal Generalizations: 3. Historicist Fallacies
- 5 Pause: How can the Impasse be Resolved?
- 6 The Logical Necessity for Economic Inequality within Rural Communities
- 7 The Farming Household: its Defects as a Statistical Unit
- 8 The Need to be Indebted
- 9 The Flexibility of Inheritance Systems
- 10 The Neglect of Farm-Labouring Systems
- 11 Misconceptions about Migration
- 12 The Neglect of Women
- 13 The Sale of Farmland
- 14 Rural Class Stratification?
- Postscript Doomsday Economics
- Glossary and Place Names
- References
- Index
Preamble How the Farmers Outwitted the Bureaucrats: A True Tale
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Preface
- Preamble How the Farmers Outwitted the Bureaucrats: A True Tale
- 1 Why Country People are not Peasants
- 2 The Vain Search for Universal Generalizations: 1. The Relevance of Economic Inequality
- 3 The Vain Search for Universal Generalizations: 2. The Poor Quality of Official Statistics
- 4 The Vain Search for Universal Generalizations: 3. Historicist Fallacies
- 5 Pause: How can the Impasse be Resolved?
- 6 The Logical Necessity for Economic Inequality within Rural Communities
- 7 The Farming Household: its Defects as a Statistical Unit
- 8 The Need to be Indebted
- 9 The Flexibility of Inheritance Systems
- 10 The Neglect of Farm-Labouring Systems
- 11 Misconceptions about Migration
- 12 The Neglect of Women
- 13 The Sale of Farmland
- 14 Rural Class Stratification?
- Postscript Doomsday Economics
- Glossary and Place Names
- References
- Index
Summary
One of the underlying themes of this book is that farmers in the rural tropical world are commonly not the docile, subservient or angry peasants' portrayed in many textbooks and official publications, but rather men and women with a proper and controlled contempt for external authority – a contempt which they often delight in concealing under a veneer of acquiescence. So I start this book with a Preamble relating to a particular case in which the clever farmers completely outwitted the gullible bureaucrats in the latter's political game.
The bureaucrats were officials of the notorious Gold Coast Cocoa Purchasing Company (CPC), an essentially political body which had been established by Nkrumah in 1952 for the purposes of gradually ousting all existing expatriate licensed buying agents for cocoa, as well as the highly successful Co-operative Marketing Association (based on local cocoa-buying co-operative societies) which was later to handle even more cocoa for export than the United Africa Company – only to be subsequently rewarded by liquidation. Being effectively a political arm of government, though disguised as the Cocoa Marketing Board's own licensed buying agentr the CPC was able to offer lavish blandishments to farmers who would support them.
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- Information
- Development Economics on TrialThe Anthropological Case for a Prosecution, pp. 1 - 7Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1986