Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 May 2017
Data from a 1979 New York survey were analyzed to develop a systematic multivariate typology of small farmers (i.e., operators of small farm businesses) which would be useful in designing and targeting public programs. Farm business size, operator's age, and off-farm employment were the most important dimensions of variation. A typology was constructed by successive dichotomization of low and moderate sales volume farms; operators 49 years of age and under, and 50 and over; and families with and without off-farm income. Means for economic and social indicators were computed for each of the resulting eight categories. Low sales volume farm families with relatively old operators and without off-farm employment were found to experience very low total family incomes. Suggestions are made regarding how public extension and research programs may be developed and targeted with specific categories of the most needy small farmers in mind.
This research was supported by funds from the Cornell Agricultural Experiment Station. J. Patrick Madden, B. F. Stanton, and Catheryn Obern provided helpful comments on a previous draft of this paper. We also appreciate the assistance of Linda A. Buttel in the data analysis. An extended version of this paper (Buttel, 1981), which contains greater detail on measurement procedures, is available from the senior author upon request.