Diversity in Peasant Economic Behavior: Transmigrant Households in South Sumatra, Indonesia

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Abstract

An important facet of peasant economics is the diversification of household labor among farm and off‐farm activities. Using a sample of South Sumatran transmigrant households the diversification of household labor among various remunerative activities was analyzed. Employment diversity was related to three sets of theoretically based factors: demographic, human capital, and agricultural. Results from a discriminant analysis model reveal that the demographic set of variables is most powerful in distinguishing households with different levels of employment diversity. The ratio of consumers to workers in a household is particularly important. However, measures of entrepreneurship and on‐farm agricultural intensity are also useful in explaining diversity behavior. Throughout our analysis we find evidence that the role of the spouse as an income producer is especially critical in the household employment diversification process. 1992 The Ohio State University

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Leinbach, T. R., & Bowen, J. T. (1992). Diversity in Peasant Economic Behavior: Transmigrant Households in South Sumatra, Indonesia. Geographical Analysis, 24(4), 335–351. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1538-4632.1992.tb00271.x

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