Abstract
The theory of induced agricultural innovation suggests that there is a path of appropriate technological change even for economies characterized by rapid population growth and increasing land scarcity. While some have given a quietistic interpretation to this theory-market signals alone are adequate to spur needed agricultural growth-recent experience suggests otherwise. This paper first considers the evidence on rural financial markets: how and why they tend to constrain the accumulation and investment needed for agricultural productivity growth, especially in economies in which small farms predominate. The paper will then consider a new generation of risk management interventions designed to alter the conditions that lead to dysfunctional rural financial markets and ultimately crowd in both the institutions and the innovations needed for sustainable technological change in agriculture.
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CITATION STYLE
Carter, M. R. (2009). Investir pour innover en monde rural. Afrique Contemporaine, 229(1), 151–170. https://doi.org/10.3917/afco.229.0151
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