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"Farms in historical materialism"

4 Comments -

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Anonymous Sam Ladner said...

Daniel,

I enjoy your blog. As a sociologist with a keen interest in philosophy, I'm inspired by your posts.

Today's post I read after having done some field research on Whole Foods. It got me to thinking: where does the contemporary, capitalist but ORGANIC farm fit in your typology?

It is not for subsistence, but its productivity is lower than capitalist farms. It employs wage labour but is a smaller farm.

In essence, it is a "boutique" farm which is most definitely capitalist but charges a premium for its output (perhaps in this sense it is actually more productive).

I saw a paper presented at an innovation conference regarding organic farming. The author showed that a very small percentage of innovation tax credits extended to organic farming (the vast majority went to "traditional" farming for pesticides presumably).

The tension between these two types of knowledge systems, vis a vis farming, is interesting. What it means, I don't know, but may be interesting to you.

May 4, 2009 at 9:18 AM

Blogger Dan Little said...

Sam,

Thanks for the thoughtful comment. Given that organic farms produce for the market, I think the major differentiator is the status of hired labor. So I think I'd probably place the contemporary organic farm in either of two ideal types: commercial family farm (if the bulk of labor is performed by the farmer's family); and capitalist farm (if more than 1/3 of labor is performed by hired farm workers). In either case the bulk of the income of the farm is generated by sale of the crop within the market economy.

There certainly are other variants that seem to exist today in the organic farming world: cooperative farms where there's fairly limited market activity for the product (produce is distributed to members of the coop); and a sort of "off-the-grid" farming system in some communities where there's a lot of barter, some market activity, and a lot of cooperation among producers.

May 4, 2009 at 10:03 AM

Blogger Carl Oberg said...

Dr. Little,

I've just started reading your blogs and I am enjoying them thoroughly. Well done.

I would like to suggest some readings on Middle Ages strip farming in England. Donald (Dierdre) McCloskey, Stefano Fenoaltea, and Douglass North are the relevant authors. They emphasize the role of transaction costs and institutions in the structure and labor relations in farming.

Regards,

Carl Oberg
http://overtonsarrow.wordpress.com/

May 4, 2009 at 9:04 PM

Blogger Bill Harshaw said...

How would you fit the plantation and latifundia into your ideal types? And, in addition to the modern organic and "hobby" farms, the contract farms (where the grower of popcorn, poultry, tobacco has a contract with a corporation) and the large farms which may be owned by a family corporation with extensive use of hired labor.

May 9, 2009 at 1:57 PM

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