Economic Disparity in Rural Myanmar
Transformation under Market Liberalization
Distributed for National University of Singapore Press
Economic Disparity in Rural Myanmar
Transformation under Market Liberalization
Ikuko Okamoto explores these issues through a detailed case study of Thongwa Township, a place east of Yangon (Rangoon) in the major green gram producing region in the country. She shows that farmers responded quickly to policy changes and made maximum use of new opportunities, even in a country where socialist policies had previously limited such opportunities. She also traces the consequences for different social groups in rural Myanmar, and shows that traders benefited the most from the new arrangements, and landless laborers the least. Her research offers important insights into the transition from a socialist to a market-based economy, and local-level responses to market incentives. It also shows that the success or failure of new crops in a peasant economy largely depends on whether the crop is compatible with the initial resource endowment.
264 pages | 6 x 9 | © 2008
Asian Studies: Southeast Asia and Australia
Economics and Business: Business--Industry and Labor, Economics--Development, Growth, Planning, Economics--Urban and Regional
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