book chapter

Income and employment generation from agricultural processing and marketing at the village level: A study in upland Java, Indonesia

by Toshihiko Kawagoe
Publisher(s): published for the international food policy research institute (ifpri) by johns hopkins university press
Open Access
Citation
Kawagoe, Toshihiko. 1994. Income and employment generation from agricultural processing and marketing at the village level: A study in upland Java, Indonesia. In Agricultural commercialization, economic development, and nutrition. von Braun, Joachim and Kennedy, Eileen T. (Eds.) Chapter 11 Pp. 176-186. Baltimore, MD: Published for the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) by Johns Hopkins University Press. http://ebrary.ifpri.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15738coll2/id/129376

In the rapidly growing economies of Southeast Asia, besides the emergence of processing enterprises (as discussed in chapter 9) catering to the diversifying and growing domestic and international demand, partly combined with contract-farming systems (as discussed in chapter 10), sizable informal village-level processing and marketing activities are a feature of the rural growth process. The employment and income effects for the poor can be a major factor in the spreading of rural growth benefits of commercialization for development and nutritional improvement, as was so successfully achieved in the 1970s and 1980s in Indonesia (Java). the informal sector's potential to generate local income and employment through farm product processing and marketing activities has been demonstrated with a case study of soybeans in Indonesia (Hayami et al. 1987, 1988a). Those results suggest a critically important role of such activities in generating income in local economies, as well as in improving income distribution by increasing employment.