book chapter

Land-abundant agricultural growth and some of its consequences: The case of Thailand

by Ammar Siamwalla
Publisher(s): published for the international food policy research institute (ifpri) by johns hopkins university press
Open Access
Citation
Siamwalla, Ammar. 1995. Land-abundant agricultural growth and some of its consequences: The case of Thailand. In Agriculture on the road to industrialization. Mellor, John W. (Ed.) Chapter 5. Pp. 150-174. 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/129340

Agricultural growth in Thailand from the Second World War until about 1980 was dominated by a massive expansion in the land area under cultivation. During this period Thailand was probably the only country in Asia that saw an expansion in cultivated land per agricultural worker (figure 5.1). The availability of land allowed agriculture to continue to absorb large amounts of labor, with the consequence that Thailand still has a larger proportion of its labor force in agriculture than other Asian countries at similar income levels (figure 5.2).1