Chinas grain production: a decade of consecutive growth or stagnation?

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Publication Type pre-print
School or College College of Social & Behavioral Science
Department Economics
Creator Li, Minqi
Other Author Xu, Zhun; Zhang, Wei
Title Chinas grain production: a decade of consecutive growth or stagnation?
Date 2014-01-01
Description Some progressive writers have argued that while China's agricultural privatization achieved short-term gains, it did so by undermining longterm production facilities such as the infrastructure and public services built in the socialist era.1 Environmental scholars have questioned the sustainability of the Chinese agriculture. In a report published in 1995, Lester R. Brown raised the question: "Who will feed China?" He argued that the Chinese population's changing diet, shrinking cropland, stagnating productivity, and environmental constraints would lead to a widening gap between China's food supply and demand, a gap the world's leading grain exporters would not be able to fill.2
Type Text
Publisher Monthly Review Press
Volume 66
Issue 1
First Page 25
Last Page 37
Language eng
Bibliographic Citation Xu, Z., Zhang, W., & Li, M. (2014). Chinas grain production: a decade of consecutive growth or stagnation? Monthly Review, 66(1), 25-37.
Rights Management (c) Monthly Review Press
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 635,657 bytes
Identifier uspace,18727
ARK ark:/87278/s63v2s9c
Setname ir_uspace
ID 712602
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s63v2s9c