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In Defense of Collective Farms:
Collectivization and Decollectivization
in the People's Republic of China
Ethan Michelson
McGill University
The current regime in China has
put in motion a program for rural economic development which has
negated collective agriculture. Many Western social scientists
have risen in defense of the new decollectivist policy, arguing
that rural economic stagnation throughout the Maoist period was
directly caused by agricultural collectives' ostensibly inherent
inability to motivate labour. And these scholars accordingly contend
that the improvements in peasant livelihood and the continual
growth in agricultural output levels obtained under the new regime
spring from a greater incentive to labour created by devolving
production to the household within a market context. Departing
from this model, it is maintained here that the rural economic
successes achieved under the reforms are not the direct consequences
of decollectivization. The reemergence of comparative-advantage
specialization and trade, the channelling of surplus agricultural
labour into productive off-farm employment, and the increased
usage of modern agricultural inputs are the fundamental forces
at work and are all compatible with collective agriculture. In
fact, a system of collectives, rather than being a source of economic
problems, seems to be a necessary condition for continued gains
in agricultural production. The Maoist collective structure, through
its accumulation fund and its unified management of labour, has
provided an efficient framework for the large-scale development,
maintenance, and utilization of water-control infrastructure necessary
for productive paddy agriculture. Furthermore, the consolidation
of land and the capacity for large capital investments within
a collective framework can allow for the development of agricultural
mechanization, thereby diverting surplus labour off the farm without
jeopardizing agricultural production. An examination of peasant
attitudes towards collectivization supports these claims. In such,
household production per se, offering little, if any benefit,
has set up a number of obstacles to sustained agricultural development.
Households in the new decollectivized economy seem unable to develop
new water-control infrastructure, let alone maintain existing
facilities. Furthermore, the agricultural problems associated
with the post-Mao fragmentation of land parcels is encouraging
peasants in many areas of China to abandon agriculture altogether.
All in all, it is hard to foresee continued growth in agricultural
output in the absence of renewed collectivization. The Abandonment
of the collective and the Emergence of the Household Responsibility
System Since Deng Xiaoping's ascendance to power in 1978 there
has been a dramatic about-face in rural economic policy away from
a collectivist framework. By 1983 China's collectives had been
almost universally dismantled and agricultural production devolved
to the household. Procurement quotas have been handed to households
in a system called the "contract responsibility system." Contracts
are made between individual or household producers and the state,
specifying the crops to be grown and the portion of the harvest
to be sold to the state. The household may do with the surplus
portion of the harvest what its members so choose, including retaining
it for consumption, selling it to the state, and even disposing
of it on the reemergent free market (Croll 1988:79). In return
for fulfilling its contract with the state, the state provides
the household production unit with agricultural inputs such as
fertilizer and insecticide at state price (Oi 1989:174; Siu 1989:278).
In the shift towards household production, the collective agricultural
means of production have been sold off for private ownership.
The management rights to collective enterprises, fish ponds, fruit
trees, and the like have been contracted out to the highest (individual
and group) bidders and the private hiring of wage labour has emerged
(Chan at al. 1984:270-73; Potter and Potter 1990:171; Hinton 1990:18-19).
Agricultural land has been contracted out for terms of, most commonly,
15 years (Potter and Potter 1990:176; Vogel 1989:97; Croll 1988:79),
although contracts of 30, 50, and more years have been made in
some locations (Putterman 1985:77). To ensure fairness the land
has been distributed in parcels of varying quality (Potter and
Potter 1990:175-76; Hinton (1990:78). Of 272 households in twenty-eight
provinces surveyed in late 1984, early 1985, the average household
land allocation was 8.35 mu [1] distributed in 9.7 plots, while
the national average number of plots per household may be as high
as eleven (Watson 1989:402). At first numerous variants of the
responsibility system were practiced. The proportion of collective
land contracted out and the number and type of crops cultivated
by individual households evolved over time at different paces
in different locations (Hartford 1985). Yet these variants need
not be discussed here since they almost universally evolved into
a single type of system: by 1985 almost all villages contracted
all agricultural production to the household in a system known
as da bao gan. The village government no longer plays a formal
administrative or managerial role in agriculture. Instead, its
role is to facilitate the supply of production inputs, to help
peasants access marketing outlets, and to provide management guidance
to peasant producers (Croll 1988:84; Oi 1989:187-88). The abandonment
of collective production is reflected clearly in changes in the
composition of rural per capita income. Between 1978 and 1989,
the proportion of income from household production increased from
26.8 to 82.2 percent (Statistical Yearbook of China 1986 1986:581;
China Statistical Yearbook 1990 1991:Table 8.26). Improved Peasant
Livelihood Following Decollectivization The stagnation of peasant
livelihood under the collective system. Typical indicators of
peasant livelihood are peasant grain rations and cash income.
By official Chinese and international standards, as well as by
local expectations, grain rations were persistently disappointing
throughout the Maoist years. Official consumption standards in
China under the collectives specified an average per capita of
43.3 jin [2] of unhusked rice per month (Oi 1989:32-33). The standards
of international relief organizations specify that a per capita
average of 45-51.5 jin per month is sufficient for subsistence
(ibid.:Table 8). In his classic study of Kaixiangong village,
located in the Yangzi delta region of Jiangsu province, Fei Xiaotong
concluded that the 1956 average per capita distribution of 45.6
jin was enough to meet subsistence needs but left no margin of
safety (Fei 1983:184-85). Local expectations in Guangdong's Huancheng
commune were at the level of 50.0 jin per month (Siu 1989:114).
By any of these standards, however, peasant consumption rarely,
if ever, surpassed the level of subsistence (Huang 1990; Potter
and Potter 1990; Oi 1989; Butler 1985). The experience of Huancheng,
a wealthy commune by national standards, bears testimony to the
suppression of grain rations throughout the collectivized years.
For the commune as a whole between 1962 and 1982, average grain
distributions fluctuated between 33.3 and 45.0--averaging 39.2--jin
per month with no discernable upward trend (Siu 1989:Table 10.5).
The stagnation of Huancheng's grain rations occurred in spite
of a general rise in grain output (ibid.: Table 10.4) and the
fact that its yields were significantly above China's average
as well as above average in its county of Xinhui (ibid.; Huang
1990:Table 11.1). In addition to the suppression of grain rations,
peasant cash income also did not rise throughout the collectivized
period, as reflected in data from Xinhui county and Chashan commune,
both in Guangdond (see Siu 1981:Tables 8.3 and 9.1 and Potter
and Potter 1990:Figure 10). Average per capita cash distributions
in Kaixiangong, likewise, stagnated from a pre-reform peak of
119 yuan in 1966 to 114 yuan in 1978 (Fei 1983:200,202-03). Rising
peasant income under the responsibility system. The recent restructuring
of the Chinese rural economy has resulted in a significant rise
in real rural income. In Chashan between 1979 and 1984 average
per capita income grew 24.5 percent annually, significantly ahead
of the annual inflation rate of 10 to 15 percent (Potter and Potter
1990:328). In China as a whole, controlling for inflation, rural
per capita income rose by about 190 percent between 1978 and 1987
(Nee and Su 1990:5). Due to rising income in Guangdong, personal
savings deposits in the Agricultural Bank of China and the Rural
Credit Cooperative have grown significantly (Vogel 1989:169).
According to Lardy (1985:49), the rise in income generated from
agriculture is attributable to the "pure allocative efficiency
gain" obtained through the restoration of comparative-advantage
specialization and trade. In relatively industrialized rural areas,
such as in Jiangsu, the rise in peasant income is most strongly
associated with access to non-agricultural work (Veeck and Pannell
1989; Huang 1990:284; Huang Shu-min 1989:162). In accordance with
Engel's Law that as real income rises the proportion of income
spent on food and other necessities diminishes, the proportion
of income spent on food in rural China declined between 1978 and
1989 from 67.7 to 54.1 percent and the proportion of peasant income
spent on clothing between the same years fell from 12.7 to 8.3
percent (Statistical Yearbook of China 1986 1986:687; China Rural
Statistics 1988 1989:Table 7.9; China Statistical Yearbook 1990
1991:Tables 8.29 and 8.30). Meanwhile, there has been a widespread
boom in the construction of new housing (Potter and Potter 1990:327:
Vogel 1989:169; Fei 1983:105; Huang 1990:246,256; Taylor 1988:756).
Between 1978 and 1989 the proportion of peasant income spent on
housing rose from 3.2 to 14.4 percent and the proportion of income
spent on consumer goods from 6.6 to 12.2 percent (Statistics Yearbook
of China 1986 1986:687; China Rural Statistics 1988 1989:Table
7.9; China Statistical Yearbook 1990 1991:Tables 8.29 and 8.30).
The Research Program It is clear that peasant livelihood suffered
throughout the collectivized period and that significant improvements
have followed its demise. But to what extent is collectivization
the cause of the stagnation of peasant livelihood, and decollectivization
the cause of the subsequent improvements? Arguments Made Against
Agricultural Collectives It is commonly argued in the West that
collectives, as such, were responsible for the suppression of
peasant livelihood and that the recent economic improvements are
the direct consequences of their dismantling. Victor Nee (1985,1986),
Nee and Su Sijin (1990), Peter Nolan, (1988), Ezra Vogel (1989),
and Andrew Watson (1983,1989), extrapolating the Maoist record,
have argued that collective agriculture, conferred by scale are
outweighed by the management problems inevitably created ostensibly
inevitable product of large-scale farming "managerial diseconomies
of scale." The argument is that on collective farms, unlike in
factories, it is very difficult and expensive to supervise and
accurately measure the quality of labour input. Since labour,
therefore, cannot be remunerated in accordance with its productive
contribution, the argument runs, a narrow pay-scale--that is,
an egalitarian distribution system--is inevitably utilized, discouraging
hard work (pp.4l-42, 52-53). In the Chinese case, the narrow workpoint
spread between labourers widely differing in productive potential
meant that all team members benefited more or less equally from
an individual's work, thereby forming a disincentive for the most
productive peasants to work hard (Nee 1985:178-80; Nee and Su
1990:8; Nolan 1988:43,58,204; Vogel 1989-92; Watson 1983:712).
As Nee (1986) argues, egalitarianism, by bringing forth the classic
free-rider dilemma, is at the heart of the problem with the agricultural
collective: "if all eat from the same pot, then free riders cannot
be kept from enjoying the fruits of the labor of more diligent
and capable farmers" (p.190). Thus, "peasants remained household
individualists, resulting in a persistent problem of suboptimal
productivity gains and low growth rates" (p.189). From this perspective,
given the inefficiency of scale and the problem of motivation
inherent to the collective farm, the household is considered to
be the ideal unit of agricultural production. Nee and Su (1990:22
write that: the causes of economic stagnation from 1956 to 1978
were inextricably linked to the issue of incentives...In this
view even if state procurement prices for agriculture were set
higher and the state somehow invested more in agriculture, the
structure of property rights and incentives in the collective
would still mitigate against entrepreneurship and therefore economic
growth. Only by reinstating the household as the basic farming
unit and introducing basic property rights, it is argued, can
the fundamental problem of economic incentives intrinsic to the
collective farm be overcome and rural economic development be
achieved (Nee 1985:167; Nee 1986:185; Nee and Su 1990:1l; Nolan
1988:43,79,113,203; Watson 1989:401-02). Therefore, like the writers
of current Chinese state doctrine (see Liu et al. 1987:163; Ma
1990:194; Xue 1986:67-68; Du 1988:375), these Western scholars
argue that the contract responsibility system has dovetailed with
peasant preference. Nee (1985:185) concludes from his study of
Yangbei village in southwest Fujian province that peasants naturally
tend towards household farming. Since most peasants were convinced
they could do better farming alone, there was "a virtual upsurge
from below in favor of individual farming" (p.186). On the basis
of this case study, Nee argues that so long as household agricultural
labour power is sufficient to handle the complete agricultural
cycle, which he maintains is the case for the overwhelming majority
of China's households, peasants will prefer the household over
the collective mode of production (p. 188). Watson (1983:712,1989:414),
looking at the case of Anhui province, argues that the initial
pressure for the adoption of the da bao gan system came from the
peasants. Watson (1983:714) is convinced that state policy-makers
accommodated the desires of the peasants by "reacting to and sanctioning
developments that had already taken place." Similarly, Vogel (1989:95-96)
argues that a groundswell for household farming pushed the system
to its current status. The peasants, according to Vogel, consider
the reforms to be a "second liberation": they have responded so
enthusiastically to the new incentive structure that grain output
has consistently increased despite a reduction in the amount of
land devoted to its production (pp.87,93,167,170). Agricultural
Collectives Take Undeserved Criticism Is it valid to argue, as
the above reviewed apologentsia does, that large-scale farming
is, on balance, harmful to agricultural production, that collective
farms are inherently unable to adequately motivate labour, and
that, therefore, China's peasants have embraced the new responsibility
system with open arms? An examination of the impact collective
production had on agricultural production during the Maoist years
as well as of peasant attitudes towards agricultural collectives
suggests not. The failure of the collectives to benefit agriculture?
In many parts of China the collectives had significantly benefited
agricultural production. The recent trend of continually rising
grain output levels originates in the early 1980s, but in the
early 1970s after the chaos of the Cultural Revolution had largely
subsided in the countryside (Hussain and Feuchtwang 1988:43-45).
A "green revolution" in which improved seeds, chemical fertilizer,
and electric irrigation pumps became increasingly used accounts
significantly for the progress in grain production throughout
the collectivized years (Aubert 1988:107). As Huang (1990:249)
writes, With all the propagandistic hype on marketized family
farming, it is easy to overlook in the national record the fact
that crop yields advanced not just in the reform period of 1979
to 1984, but throughout the collectivized years, attaining a twofold
to threefold increase by the late 1970s. In the relatively advanced
areas of China grain production had reached a plateau before decollectivization.
In Huancheng commune, rice yields had peaked in 1963 and 1977
(Siu 1989:340n11). Likewise, in Songjiang the peak in rice productivity
was attained in 1979 (Huang 1990:241). Most of Jiangsu province,
like Huancheng, obtained extremely high levels of grain output
under the collectives through large-scale water conservation and
field construction projects (Zweig 1983:889-90; Zweig 1985:145,149-50).
[3] The collective framework was a structural factor which allowed
this sustained growth in grain output (Huang 1990:225-35). It
provided labour for state-coordinated water-control projects,
such as the construction of irrigation and drainage ditches, and
ensured the maintenance of these infrastructural facilities (ibid.;
Hinton 1990:59). Under the collectives, about 10 percent of a
peasant's labour contributions went to such projects. Moreover,
the collective supplied modern inputs such as fertilizer and hybrid
seeds and invested in major capital assets such as tractors and
electric pumping stations (Huang 1990:233). It is clear that in
many areas of China scale was of significant benefit to agricultural
production. Peasant support for decollectivization? In contrast
to the prevailing image of peasants responding enthusiastically
to the break-up of the agricultural collective, there was, in
fact, widespread peasant opposition to decollectivization. Where
the collectives had significantly benefited agricultural production,
the peasants seem to have recognized such benefits. Therefore,
where the production of grain benefited from a well-developed
large-scale infrastructure, the peasants were generally unwilling
to farm on their own. Siu (1989) writes that Huancheng's production
teams were slow to adopt the da bao gan system for this very reason.
"At the heart of the matter was grain production. While most people
welcomed the reforms, many were unwilling to bear responsibility
individually for growing grain" (p.280). Moreover, with labour
and technology both well-coordinated under collective grain production,
many peasants could be freed from farming to engage in more profitable
off-farm activities (ibid.:280-81). In this context it is easy
to understand peasant resistance to the responsibility system.
An individual from Xinhui county, in which Huancheng is located,
says, "Everybody I know in Xinhui County dislikes the new policies.
People practically go around saying 'Down with Deng Xiaoping'"
(Chan et al. 1984:270n3). Since in Jiangsu province, like Huancheng,
extremely high levels of grain output had been achieved under
the collectives, peasants here, too, felt that as household units
they would not be capable of equalling the grain output levels
obtained under the collectives (Zweig 1983:889-90; Zweig 1985:145,149-50).
Moreover, rural Jiangsu was also relatively well industrialized.
In the late 1980s 20 percent of Jiangsu's rural labour force was
employed in rural industry compared with about 8 percent for rural
China as a whole (China Rural Statistics 1988 1989:Table 4; China
Statistical Yearbook 1990 1991:Tables 4.15 and 9.2). Insofar as
channels to off-farm employment are open to peasants, collectively
organized grain production, by virtue of the efficiency of scale,
allows the maximum number of peasants to leave farming while also
maximizing grain output levels. Since in most of Jiangsu, as in
Huancheng, the responsibility system was believed to directly
threaten both grain production and the peasants' off-farm activities,
there was tremendous peasant resistance to the household responsibility
system. "When peasants were able to get rich by methods other
than laboring in collective fields, we should not be surprised
to find that they did not warmly welcome these new incentive systems"
(Zweig 1985:161). Following the same pattern of resistance, Wanggongzhuang
village in Shanxi province was standing to lose a lot by adopting
the household responsibility system since many of its villagers
were employed in rural industry and would be forced back into
farming as a result of the new system. The local cadres successfully
resisted dismantling the collective by hiding every time the county
authorities came looking for them, thereby preserving the collective
and allowing the maximum amount of labour to remain in the village
factories (Hinton 1990:99). Hinton also relates the stories of
two villages in Heilongjiang province which successfully resisted
decollectivization for the same reasons (pp.104-105). Support
from below for the responsibility system, on the other hand, seems
to have been the norm only in relatively poor areas of China.
Where off-farm opportunities were non-existent and infrastructural
development and even rudimentary mechanization unsuccessful, the
collective was a fetter on agricultural production, and the peasants,
therefore, preferred to farm as households (Zweig 1983:892). The
areas which Vogel and Watson cite in arguing that there occurred
a groundswell of peasant support for decollectivization were all
extremely backwards. The scenario in these areas therefore cannot
be generalized in all of China. Vogel (1989:95) acknowledges that
the areas he discusses are exceptionally poor yet does not elaborate
on this point, apparently finding it inconsequential. And Watson's
sole example of Anhui is portrayed elsewhere as only one of a
handful of areas in China where the collective completely failed
to benefit agricultural production in any way (see Zweig 1983:889
and Hinton 1990:49-50). The areas characterized by peasant opposition
to decollectivization are not intended to be portrayed as representative
of all of China's collectives. Rather, they are simply meant to
indicate that collectives were indeed capable of improving agricultural
production through achieving economies of scale and through large-scale
infrastructural development and maintenance. Where this was the
case, peasants realized that it was in their best interest to
preserve a system of collective farming. The above findings seriously
call into question the popular image of the state reacting to
pressure from the mass of China's peasants to sanction household
farming. Why, then, were the collectives systematically dismantled?
The answer is that the policy of decollectivization was implemented
in the same manner as the initial drive for collectivization and
many other Maoist campaigns: it was forced irrespective of local
conditions and peasant preference (Chan et al. 1984:269; Unger
1986:592; Hinton 1990:13). The tendency of the state to implement
policy with "One stroke of the knife" remained steadfast despite
the transition to a new regime (Zweig 1983:885; Hinton 1990:41,135,148).
Cadres who opposed decollectivization have been branded "leftists"
and severely criticized. For opposing the responsibility system
on the grounds that it would damage agricultural production, the
former first party secretary of Jiangsu was forced by state leaders
in 1981 to make a public self-criticism for his "leftist errors"
(Zweig 1983:890; Zweig 1985:145-46). Thus, in an endeavor to avoid
the political liability of wearing the leftist tag, cadres have
pushed the new policy with vigor, frequently against the will
of the peasants (Chan et al 1984:269-70; Unger 1986:592-93). The
teams in Huancheng which had early on resisted decollectivization
had all been pushed to adopt da bao gan by late 1983 (Siu 1989:276,280).
Shanxi's Long Bow village, which also initially resisted the responsibility
system, likewise ultimately caved in to pressure from above (Hinton
1990:25,148). The inevitability of egalitarianism? Simply put,
the case that collectives are inherently unable to link reward
to work so as to motivate labour has no logical or empirical foundation.
Egalitarian distribution was an explicit component of Maoist policy,
not the inevitable consequence of collectivization. As Putterman
(1985) argues, egalitarianism and collectivism do not necessarily
go together. With the use of work-metering methods well attuned
to labour contribution, there seems to be no reason why collectives
cannot provide adequate work incentives (pp.64-65). The Household
Responsibility System Takes Undeserved Credit Is it valid to argue,
as the Western apologentsia also does, that post-Mao rural economic
development is directly linked to the system of household production?
An analysis of the nature of the post-Mao rural economic transformations
suggests not. The rising rates of productive employment in the
countryside, a rise in the productivity of agriculture, and the
concomitant increases in peasant income stem not from household
responsibility per se, but rather from the processes of agricultural
diversification and specialization, increased supply and application
of modern agricultural inputs, rural industrialization, and the
opening up of other non-agricultural opportunities. Therefore,
popular images notwithstanding, the responsibility system cannot
take direct credit for the post-Mao improvements in agricultural
production and peasant livelihood, and the rural economic successes
of the reform period are not necessarily incompatible with a collective
mode of production. Improvements in agriculture. The state is
no longer emphasizing self-sufficient grain production, but is
instead encouraging the "all-round development of agriculture"
(Ma 1990:189; Liu et al. 1987:156; Croll 1988:81). In the reforming
of agriculture, one of the first measures taken by the state was
to increase procurement prices, which had the effect of making
agriculture no longer a money-losing endeavor (Potter and Potter
1990:332; Siu 1989:279; Oi 1989:157-59; Butler 1985:111). According
to Watson (1989:393), agricultural procurement prices increased
on average 47.7 percent between 1978 and 1983. Due to the price
rises, peasants sold unprecedented amounts of grain to the state,
creating a glut of rice which the state had no way of properly
storing. Thus, the state first reduced grain procurement quotas,
next allowed other crops and even cash to be substituted for grain
quotas, then allowed cash to be used for paying the grain tax,
and finally in 1985 abandoned the old unified grain procurement
and supply system altogether (Potter and Potter 1990:332; Chan
et al. 1984:27l; Siu 1989:274; Huang 1990:196; Vogel 1989:108,167;
Oi 1989:157-59,172-74; Croll 1988:84; Hinton 1990:76). As a result,
cropping portfolios have diversified to better suit local conditions
and maximize profit. Patterns of specialization and trade have
thus emerged. Lardy (1985:48-49) shows how the restoration of
comparative-advantage cropping and increasing inter-regional trade
has been a boon to the rural economy of central coastal Fujian.
Between 1976 and 1981 the production of sugarcane more than tripled
and refined sugar exports increased by a factor of more than seven.
This area became an importer of grain, as in pre-Liberation times,
and also saw average per capita consumption of grain increase
well above the level endured throughout the Maoist years. A similar
pattern of specialization has emerged in Guangdong. Throughout
much of Guangdong as a whole, more land has become dedicated in
orchards (Chan et al 1984:263; Siu 1989:274). In Guangdong's Chashan
township (formerly commune), between 1979 and 1985 the acreage
devoted to fruit trees more than doubled, that devoted to vegetable
production quadrupled, while the acreage under rice fell by 13
percent. Overall, the value of Chashan's agricultural production,
controlling for inflation, increased by 71 percent between the
same years (Potter and Potter 1990:332). Fruit output in Guangdong
as a whole increased by 833.3 percent between 1978 and 1987 (Vogel
1989:Table A.3), compared to 153.9 percent for China as a whole
(China Statistical Yearbook 1990 1991:Table 9.30). Also in Guangdong,
the proportion of land under grain crops fell between 1980 and
1989 from 80.5 to 71.5 percent, and the proportion under vegetables,
green feed, and green manure more than doubled from 6.1 to 12.6
percent (China Rural Statistics 1988 1989:Table 3,4; China Statistical
Yearbook 1990 1991:Tables 9.26 and 9.27). Guangdong has also become
host to areas specializing in sugar cane. The combination of a
tremendous rise in the procurement price of sugar cane plus the
policy of substituting grain quotas with other crops has encouraged
the widespread cultivation of sugar cane in those parts of Guangdong
where it is very well suited. Guangdong is now producing more
sugar than any other province in China (China Rural Statistics
1988 1989:Table 10.7). Given the price differentials between rice
and sugar cane, substituting sugar cane for rice in Guangdong's
Huancheng in the mid-1980s yielded 190 yuan per mu as opposed
to rice's 90 yuan per mu (Siu 1989:279). As a result of its specializations,
overall rice production in Guangdong has fallen to the point where
the province began importing rice from Hunan, Hubei, and Guangxi
provinces (Siu 1989:275; Vogel 1989:167). The shift away from
grain-based cropping systems is reflected clearly in national
data. For China as a whole the proportion of sown acreage devoted
to grain crops fell from 80.1 percent in 1980 to 76.6 percent
in 1989, and was replaced almost completely by industrial crops
(Statistical Yearbook of China 1986 1986:138; China Rural Statistics
1988 1989:Table 3.4; China Statistical Yearbook 1990 1991:Tables
9.26 and 9.27). In terms of the value of grain crops as a proportion
of crop farming's total output value, the fall was more dramatic,
declining during the same years from 72.6 to 59.8 percent (China
Rural Statistics 1988 1989:Tables 2.10 and 2.12; China Statistical
Yearbook 1990 1991:Table 9.8). Moreover, in line with the "all-round
development of agriculture" policy, crop farming as a whole has
become a less valuable component of agriculture, while sidelines,
forestry, animal husbandry, and fishery have all taken on a larger
proportional share of agriculture's gross output value (China
Rural Statistics 1988 1989:Table 2.9; China Statistical Yearbook
1990 1991:Tables 9.6 and 9.9). Despite the reduction in acreage
devoted to grain, total grain output in China has grown consistently,
peaking in 1984, 1987, and 1989 (China Statistical Yearbook 1990
1991:Table 9.30). [4] The increasingly widespread supply and application
of modern inputs has been a critical factor in the national rise
in grain output. In such, the rise in grain output levels has
occurred independently of the shift to household production. Fertilizer
was generally scarce throughout the Maoist years and has become
more widely available only since the late 1970s. Between 1978
and 1986, the application of chemical fertilizers per unit of
land in China increased by 126.6 percent (Huang 1990:Table 11.6).
In Anhui's Yingjian commune, fertilizer application increased
by a factor of four and rice yields commensurately jumped 131.4
percent between 1978 and 1982 (Hinton 1990:58). When I asked the
peasants for specific reasons why their yields went up they all
said "the incentive to work provided by the contract." But when
I countered with the suggestion that hard work alone could hardly
quadruple yields on any piece of land they all said, "Of course,
we bought more fertilizer" (ibid.:62). The municipality of Shanghai
by 1979-80 stood apart from the rest of China in that it had reached
the outer limits in returns obtainable from continued increases
in chemical fertilizer application (Huang 1990:250). For this
reason, rice yields had levelled off before the reforms and stagnated
thereafter. In China as a whole, however, there was still tremendous
opportunity to benefit from increased chemical fertilizer application.
According to Huang (1990:250-51) and Hinton (1990:63), the usage
of modern inputs such as chemical fertilizer and insecticide is
the most significant explanatory variable for all growth in grain
output. Greater inputs of fertilizer, combined with good weather
in 1979 to 1984, almost guaranteed sustained growth in those areas,
so whether and to what extent the introduction of the household-responsibility
system in farming made a real difference is hard to fathom. Since
crop yields had advanced nationwide earlier under collective farming
and declined in the advanced areas under household responsibility,
the burden of proof, it seems to me, lies with those who insist
that the new incentive structure contributed decisively to increased
yields. (Huang 1990:283) Moreover, the massive water-works construction
projects of the Great Leap Forward and the year-to-year construction
and maintenance which took place within the collective framework
also contributed to the high yields achieved in the post-Mao period
(Hinton 1990:60). However, as will be shown below, the current
system is patently unable to ensure infrastructural upkeep, not
to mention further infrastructural development. More rational
employment patterns. While agriculture has most definitely become
more profitable, other significant and beneficial forces affecting
peasant livelihood have been rural industrialization and a rise
in other off-farm employment opportunities. A shift in the rural
employment structure away from a concentration in farming has
been necessary due to the long-standing population problem rendering
the bulk of the rural labour force surplus to agricultural production.
According to numerous Chinese studies, between 30 and 40 percent
of China's rural labourers are surplus to agricultural production
(Taylor 1988:736-37). In densely populated Guangdong the figure
is on the order of 60 percent (Potter and Potter 1990:166). A
research group under Fei Xiaotong found that in 1981 65 percent
of the labour force in Kaixiangong village was surplus to the
needs of farming (Fei 1983:226). In Taigu county, also in Jiangsu,
the figure was 56.8 percent (Taylor 1988:752). However, when all
activities were considered, the figure for surplus labour fell
in Taigu to 31 percent and in Kaixiangong to 27.3 percent (ibid.;
Fei 1983:227). It is quite clear that rural industrialization
and increasing employment in other off-farm activities has been
a welcome boon to peasant livelihood in China. Investment in rural
factories comes mainly from two sources: from urban state factories,
in the form of commissioned processing arrangements, and from
foreign investors, in the form of joint venture arrangements.
In contrast to the Maoist denunciation and severance of links
between rural and urban enterprises, these "horizontal linkages"
have been greatly encouraged under the reforms (Du 1988:376-77;
Vogel 1989:120,321; Nee and Su 1990:9-10; Huang 1990:253-59).
In Guangdong, given its proximity to Hong Kong, rural industrial
development has been stimulated to a significant extent by joint
venture export processing arrangements made with investors from
Hong Kong (Potter and Potter 1990:316-17; Vogel 1989:68-69). Rural
industrialization in China as a whole, then, can be viewed as
a top-down process, as equipment and contracts "trickle down"
from urban investors (Huang 1990:265). The rapid process of rural
industrialization in China is reflected in national data. For
China as a whole, between 1980 and 1989 the value of agriculture
as a proportion of total gross rural output diminished from 68.9
to 45.1 percent while the proportional output value of rural industry
more than doubled, increasing from 19.5 to 40.7 percent (China
Rural Statistics 1988 1989:Tables 2.2-2.7; China Statistical Yearbook
1990 1991:Tables 9.4 and 9.5). Between 1978 and 1989 the proportion
of rural labour employed in agriculture declined from 89.7 to
79.2 percent while the industrial work force increased from 5.7
to 8.0 percent of the total rural labour force (China Rural Statistics
1988 1989:Table 8.4; China Statistical Yearbook 1990 1991:Tables
4.15 and 9.2). It is clear that rural industrialization is to
a significant extent responsible for improving peasant livelihood
(Huang 1990:245). Employment in other non-agricultural occupations
has also shown a significant rise. There has been growing employment
in commerce, reflecting the emergence of a rural petty bourgeoisie
which lives off the nascent "capitalist" sector (Potter and Potter
1990:330). Moreover, newly created wealth has increased the demand
for construction, both of housing and of physical non-agricultural
infrastructure such as roads and bridges, resulting in a rise
in employment in construction (Vogel 1989:173,179,220,222; Siu
1989:276; Woon 1990:151). Employment in transportation has also
surged to facilitate the nascent commercialization and construction
boom (Vogel 1989:169,222,261,297; Siu 1989:276). Between 1978
and 1989 the proportion of China's rural labour force employed
in commerce, construction, and transportation each respectively
increased by a factor of about five, albeit from a low base (China
Rural Statistics 1988 1989:Table 8.4; China Statistical Yearbook
1990 1991:Tables 4.15 and 9.1). Changes in the national composition
of income reflect the shift away from agriculture. Between 1978
and 1989, the proportion of China's rural per capita income deriving
from agricultural production diminished from 85.0 to 61.8 percent,
while the proportion deriving from non-agricultural sources increased
from 7.0 to 28.0 percent (Statistical Yearbook of China 1986 1986:583;
China Statistical Yearbook 1990 1991:Table 8.26). As Potter and
Potter (1990:335) put it, "Land was clearly of less economic importance
than factory work or commerce to peasant households." It has been
widely noted that farming has in many areas become a part-time
activity or a sideline (Huang 1990:245,256; Hinton 1990:172; Veeck
and Pannell 1988:290-91; Oi 1989:195; Croll 1988:81). The shift
away from agriculture is significantly related to a rise in migration
both from villages to small towns and between villages. The share
of urban jobs assigned to rural labour increased from 9.9 to 21.0
percent between 1982 and 1986 (Taylor 1988:Table 3). This has
been facilitated by a loosening up of the Maoist cellular rural
structure, as the system of grain rationing has gone the way of
the collective (Vogel 1989:110). [5] In 1985 a new household registration
status termed "town citizens responsible for their own rice" was
established (Siu 1990:72; Taylor 1988:759; Potter and Potter 1990:311).
Despite increasing employment outside the village, the peasants
still generally prefer to hold on to their land for security (ibid.:760;
Siu 1989:285; Oi 1989:192,195; Veeck and Pannell 1989:290-91;
Hinton 1990:172). Thus a process of "tiered migration" has ensued
as labourers from poorer areas have been hired into more prosperous
villages to cultivate the land, tend to the fish ponds, work in
local enterprises, and so on, thus freeing the local "worker-peasants"
to work outside the village (Siu 1990:75-76,80; Potter and Potter
1990:174,176,322-23,330,335; Chan et al. 1984:271-73; Vogel 1989:168,179;
Huang Shu-min 1989:193; Woon 1990:157; Du 1988:378). The intensity
of cropping has been adjusted to reflect the shift in the pattern
of labour utilization. During the Maoist years cropping was extremely
intensive across the board because almost the entire labour force
was forced into farming (Huang 1990:245,319). Now that the agricultural
labour force has shrunk due to the shift to more profitable non-farming
activities, cropping has become significantly less labour intensive.
Between 1979 and 1985, the average number of standard labour days
expended per unit of land diminished by 22.1 percent for rice,
23.3 percent for sugarcane, 29.2 percent for cotton, 38.7 percent
for rapeseed, and 52.7 percent for wheat (Taylor 1988:Table 6).
Jiangsu province's Songjiang county is a case in point: due to
the movement of labour into off-farm jobs, the sown area devoted
to double-cropped rice dropped significantly (Huang 1990:243).
Problems Associated with the Household Responsibility System Not
only was breaking up the collective not necessary to obtain improvements
to agricultural productivity and peasant livelihood, but a return
to the collective mode of agricultural production may, in fact,
be the only way to correct the problems which have emerged under
the household responsibility system. The fragmentation of land.
As was seen, the ability of collectives to develop, maintain,
and utilize a large-scale water-control infrastructure and the
conviction among the peasantry that grain production under the
collective is, for this reason, more efficient than that under
the household, together shed doubt upon claims that scale is of
no benefit in agriculture. Areas in Guangdong, Jiangsu, Shanxi,
and Heilongjiang provinces practicing rice and wheat farming alike
had, in fact, started mechanizing under the collectives. However,
with the distribution of farm land, as was seen earlier, into
an average of perhaps eleven plots per household, scale and mechanization
have been systematically eliminated (Potter and Potter 1990:175-76,335;
Zweig 1985:153; Hinton 1990:14,15,44,63,99,104-5). The fragmentation
of land under the responsibility system is widely cited as a fundamental
barrier to long-term agricultural development. Previously consisting
of large, consolidated tracts of land, the Chinese countryside
is now characterized by what Hinton (1990:14-16) calls "noodle
land." Borders between land parcels automatically reduce the amount
of sown acreage by about 5 percent (ibid.:65). Moreover, time
is wasted travelling between the fields, which, given their small
size, are now difficult to cultivate with tractors (Potter and
Potter 1990:175-76; Hinton 1990:14-17,63-65;Taylor 1988:761).
The disregard for efficiency in agriculture is also reflected
in the reemergence of graves in the middle of fields as ancestor
worship and geomancy are practiced with renewed enthusiasm (Huang
Shu-min 1989:159; Hinton 1990:72,80). With rural industrialization
and the opening up of off-farm employment opportunities, households
with contract land have either abandoned farming altogether or
have left the elderly, the weak, and children to fulfill the household
contract while the most productive labourers have taken on outside
work (Siu 1989:276; Huang 1990:245,256; Vogel 1989:168; Oi 1989:195;
Taylor 1988:760; Hinton 1990:78,113,172). This predicament derives
in part from the fact that the initial land distributions were
made with scant regard for the capacity of each household to farm.
According to a Chinese study cited by Watson (1989:398), land
distributions were made according to farming ability for only
0.4 percent of the households surveyed. Infrastructural degradation.
The decay of the agricultural infrastructure has also been observed
(Huang 1990:247; Hinton 1990:114). The difficulty of repairing,
maintaining, and even utilizing village irrigation facilities
is arguably insurmountable under a smallholding system such as
currently exists (Chan et al. 1984:282; Unger 1986:604-5). For
China as a whole, state direct investments in agricultural infrastructure
declined from 11.5 percent in 1978 to 4 percent in 1985-87 (Hinton
1990:145). [6] In roughly the same period the investment of peasant
labour in rural capital construction declined by more than 75
percent (ibid.). With the collective accumulation fund now largely
inert, newly created wealth is being used overwhelmingly for nonproductive
investments in housing and consumer goods, rather than for productive
investments in infrastructure (ibid.:23-24,138,161; Watson 1989:408-9).
Rising agricultural output from comparative-advantage specialization
and from increasing input usage has naturally brought forth immediate
results. Sustained improvements after this initial surge, however,
will be more difficult to achieve in the absence of methods to
overcome the above described problems (Hinton 1990:63). According
to Huang (1990:196-97,247-48), the voluntary reconsolidation of
land fragments and reinstatement of collective farming in 1987-88
in Hebei's Shajing brigade, outside Beijing, represents the peasants'
response to the problems of scale and infrastructure and points
the likely direction of future change to come elsewhere in China.
It should be clear that the household responsibility system per
se, far from solving the problems of the Maoist years, has been
of little benefit and possibly much harm. The benefits obtained
from the increased usage of modern agricultural inputs will soon
reach their limits, necessitating the adoption of a more efficient
mode of production where scale can be achieved and mechanization
and infrastructure developed and maintained. Summary It is the
belief of several prominent Western social scientists that the
rural economic problems of the Maoist period derive fundamentally
from collectivization. And likewise, the application of material
incentives--through reinstating the household as the basic production
unit, restructuring property rights, and unleashing the market
mechanism--is believed to be the fundamental force behind China's
rural economic development. The findings presented here, in contrast,
suggest that improvements in peasant livelihood and the continual
rise in total agricultural output do not derive from household
responsibility per se. Agricultural diversification and comparative-advantage
specialization, the increased supply and application of modern
inputs, rural industrializations, and the shift to other off-farm
occupations offer more explanatory leverage than does the ostensibly
greater incentive to labor. There seems to be no reason why collectives
cannot benefit peasant livelihood by engaging in market activity
and by acting as the basic unit of accounting, production, and
decision-making with respect to grain farming. Thus, it was unnecessary
to decollectivize to have these rural economic successes brought
to fruition. Collective agricultural production offers many benefits
which, unfortunately, have been obscured by those who insist on
ascribing to it all the rural economic problems of the Maoist
years. The scapegoating of collective farms also obscures the
significant problems farmers now face with respect to scale infrastructural
development, maintenance, and utilization, which in many cases
could all have been avoided by retaining collective farms as basic
units of agricultural production.
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Notes
The original version of this paper
was presented to Laurel Bossen (Anthropology and East Asian studies),
Ken Dean (East Asian studies), and Donald Von eschen (Sociology),
April, 1992 as a thesis for joint honours East Asian Studies and
Sociology B.A. at McGill University, Montreal, Canada. Revised
and condensed August, 1992.
1. 1 mu = 1/15 hectare.
2. 1 jin = 1/2 kg.
3. In most cases, peasant grain
rations did not rise commensurately with growth in grain output
because of explosive population growth (Potter and Potter 1990)
and an imperious state grain procurement policy (Oi 1989).
4. Hinton (1990:22-23,137,141-42)
throws doubt upon the Chinese figures, arguing that the 1984 peak
is actually the result of grain from collective reserves being
distributed to peasants upon decollectivization, sold to the state,
and recorded as harvested grain. He also argues that the 1987
peak was merely the planned, not the actual production, figure.
Of course, Hinton is unable to substantiate his hypotheses. Therefore,
in the absence of more reliable data it seems prudent to suspend
outright disbelief in the Chinese figure.
5. Under the Maoist household registration
system, each member of the Chinese population was registered as
either worker or peasant, and immobilized to his or her respective
city or village. Workers received household grain books which
guaranteed a fixed amount of consumption grain to be available
for purchase as state-run grain shops. Peasant, however, received
their grain rations from the production teams in which they were
registered (Oi 1989:30-32).
6. Unfortunately, Hinton does not
specify what these figures are a percentage of, and his data are
not easily accessible since his source is an unpublished manuscript.
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