Farming in France: The paradoxes of a crisis
Bertrand Hervieu
Agriculture and Human Values, 1989, vol. 6, issue 1, 29-37
Abstract:
At a time when the long-established pattern of rural emigration in France is going into reverse, the number of French farmers is falling steeply. Whereas the French farming community represented over 50% of the total working population at the beginning of this century, their number will soon drop below the fateful 5% threshold. At a time when they see themselves (and are seen by others) as a minority, the farmers of France have become the world's second largest exporters of agricultural produce—yet they continue to glut the market with excess output and their income is steadily decreasing. Political reactions to these far-reaching changes are inadequate to meet the situation, and the unions are responding with internal strife and divisions. Faced with a radically new situation which is largely dominated by external factors, the government and the unions are quite unable to rebuild French farming policy. Copyright Kluwer Academic Publishers 1989
Date: 1989
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DOI: 10.1007/BF02219419
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