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The role of agriculture in economic development: Visible and invisible surplus transfers 

Authors: Paul Winters a;  Alain De Janvry b;  Elisabeth Sadoulet b; Kostas Stamoulis c
Affiliations:   a International Potato Center, Lima
b Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, University of California, Berkeley, California, USA
c Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Rome
DOI: 10.1080/00220389808422537
Publication Frequency: 10 issues per year
Published in: journal Journal of Development Studies, Volume 34, Issue 5 June 1998 , pages 71 - 97
Formats available: PDF (English)
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Abstract

The financial surplus of agriculture has been central to theories of the role of agriculture in economic development. Morrisson and Thorbecke (MT) have used a constant-price social accounting matrix (SAM) framework to measure rigorously the financial surplus of agriculture and decompose the mechanisms of surplus extraction. History and theory have, however, stressed the role of prices as an invisible transfer mechanism in addition to the visible transfers identified in the SAM framework. We extend the MT approach by defining and measuring the real surplus of agriculture and decomposing the mechanisms of surplus extraction between visible and invisible financial transfers. Using an archetype computable general equilibrium model for poor African nations, we trace the generation, transfer, and use of an agricultural surplus created by a productivity gain in agriculture. This shows that prices indeed play an overwhelmingly important role in transferring a surplus from agriculture to the benefit of the rest of the economy.
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