Labor absorption in agriculture : case study of Pakistan Punjab
Abstract
This study on labor use in agriculture attempts to investigate
factors affecting labor use in Punjab's agriculture. It aims at
finding whether the major source of labor was still the family even
after the green revolution, whether farm size and land tenures differ
in labor use. Besides, effects of seed-fertilizer technology,
tubewell irrigation and tractor use on labor absorption are
quantified. For this purpose two types of data were used; first, the
'time series cross-sectional' (or pooled) data for 17 farms over 6
years (1966-72); and second, 'cross-sectional' data of 204 farms for
1981-82 crop year.
The problem was approached by two ways. First, the labor use on
different farm categories and for both time periods was compared on
the basis of mean values; and second, 'labor use functions' were
estimated separately from both the sets of data. It was observed that
the use of labor had increased over time and that the relative share
of family labor had also increased. Cultivated area was found to be
negatively correlated with the labor use. Tractor use was found to be
negatively associated with total and family labor. But the
association in the case of casual and permanant hired labor was not
clear. Tubewell irrigation when used alone was associated with high
doses of labor. The effect of seed-fertilizer technology could not be
quantified directly, however, indirectly it was found that it is labor
using technology.
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