To sow one acre more
by Lee A. Craig
- ISBN
- 0801845297
To sow one acre more es un agricultural productivity, economic aspects book de Lee A. Craig.
Sobre este libro
"No one doubts that children supplied valuable labor on nineteenth-century American farms. But the value of that labor varied, and the children themselves represented economic costs as well as benefits. How did children affect a farmer's choices? Did bigger farms mean, in effect, bigger families? Drawing on census, wage, and other data, Lee A. Craig addresses such questions in offering a new econometric interpretation of productivity and fertility in the antebellum North." "In contrast to prevailing scholarly opinion, Craig finds that children did not provide a noteworthy advantage on the frontier, though they did so in the settled but rocky-soiled Northeast. He concludes that a farmer's economic strategy depended not so much on the size of his holding or his age (and fertility) as it did on regional agricultural patterns and proximity to market. These findings contradict the now-dominant view that farmers adjusted output according to the number of available laborers - including children. Distinguishing between the Northeast and Old Northwest, Craig constructs a model that incorporates the advantages and monetary disadvantages of child labor and accounts for the drop in fertility in regions where opportunities for children off the farm were greater than those at home."--BOOK JACKET.
Sobre el Autor
es el autor de To sow one acre more. Explora su catálogo completo en Booklogr.
Explora más libros de Lee A. Craig →Ediciones y Formatos
Reseñas
Sin reseñas aún. ¿Has leído este libro? Comparte tus opiniones con la comunidad de Booklogr.
Iniciar sesión Inicia sesión para escribir una reseña
Preguntas Frecuentes
¿De qué género es To sow one acre more?+
To sow one acre more es un libro de Agricultural productivity, Economic aspects, Economic aspects of Human fertility, Employment, Family farms.
¿De qué trata To sow one acre more?+
"No one doubts that children supplied valuable labor on nineteenth-century American farms. But the value of that labor varied, and the children themselves represented economic costs as well as benefits. How did children affect a farmer's choices? Did bigger farms mean, in effect, bigger families? Dr...
¿Quién escribió To sow one acre more?+
To sow one acre more fue escrito por Lee A. Craig.