Contract Farming in Developing Countries
The Promise and Its Perils

Author(s)
Narayanan, Sudha
Language
EnglishAbstract
Contract farming is an institutional arrangement between farmers and businesses to produce and transact agricultural commodities at predetermined prices and conditions, and it has recently received a heightened amount of attention despite being a relatively old phenomenon. A new wave of agricultural industrialization and the emergence of large-scale food retailing in developing countries may be precipitating the unprecedented shift in favor of contract farming. This open access book identifies the methodological differences across disciplines that have generated a false binary in discussions of contract farming. The author explains the importance of adopting a more integrated theoretical perspective, providing insights into the ways in which this can reconcile conflicting positions. Given the immense diversity of contracting schemes, commodities and contexts—as well as the substantial regional differences in contract farming experiences across a range of outcomes—a syncretic understanding of contract farming is essential to the evaluation of the promise and perils of contract farming. The resulting book proposes a way forward that is holistic in nature, framing contract farming within a comparative institutional analysis so that it can better accommodate multidisciplinary priorities.
Keywords
Contract farming; Agricultural commodities; Producer-processor relationship; Globalization; Agro-industry; Firm-farm connections; Agricultural industrialization; Globalization of agribusiness; AgribusinessISBN
9783031764868Publisher
Springer NaturePublisher website
http://www.springernature.com/oabooksPublication date and place
Cham, 2025Imprint
Palgrave MacmillanSeries
Palgrave Studies in Agricultural Economics and Food Policy,Classification
Agricultural science
Agribusiness and primary industries
Development economics and emerging economies
Economics

