Abstract

Agrarian South Asia is undergoing significan t technical and struc tural change. The debate on the direction of the change in the agrarian structure has been somewhat myopic. The neoclassi:al and Chayanovian schods argue that the land distribution is not worsening to eliminate the middle owner group of the peasan try. The Marxist and structuralist schods argue, in complete contrast, that polarisation of the land distribu tion is rapidly eliminating the middle group of the peasan try. This study attempts to broaden the existing dichotomous framework. An agrarian sector - and by analogy all agrarian sectors - cannot be assumed to be homogenous in the production conditions and, therefore, in the direction of change. To capture regional differentials, a theoretical exogenous-endogenous model is specified for agrarian sector analysis. Factors exogenous to a region are used to explain homogeneity in the change between regions. Factors endogenous to specific regions are used to explain differentials in the change between regions. This exogenous-endogenous model is used to predict the direction of agrarian change in the two major regions of the Punjab, i.e., the canal colonies and the South-West. The model predicts an increase in the concentration of operated area in the canal colonies but a constancy in this concentration in the South-West Empirical analysis of representative villages from each region confirms these predi: tions as well as the usefulness of the model.

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