Publication Type
Journal Article
Version
publishedVersion
Publication Date
5-2021
Abstract
We study the formation of the agrarian capitalist class in the pig farming sector in a Chinese county. We propose a new framework for analyzing the dynamics of accumulation and class formation in agriculture that focuses on the role of the state and public resources. In what we call “politically directed accumulation,” local states in China, driven by a political logic of maximizing fiscal resources and improving performance record, select actors who either have accumulated non-agrarian capital or possess political capital to serve as their agents (political selection) and then capitalize their farming operations by transferring to them public resources (political capitalization), creating a new agrarian capitalist class. The accumulation in this case happens largely without the dispossession of other agricultural producers but instead is assisted by the state's mobilization of public resources. This study advances the call for the renewal of the agrarian question of capital and proposes that the role of the state is now the most important factor in creating different paths of agrarian transition.
Keywords
agrarian transition, capitalist agriculture, local state, pig farming, political capitalism
Discipline
Agricultural and Resource Economics | Asian Studies
Research Areas
Sociology
Publication
Journal of Agrarian Change
Volume
21
Issue
4
First Page
677
Last Page
701
ISSN
1471-0358
Identifier
10.1111/joac.12435
Publisher
Wiley: 24 months
Citation
1
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.