Rural population growth, agricultural change and natural resource management in developing countries: a review of hypotheses and some evidence from Honduras

This paper reviews hypotheses about the impacts of rural population growth on agriculture and natural resource management in developing countries and the implications for productivity, poverty, and natural resource conditions. Impacts on household and collective decisions are considered, and it is a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Pender, John L.
Format: Artículo preliminar
Language:Inglés
Published: International Food Policy Research Institute 1999
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/161334
_version_ 1855537823339249664
author Pender, John L.
author_browse Pender, John L.
author_facet Pender, John L.
author_sort Pender, John L.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This paper reviews hypotheses about the impacts of rural population growth on agriculture and natural resource management in developing countries and the implications for productivity, poverty, and natural resource conditions. Impacts on household and collective decisions are considered, and it is argued that population growth is more likely to have negative impacts when there is no collective responses than when population growth induces infrastructure development, collective action, institutional or organizational development. The impacts of population pressure, particularly on natural resource conditions, may be very different in different contexts, depending on the nature of local markets, institutions, and other factors. Thus careful and comparative empirical work is needed in different contexts before general conclusions can be drawn. There is still a lack of such empirical evidence. The results of one study in central Honduras are used to examine some of the hypotheses presented. The results support neo-Malthusian concerns about the effects of population growth on land degradation, but also provide some support to Boserupian predictions that population pressure will induce adoption of labor-intensive land improvements, collective action to manage natural resources, and organizational development. In general, however, the impacts of population pressure were found to be relatively small and other factors, including infrastructure development and technical assistance programs, had stronger impacts on agricultural change and natural resource management. Although induced innovation theory argues that population pressure may induce such policy responses, we found that these interventions were more likely in less-densely populated communities. This emphasizes that such “induced” policy responses to population pressure do not happen automatically.
format Artículo preliminar
id CGSpace161334
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 1999
publishDateRange 1999
publishDateSort 1999
publisher International Food Policy Research Institute
publisherStr International Food Policy Research Institute
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1613342025-11-06T07:20:19Z Rural population growth, agricultural change and natural resource management in developing countries: a review of hypotheses and some evidence from Honduras Pender, John L. rural population environmental impact analysis agricultural policies land management This paper reviews hypotheses about the impacts of rural population growth on agriculture and natural resource management in developing countries and the implications for productivity, poverty, and natural resource conditions. Impacts on household and collective decisions are considered, and it is argued that population growth is more likely to have negative impacts when there is no collective responses than when population growth induces infrastructure development, collective action, institutional or organizational development. The impacts of population pressure, particularly on natural resource conditions, may be very different in different contexts, depending on the nature of local markets, institutions, and other factors. Thus careful and comparative empirical work is needed in different contexts before general conclusions can be drawn. There is still a lack of such empirical evidence. The results of one study in central Honduras are used to examine some of the hypotheses presented. The results support neo-Malthusian concerns about the effects of population growth on land degradation, but also provide some support to Boserupian predictions that population pressure will induce adoption of labor-intensive land improvements, collective action to manage natural resources, and organizational development. In general, however, the impacts of population pressure were found to be relatively small and other factors, including infrastructure development and technical assistance programs, had stronger impacts on agricultural change and natural resource management. Although induced innovation theory argues that population pressure may induce such policy responses, we found that these interventions were more likely in less-densely populated communities. This emphasizes that such “induced” policy responses to population pressure do not happen automatically. 1999 2024-11-21T09:54:59Z 2024-11-21T09:54:59Z Working Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/161334 en Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Pender, John L. 1999. Rural population growth, agricultural change and natural resource management in developing countries;a review of hypotheses and some evidence from Honduras. EPTD Discussion Paper 48. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/161334
spellingShingle rural population
environmental impact analysis
agricultural policies
land management
Pender, John L.
Rural population growth, agricultural change and natural resource management in developing countries: a review of hypotheses and some evidence from Honduras
title Rural population growth, agricultural change and natural resource management in developing countries: a review of hypotheses and some evidence from Honduras
title_full Rural population growth, agricultural change and natural resource management in developing countries: a review of hypotheses and some evidence from Honduras
title_fullStr Rural population growth, agricultural change and natural resource management in developing countries: a review of hypotheses and some evidence from Honduras
title_full_unstemmed Rural population growth, agricultural change and natural resource management in developing countries: a review of hypotheses and some evidence from Honduras
title_short Rural population growth, agricultural change and natural resource management in developing countries: a review of hypotheses and some evidence from Honduras
title_sort rural population growth agricultural change and natural resource management in developing countries a review of hypotheses and some evidence from honduras
topic rural population
environmental impact analysis
agricultural policies
land management
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/161334
work_keys_str_mv AT penderjohnl ruralpopulationgrowthagriculturalchangeandnaturalresourcemanagementindevelopingcountriesareviewofhypothesesandsomeevidencefromhonduras