Food grain procurement and consumption in China

Bibliographic Information

Food grain procurement and consumption in China

Kenneth R. Walker

(Contemporary China Institute publications)

Cambridge University Press, 1984

Available at  / 16 libraries

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Includes bibliographical references and indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book, first published in 1984, looks at the way in which food grains still provided the overwhelming proportion of food intake in China. In common with other countries at a similar stage of economic development, there was a marked rise in the demand for food grain, and consequent difficulties in ensuring a sufficient increase in supply. This book, written by the late Kenneth R. Walker, analyses how the Chinese Government through central planning attempted to supply its vast, rapidly growing population with adequate grain, from 1953 to 1980. The book provides provincial estimates of grain production, procurement and consumption and assesses the impact which redistribution had on consumption. It concludes by examining why, with higher grain output per head in the period 1978-1980 than in the 1950s, China continued to import large quantities of grain and why the policy of transferring grain internally seemed no longer viable.

Table of Contents

  • List of tables
  • List of figures
  • Preface
  • List of abbreviations
  • 1. The nature of China's grain problem in the 1950s
  • 2. Grain distribution under state planning, 1953-1957
  • 3. Inter-provincial grain transfers, 1953-1957
  • 4. Grain consumption, 1953-1957
  • 5. Grain production and distribution, 1958-1962: the impact of the Great Leap Forward
  • 6. Concluding remarks: grain production and distribution in the late 1970s
  • Appendices
  • Index of names
  • General index.

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