Chapter, Paragraph
1 I,1 | distortions into the land market.(5)~The private appropriation
2 I (5)| c) the establishment of market organizations and the adoption
3 I,2 | intervention that alter the market distribution mechanism and
4 I,4 | the sidelines of the land market, being excluded from the
5 I,4 | poorly integrated into the market, and their difficulties
6 I,4 | techniques. Poor knowledge of the market means that they can neither
7 I,4 | required for export.~If the market prompts small farmers to
8 I,4 | Unfavourable climatic or market conditions can lead to a
9 I,7 | in relation to the credit market, a lack of concern over
10 I,9 | The Credit Market~15. Traditional regulations
11 I,9 | regulations governing the credit market help to produce the effects
12 I,9 | is often no legal credit market, so that small farmers have
13 I,10 | large-scale concerns for market reasons;~– insufficient
14 I,12 | distortions in the land market: political interventions
15 I,12 | political interventions in the market often directly or indirectly
16 I,12 | efficiency and equity of the land market through normal trading operations;~
17 II,9 | into the external labour market by taking on paid workers.~
18 II,9 | access to the land credit market, and to ensure sustainability
19 III,3 | join forces and face the market together, for this is the
20 III,3 | can give them effective market power and provide informed
21 III,7 | supply of produce to the market. This in turn gives rise
22 III,7 | small-scale economies and forms of market power that make the associated
23 III,9 | inevitably has adverse effects on market mechanisms and the whole
24 III,10| growth, by expanding the market, stimulating efficiency,
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