Agriculture in the Malaysian Region


Book Description

Malaysia's transition from a country dependent on agriculture and mining to an industrialized society is readily apparent, but the process of change remains poorly understood. When R.D. Hill began studying agriculture in Malaysia, Singapore and Brunei in the 1960s, he found swiddening, market-gardening, semi-commercial wet-rice cultivation and large scale plantations. Today, Malaysian agriculture has become highly capital-intensive and increasingly specialized, and many forms of production have all but disappeared. Once dependent on the export of primary products such as tin, rubber and palm oil, Malaysia is now an industrialized, middle income country. Singapore has nearly abandoned its primary sector. This completely revised edition of Hill's 1982 study, with two lengthy new chapters, explains the evolution of agriculture in Malaysia, Brunei and Singapore over the last forty years, with particular attention to the agro-ecosystems of the major crops.




Agriculture in Peninsular Malaysia


Book Description

Agriculture and economic development. Agricultural land-use. Rubber. Padi and rice. Coconut. Oil palm. Tobacco. Pineapples. Fruits. Vegetables. Sugar. Cocoa. Coffee. Tea. Tapioca. Land development. Livestock. Fisheries. Fertilizers and pesticides. Agricultural statistics.




Agricultural Taxation in Malaysia


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Bureaucracy and Rural Development in Malaysia


Book Description

This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1967.




The State of the Malaysian Agriculture


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Issues in Malaysian Development


Book Description

Conference papers on economic and social development in the framework of economic policy and a changing value system in Malaysia - examines agricultural policy during late colonialism, rice production, small farm ownership, the rubber industry, plantations; recent modernization, educational policy and occupational structures, the situation of women, urban areas retail trade, housing, reasons for rural areas poverty, politics and economic growth in Sarawak, etc. Bibliographys, graphs, maps, statistical tables. Conference held in Brisbane 1977 Mar.




Malay Farmers Respond


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