Why does sharecropping continue to exist as opposed to laborers renting land and paying for the rent with the proceeds of their harvest?   Sharecropping is a farming system in which owners of the land allow others to farm it and then the harvest is split, with some portion (let's say half) going to the laborer and some to the land owner.  Renting land (the "English system") is an alternative in which laborers pay a fixed monetary rent and then keep all of the proceeds of their production.  For hundreds of years commentators have pointed out that sharecropping lowers overall investment and effort and that renting both generates more revenue for owners and, on average, more revenue for laborers

Managerial Economics: A Problem Solving Approach
5th Edition
ISBN:9781337106665
Author:Luke M. Froeb, Brian T. McCann, Michael R. Ward, Mike Shor
Publisher:Luke M. Froeb, Brian T. McCann, Michael R. Ward, Mike Shor
Chapter2: The One Lesson Of Business
Section: Chapter Questions
Problem 4MC
icon
Related questions
Question

Why does sharecropping continue to exist as opposed to laborers renting land and paying for the rent with the proceeds of their harvest?

 

Sharecropping is a farming system in which owners of the land allow others to farm it and then the harvest is split, with some portion (let's say half) going to the laborer and some to the land owner.  Renting land (the "English system") is an alternative in which laborers pay a fixed monetary rent and then keep all of the proceeds of their production.  For hundreds of years commentators have pointed out that sharecropping lowers overall investment and effort and that renting both generates more revenue for owners and, on average, more revenue for laborers due to the harvest generally being much larger.  However, when prices drop significantly for agricultural outputs, rents can exceed the total value of output under the English system.  Given that in the English system rent returns more money to land owners and on average generates more income for laborers than sharecropping, why is sharecropping still so common?  Note: The answer is not that the sharecroppers do not own land.  Indeed, globally many sharecroppers are landowners who engage in sharecropping on the labor and land supply side at the same time, so they have land that they are having someone else sharecrop on while sharecropping on someone else's land at the same time.

Expert Solution
trending now

Trending now

This is a popular solution!

steps

Step by step

Solved in 2 steps

Blurred answer
Knowledge Booster
Private Information about Consumer Type
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, economics and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.
Similar questions
  • SEE MORE QUESTIONS
Recommended textbooks for you
Managerial Economics: A Problem Solving Approach
Managerial Economics: A Problem Solving Approach
Economics
ISBN:
9781337106665
Author:
Luke M. Froeb, Brian T. McCann, Michael R. Ward, Mike Shor
Publisher:
Cengage Learning