World Politics: International Politics on the World Stage, Brief, 4/e
John T. Rourke,
University of Connecticut - Storrs Mark A. Boyer,
University of Connecticut - Storrs
Preserving and Enhancing Human Rights and Dignity
Agricultural Production per Capita
Agricultural production includes the value of all crop and livestock products originating
within a country for the base period of 1994-1996. The index value portrays the disposable output (after deductions for livestock feed and seed for planting) of a country's agriculture in comparison with the base period 1989-1991. Thus, the production values show not only the relative ability of countries to produce food but also show whether or
not that ability has increased or decreased over an eight-year period.
In general, global
food production has kept up with or very slightly exceeded population growth. However, there are significant regional variations in the trend of food production keeping up
with or surpassing population growth. For example, agricultural production in Africa
and in Middle America has fallen, while production in South America and Asia has grown more rapidly than agricultural productivity. Where rapid increases in food production per capita exist (as in certain countries in South America, Asia, and Europe),
most often the reason is the development of new agricultural technologies that have
allowed food production to grow faster than population. In much of Asia, for example,
the so-called Green Revolution of new, highly productive strains of wheat and rice
made positive index values possible. Also in Asia, the cessation of major warfare
allowed some countries (Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam) to show substantial increases
over the 1982-1984 index. In some cases, a drop in production per capita reflects government decisions to limit production in order to maintain higher prices for agricultural
products. The United States and Japan fall into this category.