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Some Conceptional Thoughts on the Impact of Social Networks on Non-farm Rural Employment

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  • Traikova, Diana
  • Mollers, Judith
  • Fritzsch, Jana
  • Buchenrieder, Gertrud

Abstract

Everybody knows: rural regions offer fewer possibilities for non-farm employment than urban areas. For this reason, it was the semi-subsistence farm structures that had to absorb the released workers from the big rural state enterprises and the urban-rural migrants fleeing unemployment in the towns in the course of economic transformation. This has created hidden unemployment in farm households and thus low agricultural labour productivity in the European transition economies. From a policy point of view, it is therefore desirable to promote new jobs outside the farm sector in order to decrease the livelihood dependency on agriculture. But do rural people actually have a choice? And if so, will they go for non-farm employment? In Europe's transition economies rural people taking up non-farm jobs seem to do this predominantly due to distress-push and not so much due to demand-pull factors. The former would imply that distress pushes them to earn money even in very low-paid jobs. The latter indicates better remunerated job options because there is demand. When individuals decide what kind of employment to go for, they consider among other factors also the support they can get from relatives and friends, the opinion of the local society in general, the resources they can mobilize and the barriers they are supposed to overcome. Since the late 1990s, a number of studies have been done with respect to non-farm rural employment (NFRE) and its contribution to rural development. However, the role of social capital and the underlying networks in getting access to NFRE has not yet been researched. The objectives of this paper are to give an overview of the social capital concepts, stressing on bonding, bridging and linking social capital.

Suggested Citation

  • Traikova, Diana & Mollers, Judith & Fritzsch, Jana & Buchenrieder, Gertrud, 2007. "Some Conceptional Thoughts on the Impact of Social Networks on Non-farm Rural Employment," 104th Seminar, September 5-8, 2007, Budapest, Hungary 7801, European Association of Agricultural Economists.
  • Handle: RePEc:ags:eaa104:7801
    DOI: 10.22004/ag.econ.7801
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Productivity Commission, 2003. "Social capital: reviewing the concept and its policy implications," Public Economics 0307001, University Library of Munich, Germany.
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    Cited by:

    1. Hans Wydler & Christian Flury2, 2009. "Pluriaktive Landwirtschaft in der Schweiz - Eine sekundärstatistische Analyse," Journal of Socio-Economics in Agriculture (Until 2015: Yearbook of Socioeconomics in Agriculture), Swiss Society for Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology, vol. 2(1), pages 205-232.

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