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3
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0038658203
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Lewis, Singh, Oxford University Press, reprinted in Agarwala, In his seminal paper on ‘Economic development with unlimited supplies of labour’, Lewis writes that ‘Capitalists have experience of certain types of investment, say of trading and plantation agriculture, and not of other types, and stick to what they know. The result is a lopsided economy with overinvestment in certain sectors and underinvestment in others.’
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(1968)
The Economics of Underdevelopment
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8
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85025735176
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A biography of labour
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Institute of Social and Ecomomic Research, Mona, Jamaica
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(1975)
Caribbean Economy
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Best1
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10
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85025735176
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A biography of labour
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Institute of Social and Ecomomic Research, Mona, Jamaica, Ch. 3
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(1975)
Caribbean Economy
, pp. 81
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Best1
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11
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85025737825
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OUP, Ch. 3, This argument follows from the profit-maximizing principle governing the use of factors of production. When he acquires a slave, the planter buys a fixed stock of labour. His labour policy will be different from what it would have been if labour services were hired for a wage. In the first case, profit maximization requires that labour, which has no marginal cost, should be worked as intensively as possible in order to recover the cost of investment as rapidly as possible. The primum mobile of the plantation owner was to extract as much labour service as possible out of the available labour force. This led to a system of exploitative authoritarian management which was at its peak on the slave plantations.
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(1972)
Persistent Poverty: Underdevelopment in Plantation Economies of the Third World
, pp. 54
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Beckford, G.L.1
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19
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85025734447
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The characteristics of the small planter class in a small plantation economy: the case of Mauritius
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R. Virahsawmy, These figures relate to the total area under Indian cane cultivation. This term covers different categories of holdings including a few large estates belonging to Indians. However, separate figures are available for a few odd years, which indicate that the bulk of the Indian cane land belonged to small planters.
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(1977)
Characteristics of Island Economies
, pp. 63
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Nababsing1
Virahsawmy2
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21
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85025742482
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N. Stern, ‘On labour markets in less developed countries’, paper prepared for the Development Research Centre of the World Bank, mimeo, Ch. 4, p. 46. Cane farming resembles share-cropping in certain respects. Although the farmer cultivates his own land, he pays the factory to process his cane by giving the miller a share of his output. Millers receive between 25 and 30% of the average sugar content of farmers' canes.
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27
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85025740659
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Statutory minimum wage fixing in the sugar industry of Mauritius
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The ratio of labour to lad in the sugar industry of Mauritius is much higher than in many other countries; one daily-paid worker is employed for each 3–4 acres harvested by millers with estates and large planters. In 1966, it was reported that the sugar industry in Mauritius used seven times as many workers per acre as Australia and twice as many as Guyana and Jamaica.
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(1967)
International Labour Review
, vol.96
, Issue.3
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Chesworth, D.P.1
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33
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85025735176
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A biography of labour
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Institute of Social and Ecomomic Research, Mona, Jamaica
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(1975)
Caribbean Economy
, pp. 155
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Best1
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34
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85025717317
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Emergence historique et adaptation des rapports de production dans le cadre d'une économie de plantation insulaire: le cas de la Réunion
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Nababsing, Virahsawmy, University of Mauritius, The economic effects of departmentalization in Réunion, Martinique and Guadeloupe are analysed by Crusol in ‘Quelques aspects économiques de la départementalisation aux Antilles Francaises’
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(1977)
Characteristics of Island Economies
, pp. 43
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Boisson, J.M.1
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35
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85025744793
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The characteristics of the small planter class in a small plantation economy: the case of Mauritius
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R. Virahsawmy, University of Mauritius, translated from French
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(1977)
Characteristics of Island Economies
, pp. 85
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Crusol1
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