Being a poor farmer in a wealthy country: A Swiss case study
Version
Published
Date Issued
2019
Author(s)
Crettaz, Eric
Type
Article
Language
English
Abstract
Many Swiss farming families face socioeconomic disadvantage despite Switzerland being a wealthy country with instruments of agricultural policy financially supporting almost all farmers. However, official poverty statistics exclude Swiss farmers and scientific knowledge is rare about how such situations are experienced. This article scrutinises the situation of Swiss farming families living in poverty or material deprivation by intertwining qualitative and quantitative methods to enrich both types of data and interpretations. By statistically comparing farmers with the self‐employed in other economic sectors, it uses a novel way of comparing the farming with the non‐farming population. The article shows that the poverty among farmers resembles that of the self‐employed with no or few employees in other economic sectors and describes the lived experiences of poverty and material deprivation. It concludes that adaptive preferences make farming families resilient to socioeconomic disadvantage, while possibly leading to a loss of their livelihood in the long run.
Subjects
H Social Sciences (General)
S Agriculture (General)
Publisher DOI
Journal or Serie
Sociologia Ruralis
ISSN
0038-0199
Volume
59
Issue
3
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
Submitter
Lutz, Simon
Citation apa
Contzen, S., & Crettaz, E. (2019). Being a poor farmer in a wealthy country: A Swiss case study. In Sociologia Ruralis (Vol. 59, Issue 3, pp. 393–418). Wiley-Blackwell. https://doi.org/10.24451/arbor.8386
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