ABSTRACT

A study of economic development in the Dominican Republic, this book argues that rigid economic structures and poor use of labour resources have created conditions that undermine the demand for labour, and maintain perpetual poverty and unemployment. Viewing the problem from a broad perspective, the author analyzes labour and credit markets, offers empirical data on agricultural yields, and examines such socioeconomic issues as the living conditions among the peasantry, the demand for immigrant Haitian labour, and migration from rural to urban areas.

chapter |11 pages

Prologue: The Voice That Was Never Heard

chapter 1|13 pages

Introduction

chapter 3|19 pages

Unemployment or Poverty?

chapter 4|33 pages

The Dominican Peasantry

chapter 5|40 pages

Produce Marketing and Price Policies

chapter 6|29 pages

Land Tenure Structure and Reform Attempts

chapter 7|29 pages

Agricultural Credit

chapter 8|33 pages

The Use of Haitian Labor*

chapter 9|56 pages

The Effects of Market Distortions

chapter 11|15 pages

Concluding Remarks