Poverty as Subsistence explores the "propertizing" land reform policy
that the World Bank advocated throughout the transitioning countries of
Eurasia, expecting poverty reduction to result from distributing
property titles over agricultural land to local (rural) populations.
China's early 1980s land reform offered support for this expectation,
but while the spread of propertizing reform to post-communist Eurasia
created numerous "subsistence" smallholders, it failed to stimulate
entrepreneurship or market-based production among the rural poor. Varga
argues that the World Bank advocated a simplified version of China's
land reform that ignored a key element of successful reforms: the
smallholders' immediate environment, the structure of actors and
institutions determining whether smallholders survive and grow in their
communities. With concrete insights from analysis of the land reform
program throughout post-communist Eurasia and multisited fieldwork in
Romania and Ukraine, this book details how and why land reform led to
subsistence and the mechanisms underpinning informal commercialization.