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Jeanne Cilliers . Photo

Jeanne Cilliers

Researcher

Jeanne Cilliers . Photo

The land-labour hypothesis revised : Wealth, labour and household composition on the South African Frontier

Author

  • Jeanne Cilliers
  • Erik Green

Summary, in English

Traditional frontier literature identifies a positive correlation between land availability and fertility. A common explanation is that the demand for children as labour is higher in newly established frontier regions compared to older and more densely populated farming regions. In this paper we contribute to the debate by analysing the relationship between household composition and land availability in a closing frontier region, i.e. the Graaff-Reinet district in South Africa’s Cape Colony from 1800-28. We show that the number of children present in farming households increased with frontier closure, while the presence of non-family labourers decreased over time. We explain this by, differently from the frontier literature, acknowledging that the demand for family labour was not a function of its marginal productivity and that farmers reacted to differently to diminishing land availability depending on their wealth. Poorer households, which made up the majority of this frontier population, responded to shrinking land availability by employing relatively more family labour, while the wealthiest group underwent capital intensification.

Department/s

  • Department of Economic History

Publishing year

2017-05-19

Language

English

Publication/Series

African Economic History Network Working Paper Series

Volume

2017

Issue

34

Document type

Working paper

Publisher

African Economic History Network

Topic

  • Social Sciences

Keywords

  • South Africa
  • household composition
  • agriculture
  • labour
  • pre-industrial
  • J23
  • N37
  • N57

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISBN: 978-91-981477-9-7