Farmers and traders in a chaning maize market in East Java

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RT Generic T1 Farmers and traders in a chaning maize market in East Java A1 Yonekura, Hitoshi YR 1996 LK https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/4058 PB CGPRT Centre Monograph AB <p>In recent years the so-called institutional aspects of markets are receiving more attention. In part the expanded attention for institutional explanations of markets is a counter movement against the rigid analysis of markets with a demand and supply tool only. The institutional approach is somewhat more connective. It attempts to explain the actual working of markets - imperfections, price formation etc. - from the rules of the game and power of market participants because these also determine economic exchange. Agriculture, par excellence, is a field where one also has to include biophysical factors in determining the structure of transactions. The study of Mr. Hitoshi Yonekura, who worked at the CGPRT Centre from 1989 to 1991, can be regarded as a contribution to the institutional approach in general, because of the inclusion of biophysical factors in his approach.</p> <p>In studying the market of maize in East Java. Mr. Yonekura has taken into account the structure of agriculture production, which is determined by biophysical factors, and expanding demand and emerging market outlets. Dr. Yonekura has juxtaposed the structure of collection trade in harvested maize - the biophysical quality standards as induced by user requirements and the product characteristics of maize - with the structure and standards of rural finance. He observes a parallel between the lack of standardization in maize collection and the lack of standardization in rural finance for maize traders.</p> OL English(30) TY - GEN T1 - Farmers and traders in a chaning maize market in East Java AU - Yonekura, Hitoshi Y1 - 1996 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/4058 PB - CGPRT Centre Monograph AB -In recent years the so-called institutional aspects of markets are receiving more attention. In part the expanded attention for institutional explanations of markets is a counter movement against the rigid analysis of markets with a demand and supply tool only. The institutional approach is somewhat more connective. It attempts to explain the actual working of markets - imperfections, price formation etc. - from the rules of the game and power of market participants because these also determine economic exchange. Agriculture, par excellence, is a field where one also has to include biophysical factors in determining the structure of transactions. The study of Mr. Hitoshi Yonekura, who worked at the CGPRT Centre from 1989 to 1991, can be regarded as a contribution to the institutional approach in general, because of the inclusion of biophysical factors in his approach.
In studying the market of maize in East Java. Mr. Yonekura has taken into account the structure of agriculture production, which is determined by biophysical factors, and expanding demand and emerging market outlets. Dr. Yonekura has juxtaposed the structure of collection trade in harvested maize - the biophysical quality standards as induced by user requirements and the product characteristics of maize - with the structure and standards of rural finance. He observes a parallel between the lack of standardization in maize collection and the lack of standardization in rural finance for maize traders.
@misc{20.500.12870_4058 author = {Yonekura, Hitoshi}, title = {Farmers and traders in a chaning maize market in East Java}, year = {1996}, abstract = {In recent years the so-called institutional aspects of markets are receiving more attention. In part the expanded attention for institutional explanations of markets is a counter movement against the rigid analysis of markets with a demand and supply tool only. The institutional approach is somewhat more connective. It attempts to explain the actual working of markets - imperfections, price formation etc. - from the rules of the game and power of market participants because these also determine economic exchange. Agriculture, par excellence, is a field where one also has to include biophysical factors in determining the structure of transactions. The study of Mr. Hitoshi Yonekura, who worked at the CGPRT Centre from 1989 to 1991, can be regarded as a contribution to the institutional approach in general, because of the inclusion of biophysical factors in his approach.
In studying the market of maize in East Java. Mr. Yonekura has taken into account the structure of agriculture production, which is determined by biophysical factors, and expanding demand and emerging market outlets. Dr. Yonekura has juxtaposed the structure of collection trade in harvested maize - the biophysical quality standards as induced by user requirements and the product characteristics of maize - with the structure and standards of rural finance. He observes a parallel between the lack of standardization in maize collection and the lack of standardization in rural finance for maize traders.
}, url = {https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/4058} } @misc{20.500.12870_4058 author = {Yonekura, Hitoshi}, title = {Farmers and traders in a chaning maize market in East Java}, year = {1996}, abstract = {In recent years the so-called institutional aspects of markets are receiving more attention. In part the expanded attention for institutional explanations of markets is a counter movement against the rigid analysis of markets with a demand and supply tool only. The institutional approach is somewhat more connective. It attempts to explain the actual working of markets - imperfections, price formation etc. - from the rules of the game and power of market participants because these also determine economic exchange. Agriculture, par excellence, is a field where one also has to include biophysical factors in determining the structure of transactions. The study of Mr. Hitoshi Yonekura, who worked at the CGPRT Centre from 1989 to 1991, can be regarded as a contribution to the institutional approach in general, because of the inclusion of biophysical factors in his approach.
In studying the market of maize in East Java. Mr. Yonekura has taken into account the structure of agriculture production, which is determined by biophysical factors, and expanding demand and emerging market outlets. Dr. Yonekura has juxtaposed the structure of collection trade in harvested maize - the biophysical quality standards as induced by user requirements and the product characteristics of maize - with the structure and standards of rural finance. He observes a parallel between the lack of standardization in maize collection and the lack of standardization in rural finance for maize traders.
}, url = {https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/4058} } TY - GEN T1 - Farmers and traders in a chaning maize market in East Java AU - Yonekura, Hitoshi UR - https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12870/4058 PB - CGPRT Centre Monograph AB -In recent years the so-called institutional aspects of markets are receiving more attention. In part the expanded attention for institutional explanations of markets is a counter movement against the rigid analysis of markets with a demand and supply tool only. The institutional approach is somewhat more connective. It attempts to explain the actual working of markets - imperfections, price formation etc. - from the rules of the game and power of market participants because these also determine economic exchange. Agriculture, par excellence, is a field where one also has to include biophysical factors in determining the structure of transactions. The study of Mr. Hitoshi Yonekura, who worked at the CGPRT Centre from 1989 to 1991, can be regarded as a contribution to the institutional approach in general, because of the inclusion of biophysical factors in his approach.
In studying the market of maize in East Java. Mr. Yonekura has taken into account the structure of agriculture production, which is determined by biophysical factors, and expanding demand and emerging market outlets. Dr. Yonekura has juxtaposed the structure of collection trade in harvested maize - the biophysical quality standards as induced by user requirements and the product characteristics of maize - with the structure and standards of rural finance. He observes a parallel between the lack of standardization in maize collection and the lack of standardization in rural finance for maize traders.
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In recent years the so-called institutional aspects of markets are receiving more attention. In part the expanded attention for institutional explanations of markets is a counter movement against the rigid analysis of markets with a demand and supply tool only. The institutional approach is somewhat more connective. It attempts to explain the actual working of markets - imperfections, price formation etc. - from the rules of the game and power of market participants because these also determine economic exchange. Agriculture, par excellence, is a field where one also has to include biophysical factors in determining the structure of transactions. The study of Mr. Hitoshi Yonekura, who worked at the CGPRT Centre from 1989 to 1991, can be regarded as a contribution to the institutional approach in general, because of the inclusion of biophysical factors in his approach.
In studying the market of maize in East Java. Mr. Yonekura has taken into account the structure of agriculture production, which is determined by biophysical factors, and expanding demand and emerging market outlets. Dr. Yonekura has juxtaposed the structure of collection trade in harvested maize - the biophysical quality standards as induced by user requirements and the product characteristics of maize - with the structure and standards of rural finance. He observes a parallel between the lack of standardization in maize collection and the lack of standardization in rural finance for maize traders.