A. Burger, Agricultural development and land concentration in a central European country: a case study of Hungary, LAND USE P, 18(3), 2001, pp. 259-268
Land has been newly re-allotted in those General European former socialist
countries, the agriculture of which was previously dominated by production
co-operatives and state farms. Land privatization was undoubtedly an urgent
need but the manner of its fulfillment was essentially politically motivat
ed, based more on the ideology of different peasant parties than on economi
c considerations. Generally, millions of people received small parcels, oft
en in several pieces, and many of the heirs of the former owners had never
worked in agriculture and did not even live in rural areas. Scattered land
ownership was not suitable for modern farming, since it could not be well e
quipped, mechanised and cultivated. The average size of these farms lags fa
r behind that of the EU countries where farms must also be highly subsidise
d in order to survive. The real situation is, however, not so bad. Land ten
ure is much more concentrated than ownership. Some of the big farms have su
rvived either as renamed and restructured co-operatives or as different com
panies organized from the former co-operatives and state farms in most Cent
ral European Countries (CECs). In Hungary they cultivate 45 per cent of the
land and keep a large part of the livestock. In the small-farm sector, a s
ignificant concentration has also occurred recently. According to our repre
sentative survey in 11 counties of Hungary in 1998, 60-70 per cent of the l
and of individual farms is cultivated by farms larger than 50 ha. They prod
uce, together with the large corporate farms, the bulk of the marketed prod
ucts. Farms under 10 ha are mostly part-time farms or holdings of retired a
nd unemployed people. These farms have more of a social than an economic si
gnificance. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.