4.6 Article

Analyzing Agricultural Agglomeration in China

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 9, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su9020313

Keywords

agricultural evolution; geographical agglomeration; agricultural clusters; spatial analysis; China

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41471105, 41430637, 41471117, 41329001]
  2. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2013M531667, 2014T70672]
  3. program for Innovative Research Team (in Science and Technology) in University of Henan Province [16IRTSTHN012]
  4. The major projects of Ministry of education for humanities and social science key research base, China [15JJDZONGHE008, 13JJD790008]

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There has been little scholarly research on Chinese agriculture's geographic pattern of agglomeration and its evolutionary mechanisms, which are essential to sustainable development in China. By calculating the barycenter coordinates, the Gini coefficient, spatial autocorrelation and specialization indices for 11 crops during 1981-2012, we analyze the evolutionary pattern and mechanisms of agricultural agglomeration. We argue that the degree of spatial concentration of Chinese planting has been gradually increasing and that regional specialization and diversification have progressively been strengthened. Furthermore, Chinese crop production is moving from the eastern provinces to the central and western provinces. This is in contrast to Chinese manufacturing growth which has continued to be concentrated in the coastal and southeastern regions. In Northeast China, the Sanjiang and Songnen plains have become agricultural clustering regions, and the earlier domination of aquaculture and rice production in Southeast China has gradually decreased. In summary, this paper provides a political economy framework for understanding the regionalization of Chinese agriculture, focusing on the interaction among the objectives, decision-making behavior, path dependencies and spatial effects.

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