Dictionary Definition
sharecropping See sharecrop
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- The act of being a tenant farmer, especially in the southern United States, who farms the land in exchange for a portion of the crops.
Verb
sharecropping- present participle of sharecrop
Extensive Definition
Sharecropping is a system of agriculture or
agricultural production in which a landowner allows a sharecropper
to use the land in return for a share of the crop produced on the
land. Sharecropping has a long history and there are a wide range
of different situations and types of agreements that have
encompassed the system. Some are governed by tradition, others by
law. Legal contract systems such as the Italian mezzadria, the French métayage, and
Spanish aparcería occur widely. Islamic law contains
a traditional “musaqat” sharecropping agreement for the cultivation
of orchards.
Overview
Sharecropping typically involves a relatively rich land owner and a less wealthy or poor agricultural worker or farmer; although the reverse relationship, in which a poor landlord leases out to a rich tenant also exists. Sharecropping has benefits and costs for both the owners and the tenants(workers). It encourages the worker to remain on the land throughout the harvest season to work their land, solving the harvest rush problem. At the same time, since the tenant pays in shares of his harvest, owners are not insulated from the effects of bad harvest; this makes it markedly more risky to owners than currency-rent systems. Because tenants benefit from larger harvests, they have an incentive to work harder and invest in better methods than in a slave plantation system. However, by dividing the working force into many individual workers, large farms no longer benefit from economies of scale. On the whole, sharecropping is not as economically efficient as the gang agriculture of slave plantations. The advantages of sharecropping in other situations include enabling access for women to arable land where ownership rights are vested only in men. The system occurred extensively in colonial Africa, Scotland, and Ireland, and came into wide use in the Southeastern United States, including Appalachia during the Reconstruction era (1865-1877). After the American Civil War many planters had ample land but little money for wages. At the same time most of the former slaves were uneducated and impoverished. The solution was the sharecropping system, which continued the workers in the routine of cotton cultivation under rigid supervision. Economic features of the system were gradually extended to poor white farmers.http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1E1-sharecro.html Use of the sharecropper system has also been identified in England(as the practice of "farming to halves"). It is still used in many rural poor areas today, notably in Pakistan, and in India.Although there is a perception that sharecropping
was exploitative, “Evidence from around the world suggests that
sharecropping is often a way for differently endowed enterprises to
pool resources to mutual benefit, overcoming credit restraints and
helping to manage risk.”
It can have more than a passing similarity to
serfdom or indenture,
and it has therefore been seen as an issue of land reform
in contexts such as the Mexican
Revolution. However, Nyambara states that Eurocentric
historiographical devices like ‘feudalism’ or ‘slavery’ often
qualified by weak prefixes like ‘semi-’ or ‘quasi-’ are not helpful
in understanding the antecedents and functions of sharecropping in
Africa. http://www.ies.wisc.edu/ltc/live/zimbabwe/sym1b.pdf
Sharecropping agreements can however be made
fairly, as a form of tenant
farming or sharefarming that has a
variable rental payment, paid in arrears. There are three different
types of contracts.
- Workers can rent plots of land from the owner for a certain sum and keep the whole crop.
- Workers work on the land and earn a fixed wage from the land owner but keep none of the crop.
- Workers can neither work for nor get paid from the land owner, so the worker and land owner each keep a share of the crop.
Sharecropping by region
Africa
In colonial Africa, sharecropping was a feature of the agricultural life. White farmers, who owned most of the land, were frequently unable to work the whole of their farm for lack of capital. They therefore allowed black farmers to work the excess on a sharecropping basis. The 1913 Natives Land Act outlawed the ownership of land by blacks in areas designated for white ownership and effectively reduced the status of most sharecroppers to tenant farmers and then to farm laborers. In the 1960s, generous subsidies to white farmers meant that most farmers could afford to work their entire farms, and sharecropping faded out.The arrangement has reappeared in other African
countries in modern times, including Ghana and Zimbabwe.
United States
Although the sharecropping system is thought of as a post Civil War development, it existed in antebellum Mississippi, especially in the northeastern part of the state, an area with few slaves or plantations,http://mshistory.k12.ms.us/features/feature50/farmers.htm and most probably also existed in Tennessee. http://tennesseeencyclopedia.net/imagegallery.php?EntryID=S026After the Civil War
planters had to borrow money to produce crops. Interest rates on
these loans were around 15%. The indebtedness of cotton planters
increased through the early 1940s, and the average plantation fell
into bankruptcy about every twenty years. It is against this
backdrop that owners maintained their concentrated ownership of the
land.
In Reconstruction-era
United
States, sharecropping worked in collaboration with convict
lease to re-employ former slaves in jobs similar to those
performed prior to their emancipation. To avoid the worst situation
of becoming convict laborers, farmers were forced to enter into
extremely disadvantageous sharecrop agreements that generally left
them permanently in debt to the landowner.
Sharecrop farmers were loaned a plot of land to
work, and in exchange owed the owner a share of the crop at the end
of the season. Often the planter’s share was 1/3, though sometime
it was much higher. The sharecropper was required to purchase seed,
tools and fertilizer, as well as food and clothing, on credit at
the plantation store. When the harvest came, the sharecrop farmer
would harvest the whole crop and sell his or her portion to the
planter at a fixed price. By the time all the debts owed and
proceeds made were tallied up the farmer was lucky to break even.
As the planter set the price of the crop, and all the books were
kept and tallied by the planter, there was plenty of opportunity to
falsify the books, thus guaranteeing that the sharecropper never
made any profit.
Historically, whites made up two thirds or more
of the sharecroppers in Tennessee.http://tennesseeencyclopedia.net/imagegallery.php?EntryID=S026
In Mississippi, by 1900, 36% of all white farmers were tenants or
sharecroppers, while 85 percent of black farmers were. http://mshistory.k12.ms.us/features/feature50/farmers.htm
Sharecropping continued to be a significant institution in
Tennessee agriculture for more than sixty years after the Civil
War, peaking in importance in the early 1930s, when sharecroppers
operated approximately one-third of all farm units in the state.
http://tennesseeencyclopedia.net/imagegallery.php?EntryID=S026
At one point in the early 20th century, there were 5.5 million
white tenant, sharecrop, and laborers in the United States, and 3
million blacks.
The situation of landless farmers who challenged
the system in the rural south as late as 1941 has been described
thus: "he is at once a target subject of ridicule and vitriolic
denunciation; he may even be waylaid by hooded or unhooded leaders
of the community, some of whom may be public officials. If a white
man persists in “causing trouble” , the night riders may pay him a
visit, or the officials may haul him into court; if he is a Negro,
a mob may hunt him down.”
Effects of the 1933
Agricultural Adjustment Act of the New Deal
virtually brought the institution of sharecropping to an end in the
United States. http://tennesseeencyclopedia.net/imagegallery.php?EntryID=S026http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1E1-sharecro.html
During this time there were sharecroppers'
strikes in Arkansas and the Bootheel of Missouri in the 1930's. The
documentary "Oh Freedom After While" further examines the 1939
Missouri Sharecroppers' Strike.
Sharecropping agreements
Typically, a sharecropping agreement would specify which party was expected to cover certain expenses, like seed, fertilizer, weed control, irrigation district assessments, and fuel. Sometimes the sharecropper covers those costs, but they expect a larger share of the crop in return. The agreement should also indicate whether the sharecropper would use his own equipment to raise the crops, or use the landlord's equipment. The agreement should also indicate whether the landlord will pick up his or her share of the crop in the field, or whether the sharecropper will deliver it (and where it will be delivered.)For example, A landowner may have a sharecropper
farming an irrigated hayfield. The sharecropper uses his own
equipment, and covers all the costs of fuel and fertilizer. The
landowner pays the irrigation district assessments and does the
irrigating himself. The sharecropper cuts and bales the hay, and
delivers one-third of the baled hay to the landlord's feedlot,
about ten miles round trip. The sharecropper might also leave the
landlord's share of the baled hay in the field, where the landlord
would fetch it when he wanted hay.
Another arrangement could have the sharecropper
delivering the landlord's share of the product to market, in which
case the landlord would get his share in the form of the sale
proceeds. In that case, the agreement should indicate the timing of
the delivery to market, which can have a significant effect on the
ultimate price of some crops. The market timing decision should
probably be decided shortly before harvest, so that the landlord
has more complete information about the area's harvest, to
determine whether the crop will earn more money immediately after
harvest, or whether it should be stored until the price rises.
Market timing can entail storage costs as well, for some
crops.
When negotiating a crop sharing arrangement, you
should consider:
1. What crop(s) will the sharecropper produce? 2.
Who will pay for fuel? 3. Who will pay for seed? 4. Who owns the
farming equipment the sharecropper will use? 5. Who will provide
weed control, or other cultivation costs related to the crop? 6.
How does the landlord want to receive her share, in kind or in
cash? 7. If in cash, when will the crop be delivered to market (and
to what market?) 7. If in kind, where will the crop be delivered to
the landlord? 8. Who will provide the labor to irrigate? 9. Who
will pay the irrigation district assessments? (and on a related
note, who will vote the landowner's shares at irrigation district
meetings?) 10. Are there other costs related to this particular
farming operation that should be allocated in the agreement?
Farmer's cooperatives
Cooperative farming exists in many forms throughout the United States, Canada, and the rest of the world. Various arrangements can be made through collective bargaining or purchasing to get the best deals on seeds, supplies, and equipment. For example, members of a farmer's cooperative who cannot afford heavy equipment of their own can lease them for nominal fees from the cooperative. Farmers cooperatives can also allow groups of small farmers and dairymen to manage pricing and prevent undercutting by competitors.See also
References
sharecropping in German: Naturalpacht
sharecropping in Spanish: Mediería
sharecropping in French: Métayage
sharecropping in Korean: 소작인
sharecropping in Italian: Mezzadria
sharecropping in Japanese: 寄生地主制
sharecropping in Swedish: Avrad
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
agrarianism, agricultural
geology, agriculture, agrology, agronomics, agronomy, collective farm,
collectivism,
collectivity,
collegiality,
common ownership, communal effort, communion, communism, community, contour farming,
cooperation,
cooperative society, cultivation, culture, democracy, dirt farming, dry
farming, dryland farming, farm economy, farming, fruit farming, geoponics, grain farming,
husbandry, hydroponics, intensive
farming, kibbutz,
kolkhoz, mixed farming,
profit sharing, public ownership, rural economy, socialism, state ownership,
strip farming, subsistence farming, tank farming, thremmatology, tillage, tilth, town meeting, truck
farming