Van Etten said that by revisiting the history and context of the 1930s, it became clear that Schultz had "got the story wrong" and that new narratives about the Green Revolution should reserve a much more important place for institutional change in agricultural development.
In his paper, Revisiting the adequacy of the economic policy narrative underpinning the Green Revolution, published in the journal Agriculture and Human Values, van Etten showed that Schultz deliberately tried to hide that the village's Mayan farmers were not challenged in technological terms and were able to reach relatively high economic returns.
"I hadn't expected this… What I thought I would find would be that the story only represents one kind of experience in agriculture, but actually it's not even about this village, it's a story about Schultz's version of the village that influenced the world," van Etten said, "and it's a wrong story."
The researcher explained that Schultz presented a distorted narrative which painted a picture of a population held back by a lack of access to modern varieties and fertilizers.
"What limited farms in that village wasn't technology, it was access to land, to markets, to credit," van Etten said, adding that Schultz's parable ignored ethnic tensions dominating market exchange, a main barrier for agricultural development.
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