This paper is a case study of three rural villages which contains a total of 196 samplings and it is especially based on the analysis of the present status of farming succession problem.
The significant findings are as follows:
1. In rural villages...
This paper is a case study of three rural villages which contains a total of 196 samplings and it is especially based on the analysis of the present status of farming succession problem.
The significant findings are as follows:
1. In rural villages farmer's traditional atittude toward agriculture is rapidly changing.
This is caused by farmer's changing view of value system.
2. In comparison with other professions farmers do not consider farming as a money earning job.
3. Desire for the better education of their second generation in the future is very high although they themselves had very low level of education in the past.
4. The most qualified man power in the rural villages are leaving their farms to get jobs in the cities. 87.2% of out going population were under the age of 30 and 77.8% of migrants had more than middle school education.
5. Four fifth of 196 farm-households did not yet determine their farming successor. If this tendency continues they will be confronted with serious farming succession problem when senior farming population retire from farming in near future.