Coxhead, IanSouthgate, Doug2016-04-192016-04-192000Int. J. Agricultural Resources, Governance and Ecology 1(1): 68-761462-46051741-500449_Economy_Wide.pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/10919/65439This paper examines the environmental problem of deforestation in tropical countries with high levels of persistent poverty. The authors explore reasons why the commencement of development does not cause a decrease in the expansion of agricultural onto fragile land. Pointing to the case study of Thailand, they suggest that changing demands for agricultural productivity and favorable agroclimatic characteristics of frontier lands are significant factors contributing to continued deforestation even when living standards rise. The authors suggest that the creation of off-farm employment opportunities is crucial for making issues of environmental sustainability compatible with rural income growth.application/pdfen-USIn CopyrightRural developmentEconomic growthDeforestationIncome generationSustainable developmentLivelihoodsTropical zonesPovertyEconomic impactsConservation incentivesAgricultural colonizationDevelopment and the environmentTropical deforestationThailandOff-farm employmentExternalitiesGovernanceEconomy-wide sources of agricultural expansion in developing countriesArticle - RefereedCopyright 2000 Inderscience Enterprises Limited