Oh, dude, like, farmers in Mesopotamia totally needed a division of labor to handle all the farming tasks efficiently. By having different people focus on specific jobs like planting, harvesting, and irrigation, they could like, get stuff done way faster. It's like teamwork, but with more dirt and less high-fives.
Protecting its own farmers by subsidizing them makes it more difficult for farmers (e.g. in Africa0 to sell (export) their goods. This may create global inequality.
Farmers benefit from various agricultural advancements and policies, such as improved technology, access to better seeds, and efficient irrigation systems, which enhance crop yields and reduce labor costs. Additionally, government subsidies and support programs can provide financial stability, helping farmers invest in their operations and adapt to market changes. Overall, these factors contribute to increased productivity and profitability for farmers.
Several factors contribute to the plight of farmers, including climate change, which leads to unpredictable weather patterns and extreme conditions that can devastate crops. Additionally, fluctuating market prices and high input costs for seeds, fertilizers, and machinery strain their financial stability. Access to water resources and land ownership issues further exacerbate their challenges, often leaving farmers vulnerable to economic and environmental pressures. Lastly, inadequate government support and infrastructure can limit their ability to compete and thrive in the marketplace.
There are the armchair farmers, drugstore farmers, hobby farmers, backseat farmers, hippy farmers, and finally, the real farmers.
Farmers wouldn't be farmers without agriculture, and agriculture wouldn't be agriculture without farmers. Simple as that.
it provided irrigation for farmers. it provided fish ,water. it also provides means of transport
the mesopotamian farmers loed their feilds, and milked cows, and collected eggs and some other things
Farmers didn't use them
they did everything that farmers today do
The early Mesopotamians were primarily farmers. However, there was specialization of labor even in the beginning of Mesopotamian civilization, so some were builders, soldiers, priests, merchants, or scribes, etc.
They lived neqr Tigris and Euphrates
Early life Mesopotamian farmers grew Barley and Sweet Potatoes.
Farmers provided food and labor for the cities.
they're farmers farmed food and it was dispersed amongst the city
Mesopotamia farmers built canals to irrigate their fields.
That would depend on who they were, some were kings others peasant farmers.
Through irrigation canals