Fiji's farms are mainly subsistence farms.
Europe
Subsistence farms and Plantations
Brazil has a majority of Subsistence farming (owned by a family or small amount of people), but that is not to say that it doesn't have Commercial Farms. When we judge whether a country is commercial or subsistence, we judge the majority of the farming. Brazil's farming is Subsistence.
Agriculture is characterised by a dualistic structure of market-oriented commercial farms and much small-scale subsistence farming.
The subsistence agriculture regions in developing countries typically have small farms that provide just enough food for the family. These farms rely on traditional farming methods and produce a variety of crops for the family's consumption.
Subsistence farmers are frequently located in higher poverty areas in the developing or undeveloped world. As such, they cannot afford or cannot obtain higher quality seeds and fertilizers that would enable them to achieve higher yields.
Most Indian farmers are subsistence farmers who produce crops for their family. Farmers divide their property between their sons, which decreases the size of the farm.
Subsistence farming is commonly found in regions with small farms that provide just enough food for the family. This practice is often seen in developing countries where agriculture is the primary livelihood.
Yes. However, "hacienda" is a term no longer used: haciendas were large plantations or ranches, commonly found before the Mexican Revolution (1910-1921). Nowadays, most agriculture and ranching in Mexico is done on either a) low-tech, subsistence farms which lack the requisites to be considered an hacienda (e.g. haciendas are for profit-making, not for subsistence), or b) mechanized agriculture farms, akin to those found in industrialized countries.
The rich male citizens, the ordinary male citizens with subsistence farms, the non-propertied class, resident aliens, women, slaves.
subsistence