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Data InsightsFewer people work in farming in Asia’s largest countries

Fewer people work in farming in Asia’s largest countries

This is a line graph depicting the decline in agricultural employment across various Asian countries over a 30-year period, from 1991 to 2019. The title reads "Employment in agriculture has dropped a lot across Asia in the last 30 years," emphasizing the significant reduction in this sector. 

There are several colored lines representing different countries, each showing a downward trend from 1991 to 2019: 
- India decreased from 63% to 43%.
- Bangladesh went from 70% to 38%.
- Vietnam dropped from 71% to 37%.
- Thailand fell from 60% to 31%.
- Indonesia declined from 56% to 29%.
- China saw a reduction from 60% to 25%.
- The Philippines went from 45% to 23%.

The graph is accompanied by a data source note indicating that the information is derived from the International Labor Organization via the World Bank. The chart has a Creative Commons BY attribution license from Our World in Data.

Over the last three decades, employment has changed dramatically across Asia.

In the early 1990s, almost two-thirds of the labor force in South Asia was employed in agriculture, and more than half in East Asia. Today, this is just 40% in the former, and one-quarter in the latter.

The chart shows the change across several countries in these regions. The share has fallen in all of them, but some stand out as having particularly dramatic transitions away from farming.

In Bangladesh and Vietnam, rates have fallen from around 70% to 38%. In China, they have dropped from 60% to 25%. In India, things have moved more slowly.

This matters for people still working in agriculture and those who have moved to jobs in other sectors. Productivity gains — which can allow family members and former workers to move away from the farm — mean that the financial returns per farm worker have increased over this time. Those who have moved to jobs in industry and services often see an increase in their wages. The result is that mean incomes have increased across these countries.

Read our data insight on this transition in today’s rich countries

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