A concept first
elucidated by
anthropologist Eric T. Wolf. Wolf contends that one of the
defining characteristics of
peasant societies is their use of resources. The replacement fund is constituted by those resources allocated to assuring that the
subsistence agriculture practiced by many peasant societies may continue during the next
growing season.
This fund is often composed of the actual material necessary for continued farming: seed, tools, and livestock. Or anything that must be purchased or produced for continued tenancy. It is also frequently composed of credit, although usually not in the sense of dealing with a financial institution like a bank. In this case, credit is given by the landlord, often in terms of yield from the next year's crop. Banks don't care too much to deal with peasantry, since peasants don't have the kind of capital necessary to meet minimum requirements for loans and the like.
Related concepts: