The Pojulu Economy depends largely on subsistence production.
In the Early Minoan, the villages were oriented principally towards subsistence production.
Native varieties are highly adapted to the range of ecological conditions found in the region and are of key importance for subsistence production.
Thirty-five percent of the day is spent on subsistence production, leaving the rest of the day open.
About one-half of total agricultural output is non-marketed subsistence production.
Half of the sector's output remains subsistence production.
In Laos, society is characterized by semiindependent rural villages engaged in subsistence agricultural production.
Most farms were geared toward subsistence production for family use.
In the mid-1950s, the Bahian economy could be considered a typical example of the primary-exporting model, which followed the subsistence production.
During the Tsarist rule, the agricultural economy diverged from subsistence production to production directly for the market.