Effects of Peer Pressure in Agro Clusters of West Java
Effects of Peer Pressure in Agro Clusters of West Java
Effects of Peer Pressure in Agro Clusters of West Java
To cite this article: Dadan Wardhana, Rico Ihle & Wim Heijman (2021) Effects of Peer Pressure
in Agro-clusters of West Java, Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies, 57:2, 233-256, DOI:
10.1080/00074918.2020.1780197
Dadan Wardhana*
Government of Bandung Regency, West Java
INTRODUCTION
The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO 2017) highlights that farmers situated
near each other in large numbers and specialised in producing a certain commod-
ity may benefit from positive externalities. These include increased agricultural
outputs and access to markets and information, as well as increased innovation
(OECD, FAO and UNCDF 2016; Gálvez-Nogales 2010). However, such regional
concentration of farming may also result in highly competitive economic environ-
ments. That is, farmers situated very close to each other in dense clusters may face
substantial economic pressure, as they, for example, compete with numerous peers
for purchasing production factors or for marketing their farm outputs to buyers.
Smith (2001), Thapa (2010) and CSR Asia (2017) report that smallholder profits
may decrease as a result of such increased competition. Moreover, Fishbein and
Ajzen (2010, 10) find that the social pressure that individuals perceive may result in
behavioural changes. Farmers who feel increasing competitive pressure from peers
are likely to adapt their actions either by teaming up with peers or by increasingly
solving their problems individually, such as by attaining superior seeds or fertilisers.
Such pressure from peers may yield positive and negative effects. On the one
hand, farmers may be more inclined to use new production technology, such as
improved seeds or fertilisers, because they are influenced by many neighbouring
farmers’ use of the technology. They may also feel that they need to improve the
quality of their farm outputs because peers producing the same crop realise larger
sales revenues due to higher output quality. On the other hand, intense competition
between regionally concentrated agents of an industry may result in considerable
challenges for individuals. Output prices tend to decrease when many suppliers
compete to sell their produce (Alcácer 2006). In this situation, prices for production
inputs tend to increase as each actor tries to acquire inputs needed for produc-
tion (Meyer-Stamer 1998). Porter (1998) reports that fierce economic competition
between densely clustered economic agents of one industry tends to erode profits.
This is despite competition yielding the desired effects of agglomerations, such as
efficient resource allocation and regional knowledge spillovers.
This article assesses the effects of competitive pressure created by concentrated
economic activity. Understanding both the factors that drive peer pressure among
farmers and its effects on their behaviour may provide insight into the institutional
characteristics that help to reduce socio-economic conflicts among neighbouring
farmers. Such knowledge is important for Indonesia and other Southeast Asian
countries, as farmers in these regions are said to be challenged by negative exter-
nalities caused by highly competitive economic environments (FAO 2018). The FAO
highlights that the main source of these competitive environments is a growing
population that results in a higher number of actors increasingly competing.
This article’s analysis is very relevant in the Indonesian context, as the country
has been declaring itself an agrarian nation for decades (Rakhmat and Saputra
2016). Hamilton-Hart (2019) stresses that smallholder farmers play a crucial role
in achieving self-sufficiency in food production, which has been proclaimed a
priority by the Indonesian government in recent years. The FAO (2018) stresses
that the main challenges these smallholders face relate to declining farm sizes and
high prices of agricultural inputs. Arifin et al. (2019) and Statistics Indonesia (BPS
2013) report that both aspects are caused by urban sprawl, which is expanding
by 4.1% per year. This sprawl results in declining availability of land, water and
pasture. As the farmer population declines by about 1.75% per year (BPS 2013),
the number of agricultural labourers and the structure of input markets are also
changing significantly. The result is markedly higher competition between farmers
for increasingly scarce resources.
Hamyana and Romadi (2017), for instance, find that social conflicts among
Indonesian farmers frequently occur despite the prevalence of farmer groups
(kelompok tani/gabungan kelompok tani) and cooperatives (koperasi). They also observe
an uneven distribution of benefits from government subsidies among elites and
members of farmer organisations. Conflicts among farmers over water accessibil-
ity have been reported in the literature, for example, for the Majalengka Regency
of West Java (World Bank 2011). These conflicts have led to vegetable production
constraints, including for the Batang and Banjarnegara regencies of Central Java
(Susanto 2021).
Using data from a survey of 1,250 farmers in West Java, we assess to what extent
peer pressure in high-density agro-clusters affects farmers’ behaviour and income.
Effects of Peer Pressure in Agro-clusters of West Java 235
CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK
Krugman’s (1991) ‘new economic geography’ literature has established that
regional agglomerations of any industry yield positive effects, such as economies of
scale and regional knowledge spillovers. The literature on regional agglomerations
also covers agricultural production (FAO 2017; OECD, FAO and UNCDF 2016).
Porter (1998) notes that economic pressure from peers within an industry tends to
be more intense in regions where many of the peers’ businesses are close to each
other. In the context of agriculture in Southeast Asia, such spatial agglomerations
are often referred to as agro-clusters (Deichmann et al. 2008).
Folta, Cooper and Baik (2006) stress that competition for resources such as labour
or land, or for marketing opportunities, increases as a cluster grows. However, a
farmer may still behave altruistically and cooperatively towards peers by sharing
agricultural information on input supply, new technologies, selling prices, mar-
keting options or government subsidies. Braguinsky and Rose (2009) report that
the sharing of knowledge among neighbouring farmers in highly competitive
environments is likely to increase the adoption of new technologies. More frequent
social interactions within agro-clusters also accelerate the effects of agglomeration
on farmers’ behaviour towards peers (Suire and Vicente 2009). On the other hand,
some farmers may act selfishly by withholding information that would increase
the farm income of peers. Fehr and Fischbacher (2002) note that competition may
prompt people to choose between being cooperative or selfish.
1. Smallholders are defined as farmers who cultivate agricultural land of less than two
hectares (Khalil et al. 2017). BPS (2013) reports that about 70% of West Javanese farmers
belong to this category.
2. BPS (2013) reports between 1 and 187 farmers per square kilometre across Indonesia’s
provinces. Across West Java, there are between 14 and 373 farmers per square kilometre,
indicating that this province covers a wide range of farmer densities.
236 Dadan Wardhana, Rico Ihle and Wim Heijman
Farmer’s
Farmer’s personality Past experience
demographics
1. Attitudes towards
Peers’ behaviour
peer pressure
Behavioural
Peers’ cognitive 2. Perceived social
Behavioural intention responses
proximity (peer) pressure
to peer pressure
Ethical behaviour
Fully ethical
be
B A
b1
b2 C
u1
u2
to2 to1
0
πe π’1 π2 π1 π’max πmax Profit (π)
profit erosion resulting from greater competition (Porter 1998). Additional profit
beyond the level πe can be realised only through lower ethics (higher self-interest).
This mechanism has been empirically confirmed. Graafland (2002), James and
Hendrickson (2008) and Graham (2014) show for various countries that an increase
in competitive pressure perceived by farmers reduces their ethical behaviour.
METHODS
Data and Variables
West Java is one of the most important agricultural production regions of Indonesia.
According to BPS (2015), the province contributes more than 15% of Indonesia’s
annual rice production and 20%–40% of the country’s horticultural production.
The region is also a major producer of coffee, tea, vegetables, fruit and livestock.
These crops are produced across West Java in geographic clusters chosen for the
Effects of Peer Pressure in Agro-clusters of West Java 239
e
rd=
s es − Es (1)
E
3. Our choice was based on 18 combinations involving the following variables: density of
agro-clusters (high, medium or low), poverty rates (high, medium or low) and subdistrict
classification (rural or urban), according to Head of Central Bureau of Statistics Regulation
37/2010. As three combinations did not have corresponding regions, we selected 15 feasible
subdistricts.
4. Online appendix A1 describes the exact measurements of the behavioural variables con-
sidered. Online appendix C1 provides a descriptive analysis of them.
5. For details on the exact measurements of these variables, see appendix A2 and tables B1
and B2 in the online appendix.
240 Dadan Wardhana, Rico Ihle and Wim Heijman
6
β 0 + β1dpressi + β 2 sq _ dpressi + β 3 rd s + ∑β pc cpress pi
bni =
p =1
6 2 15
(2)
+ ∑β sq _ cpress + ∑β d + ∑β Vxi + ε i .
sq
p pi
d
f fi
v
x
=p 1 = f 1= x 1
6. Drawing from an FAO survey module, we quantify food vulnerability by using a five-
point Likert scale. Detailed descriptive statistics of all variables are given in table B3. The
FAO survey module’s Food Insecurity Experience Scale contains eight questions that refer
to farmers’ individual experiences of food insecurity and its effects on them as well as on
their household members (Ballard, Kepple and Cafiero 2013).
7. For details on the measurements of these variables, see online appendix A and table B2.
242 Dadan Wardhana, Rico Ihle and Wim Heijman
2 2
0 0
−2 −2
−4 −4
0 2 4 6 8 10 −6 ₋4 −2 0 2 4
2 2
1 1
0 0
−1 −1
−2 −2
0 2 4 6 8 10 −6 −4 −2 0 2 4
2 7 5 5 2 5 7
ir 0 nI bni xII X xi rIII ir rIV, nir bni rV, xir X xi i . (3)
n 1 x 1 r 1 r 1 n 1 r 1 x 1
The dependent variable πir measures the farm income of farmer i in region r, cal-
culated as the difference between all farm revenue and all farm costs from January
to March 2015 in millions of rupiah. The variables bni are identical to the ones in
equation 2. The term Xxi represents seven control variables that complement those
represented by Vxi in equation 2. These seven variables include business activities of
the farmer and characteristics of the region of the farm. We also include a dummy
variable for membership in a farmer group, farmer association or cooperative, in
equation 3. We do this to control for whether such membership is associated with
an increase in farmer income (Verhofstadt and Maertens 2014). The y’s are sets of
coefficients to be estimated using OLS. The error term is εi. We find that endogene-
ity is a minor issue for model 2, as behaviour is plausibly shaped by perceptions,
while causality in the opposite direction contradicts the theoretical framework
of Ajzen (1991) and Rabbie (1991). Moreover, all variables on a regional scale are
virtually independent of the behaviour of individual farmers or their income as
modelled in equation 3. The Durbin-Wu-Hausman test applied to equations 2 and
3 showed no significant results, implying that estimating equation 2 separately
using OLS yields consistent results.
Based on Regulation 22/2010 on the Spatial Planning of West Java, we group
all subdistricts into six meta-regions represented by R1, R2, R3, R4, R5 and R6
(figure 3). Table C2 in the appendix presents summary statistics of each of the
six development regions. Each of these regions contains several subdistricts
that have relatively homogenous characteristics relevant for the income gen-
eration of farmers. Therefore, each region is represented by dummy variables
θθirir, ,rr ∈ {{R1,
R1,R2,
R2,R3,
R3,R4,
R4,R5,R5, R6 }
R6}.
This regional heterogeneity may also yield regionally varying partial effects
of the explanatory variables on farmer i’s income. We explicitly consider these
effects in equation 3: first, as region-dependent intercepts; second, as the region-
dependent slope; and third, as separate dummies and interaction terms between
each regional dummy and all explanatory variables. Accounting for such potential
regional heterogeneity in the effects of income determinants seems very plausi-
ble given that output prices and farmers’ productivity—both major determinants
of farm income—have been reported to show significant regional heterogene-
ity in Southeast Asian countries (OECD 1998). Moreover, Luckmann et al. (2015)
emphasise existing differences in regional supply chains and output prices in
Vietnam. Arifin et al. (2019) report starkly varying labour productivity patterns
for Indonesian agriculture.
244 Dadan Wardhana, Rico Ihle and Wim Heijman
If the regional effects θir and their interactions are jointly not significant, then
equation 3 can be simplified into equation 4, implying that the findings of the
OECD (1998) do not apply to West Java:
2 7
i 0 nI bni xII X xi i . (4)
n 1 x 1
Agro-cluster variables
Agro-cluster density
Distance to closest cooperating farmer
Distance to nearest economic centre
Control variables
Male (dummy variable)
Farmer’s age
Farmer (dummy variable)
Household members
Assets
Meeting frequency
Food vulnerability
Yield satisfaction
Rural farm location (dummy variable)
Poverty rate
the control variables on farmers’ cooperation (b1i) and self-interest (b2i), respective-
ly.8 The two versions of model 2 differ only by the dependent variable.
Figure 5 shows that the effect of peer pressure (dpressi) on both types of behav-
iour is significant at the 5% level, confirming the findings of Ajzen (1991), Rabbie
8. Detailed results are provided in table D1 in the appendix. The overall F-tests of both
model versions are significant at the 5% level, showing that both models give meaningful
explanations of variations in farmers’ behaviour.
246 Dadan Wardhana, Rico Ihle and Wim Heijman
(1991) and Binmore (2009). The partial effect of perceived peer pressure is higher
for selfishness than for cooperation. The sign of this partial effect is opposite in both
model versions. The partial effects of the squared terms are both significant and of
opposite sign and have much narrower confidence intervals. Thus, the marginal
effect of peer pressure on cooperative behaviour is convex, as suggested by figure
4a. From low levels of peer pressure to a degree of about 4.3, cooperative behaviour
declines, but it rises beyond that point. Figure C1 in the appendix shows that about
60% of all observations lie in this range (–3.7 to 4.3).
The marginal effects of peer pressure on self-interest indicate a concave rela-
tionship: selfish behaviour increases strongly as peer pressure grows, until the
pressure reaches a degree of about 6; it then declines, as suggested by figure 4. This
is in line with the work of Bergstrom (2002), who finds that individuals facing low
levels of peer pressure typically become more selfish in their dealings with peers
because they believe self-interest will benefit them more than cooperation. The
finding is also in line with the findings of Hendrickson and James (2008) (figure 2)
and Graham (2014), who emphasise that perceived pressure increases selfishness.
In figure 5, the wide confidence intervals of many of the coefficients of the
control variables often render them insignificant. Several aspects determining the
comprehensiveness of peer pressure appear to significantly affect cooperation. The
largest coefficient value is about 0.4, for peer pressure resulting from changes in
input costs (x1i). Furthermore, these six factors determining comprehensiveness
significantly influence self-interest. The largest coefficient has a value of about 0.4,
for the variables measuring competition for production technology (z2i) and the
use of superior seeds (z1i). Many of the quadratic terms are not significant.
Agro-cluster density (rds) appears to have a positive effect only on self-interest.
Denser agro-clusters are associated with increased selfishness. A greater travel
distance from a farm to the next economic centre means the farmer is less likely to
act selfishly. Farmers situated in subdistricts of the densest agro-clusters appear to
cooperate most when they perceive the least peer pressure (see section D1 of the
online appendix). Likewise, farmers are most likely to act most selfishly in dense
agro-clusters with the highest peer pressure.
Table 1 complements figure 5 by translating the abstract statistical estimates into
corresponding magnitudes of tangible economic effects. Thus, this table summa-
rises the economic relevance of the estimated effects, using the maximum observed
ranges of the explanatory variables. This table reports the partial effects in decreas-
ing order of the maximum observed effect of each explanatory variable on each
type of behaviour.
Table 1 suggests that two of the variables quantifying the comprehensiveness
of peer pressure exert the largest maximum partial effects on both self-interest and
cooperation. Change in input costs (x1i) due to competition is the most prominent
factor that influences farmers’ levels of cooperation. This is followed by competi-
tion with peers for attaining information on input supply and crop marketing (z3i).
The maximum effect size of the comprehensiveness variable x1i changes the level of
cooperative behaviour by 2.97 points, which is 46% of its observed range (for more
details, see section D2 of appendix D). Membership in a farmer group appears to
increase cooperation and reduce selfishness.
Effects of Peer Pressure in Agro-clusters of West Java 247
9. These results directly correspond to the theoretical model of James and Hendrickson
(2008) (see figure 2). Detailed results are given in table D2 in the appendix. The overall F-test
of this model has a p-value smaller than 0.01, indicating that it is meaningful for explaining
the variation in farmers’ income.
248 Dadan Wardhana, Rico Ihle and Wim Heijman
Farmer behaviour
Cooperative behaviour (b1i)
Self-interested behaviour (b2i)
Control variables
Years of schooling (yedu)
Farm size (fsize)
Number of crops (ncrop)
Working hours on farm (whours)
Rice farmer (dummy) (frice)
Membership (dummy) (D_Member)
Distance to economic centre
Region (dummy variables)
Region 1 (R1)
Region 4 (R4)
Region 5 (R5)
Region 1
b1i_R1
b2i_R1
yedu_R1
fsize_R1
frice_R1
ncrop_R1
whours_R1
D_Member_R1
Region 2
b1i_R2
b2i_R2
yedu_R2
fsize_R2
ncrop_R2
whours_R2
D_Member_R2
Region 4
b1i_R4
b2i_R4
yedu_R4
fsize_R4
frice_R4
whours_R4
D_Member_R4
Region 5
b1i_R5
b2i_R5
yedu_R5
fsize_R5
frice_R5
ncrop_R5
whours_R5
D_Member_R5
Region 6
b1i_R6
b2i_R6
yedu_R6
fsize_R6
whours_R6
D_Member_R6
−2 −1 0 1 2 3
Hypothesis 1 < 0.01 dpressi affects Hypothesis 1 < 0.01 dpressi affects
cooperative behaviour selfishness
Hypothesis 2 < 0.01 cpressi variables jointly Hypothesis 2 < 0.01 cpressi variables
affect cooperative jointly affect
behaviour selfishness
Hypothesis 3 < 0.01 dpressi and cpressi Hypothesis 3 < 0.01 dpressi and cpressi
jointly affect jointly affect
cooperative behaviour selfishness
Hypothesis 4 0.24 Distance does not affect Hypothesis 4 < 0.01 Distance affects
cooperation selfishness
Hypothesis 5 < 0.01 Poverty affects Hypothesis 5 < 0.01 Poverty affects
cooperation selfishness
Hypothesis 6 0.02 The characteristics Hypothesis 6 < 0.01 The characteristics
jointly affect jointly affect
cooperative behaviour selfishness
p-value Interpretation
Hypothesis 7 < 0.01 The partial effects of farmers’ behaviour on income are regionally
heterogeneous.
trade-off between cooperation and income, as proposed in figure 2. For the refer-
ence region of Bandung metropolitan area, as well as R1, R4, R5 and R6, a farmer
scoring one unit higher with respect to cooperation has, on average, an income of
17% less. The impact of cooperation on income for R2 differs statistically from that
for R1, R3, R4, R5 and R6, and thus points to some regional heterogeneity in this
effect. Figure 6 and table D2 in the appendix suggest that the partial effects of the
control variables vary by region too. For example, in the reference region, R3, farm
size appears to have the greatest effect on income, while in R1, being a rice farmer
appears to have the greatest effect on income. In R2, cooperative behaviour has the
greatest effect; in R4, the number of crops; and in R5, farmer group membership.
Table 2 reports the results of the F-tests of hypotheses 1–7. The results for
hypotheses 1, 2 and 3 show robust evidence that both the degree and the com-
prehensiveness of peer pressure determine farmers’ behaviour—cooperative or
self-interested—confirming this aspect of our conceptual framework, as derived
from Ajzen (1991) and Rabbie (1991).
250 Dadan Wardhana, Rico Ihle and Wim Heijman
Physical distance to the closest farmers with whom the farmer cooperates and
to the nearest economic centre appear to matter only for self-interested behav-
iour. This only partly supports Fischer and Qaim’s (2012) findings. Hypothesis 5
is rejected at the 5% level for both types of behaviour, confirming Brañas-Garza’s
(2006) findings. Hypothesis 6—that farmers’ personal characteristics influence their
behavioural patterns, as hypothesised in our conceptual framework in figure 1—is
rejected as well. Finally, hypothesis 7 is rejected, indicating that the effects of farm-
ers’ behaviour on income levels statistically differ across the regions of West Java,
in line with the OECD’s (1998) research.
10. R4 has the densest agro-cluster and R3 has the least dense agro-cluster. Detailed results
are given in online appendix table C2.
Effects of Peer Pressure in Agro-clusters of West Java 251
the OECD (1998), however, we find some evidence that the effect of cooperation
on income does significantly vary by region. Household food insecurity appears
to have a consistent and large effect on farmers’ behaviour towards peers, which
supports Brañas-Garza’s (2006) finding that food insecurity reduces cooperation
considerably.
These findings indicate that the strong tradition of community in Indonesia
remains an important part of farmers’ lives. Some farmers in agro-clusters show
high levels of cooperation despite high levels of peer pressure and fears that coop-
eration will negatively affect their income. This shows that economic incentive may
not be the main factor affecting the behaviour of smallholder farmers. However,
unethical behaviour due to competitive pressure from intense and concentrated
economic activity appears widespread. About 37% of the survey respondents
reported being uncooperative with peers, for fear of conflict. Nearly 48% of the
farmers who reported being uncooperative have been cheated by peers or fear
being cheated. However, such self-interest, which flouts Indonesian social norms,
appears to have no effect on farmers’ incomes.
In order to reduce peer pressure among neighbouring farmers, policies should
be tailored to specific characteristics of each region. For farmers in dense agro-
clusters (such as R2, R4 and R5), policies could improve access to information
on input supplies and crop marketing. For farmers in regions of low agro-cluster
density (such as R1, R3 and R6), policies could aim to reduce the selfishness of
farmers by ensuring sufficient supplies and low prices of production inputs, or by
improving the efficiency of input use so that farmers’ production costs decrease.
Hamilton-Hart (2019) emphasises governments’ current ‘willingness to adopt
intrusive state interventions to direct economic activity’. Our analysis shows that
to improve the exchange of knowledge and expertise among farmers, policymakers
should aim to improve specific aspects of agricultural production. It would suffice
to encourage the factors that appear to increase cooperation and discourage the
factors that appear to increase selfishness.
Selective policies may succeed if the role of institutions such as cooperatives and
farmer groups is fostered by governments. These institutions could play a greater
role in distributing production inputs, such as high-quality seeds. Alternatively,
machinery cooperatives could focus on the purchase, maintenance, administration
and coordination of joint technology use (Harris and Fulton 2000). Such coopera-
tives are widespread in Western Europe and North America. Boosting the roles of
these institutions in crop marketing is likely to stimulate cooperative behaviour,
as suggested by Ibnu, Offermans and Glasbergen (2018).
Local government offices for agriculture could play a pivotal role in improving
the general availability and spatial distribution of inputs, and in improving the
connections and trust among farmers and input suppliers. They could champion
support for farmer organisations to establish such cooperation, by strengthening
and extending agricultural extension, as stated in Law 19/2013 on the Protection
and Empowerment of Farmers. The agricultural offices could also help farmer
groups to establish partnerships with other stakeholders, such as input suppliers,
processing and marketing firms and research institutions. This could help farmers
in agro-clusters to obtain the information and resources they need.
Hence, policies and other programs to support farmers should take a whole-of-
chain approach. They should not only target on-farm aspects but also address input
252 Dadan Wardhana, Rico Ihle and Wim Heijman
and output markets. Importantly, they should consider the competitive nature and
regional characteristics of farming locations, including agro-cluster density and
peer pressure. Farmer groups and extension officers could communicate regional
needs to policymakers, potential investors and other stakeholders, such as buyers,
firms and scholars. In doing so, they could also help farmers to reduce costs of
attaining market information and transport. This might not only create opportunity
for the national and provincial governments to develop appropriate agricultural
policies, but also stimulate the development of private sector initiatives. This could
include start-ups that provide digital infrastructure—such as that of TaniHub, an
Indonesian organisation helping farmers attain higher prices and more customers
for their crops—to help farmers market their products to end consumers.
The finding that food insecurity at the household level, as evaluated according
to FAO criteria (Ballard, Kepple and Cafiero 2013), consistently and considerably
reduces cooperative behaviour implies that some households may face a poverty
trap. Their limited willingness to cooperate with peers tends to exclude them from
positive spillovers. Such spillovers could improve their food security or income.
Targeted policies are needed to help them escape this trap.
Last, the pronounced spatial heterogeneity of the effect of farmers’ behaviour
on their income should be considered. Such heterogeneity implies that all-purpose
policies are unlikely to be effective across all regions of West Java or Indonesia.
Therefore, any policy intervention intended to reduce the negative effects of com-
petitive peer pressure should be tailored to the particular characteristics and needs
of each region, as suggested by the OECD (2007).
Future research could investigate whether and to what extent the spatial struc-
ture of certain crop specialisations affects the extent and the comprehensiveness of
peer pressure for specialised farmers. Unique features of niche markets may relate
to the level of peer pressure experienced.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
We gratefully acknowledge the funding provided by the Indonesia Endowment
Fund for Education (LPDP). We also wish to thank the government of West Java
province for supporting this research, and the anonymous reviewers for offering
suggestions for enriching this article.
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