Reallocating wealth? Insecure property rights and agricultural investment in rural China
Jessica Leight
No 2013-08, Department of Economics Working Papers from Department of Economics, Williams College
Abstract:
This paper evaluates the impact of village-level land reallocations in China on household economic outcomes. Since land was decollectivized in China in 1983, village leaders have implemented regular forced reallocations of land designed to enhance intravillage equity and attain other policy goals. I estimate the impact of insecure tenure using the past history of land shifts as an instrument for current tenure insecurity, and find that an increase in the probability of losing the current plot yields a decrease in agricultural inputs and production of around one standard deviation. Though the costs of insecure tenure are high, structural estimates of the varying cost of reallocation across different villages suggest the choice to reallocate does reflect an optimizing process on the part of village officials, who reallocate where the net benefit is larger. However, the observed pattern of reallocations would be optimal only given an objective function for the village leader that places an extremely high weight on equity, and even given this objective function, there is evidence that village leaders may be making some costly mistakes.
Pages: 53 pages
Date: 2013-05
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-agr and nep-tra
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Journal Article: Reallocating wealth? Insecure property rights and agricultural investment in rural China (2016) 
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