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Poverty and Landownership

Karl Ove Moene

American Economic Review, 1992, vol. 82, issue 1, 52-64

Abstract: The author studies how landownership affects labor allocation, income distribution, and poverty in less-developed countries. He focuses on three prototypes of ownership classes: landlords, smallholders, and landless people. Agents are identical except for their ownership of assets. On the basis of optimizing behavior, they divide into urban workers in the modern sector, urban workers in the informal sector, agricultural laborers, subsistence farmers, and landlords. The impact of land reform on production and poverty depends on the amount of fertile land per capita. A more egalitarian distribution of landownership reduces poverty where land is scarce but not where land is abundant. Copyright 1992 by American Economic Association.

Date: 1992
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Related works:
Working Paper: POVERTY AND LANDOWNERSHIP (1990)
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