1 / 13

Land distribution, growth and poverty reduction

Land distribution, growth and poverty reduction. Gershon Feder Klaus Deininger. Outline. The rationale for land reform Empirical evidence Country examples General lessons Concluding remarks. Rationale I: Equity & Justice. Social and political issues

sybil-gibbs
Download Presentation

Land distribution, growth and poverty reduction

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Land distribution, growthand poverty reduction Gershon Feder Klaus Deininger

  2. Outline • The rationale for land reform • Empirical evidence • Country examples • General lessons • Concluding remarks

  3. Rationale I: Equity & Justice • Social and political issues • High inequality undermines social cohesion; generates conflict • Lower provision of public goods in unequal groups • Historical justice • Can affect overall growth • Food security and consumption smoothing • Effective insurance against malnutrition (China) • Dealing with shocks (El Salvador) • Recognized e.g. in household plots in CIS

  4. Rationale II: Sustainable Development • Inequality of asset distribution: • Leads to lower economic growth • Less poverty reduction • More environmental degradation by overcrowding of poor on fragile lands • Reduces a society’s ability to respond to macroeconomic shocks • Leads to more rent-seeking and corruption • Leads to more crime

  5. Rationale III: Productivity • Farm size productivity relationship • Supervision cost advantage of owner-operated units • But access to credit and other market can counteract • Supported by inefficiency of collectives; underutilization of land • Indivisible investments to get out of poverty traps • Owners invest more than tenants • Even more pronounced with credit market imperfections • Farm investments as well as education and other services • Markets by themselves may not lead to optimum • Difficulty in dealing with highly unequal initial allocation • Obstacles remain - easily subverted at the local level • Mortgage finance very rare

  6. Countries with more equal land distribution grow faster Average GDP growth, 1960-90 Japan 5 Malaysia Thailand 4 3 Egypt Brazil 2 India Costa Rica Kenya Togo 1 Iraq Venezuela Senegal Peru 0 5 15 25 35 45 55 65 Initial land distribution More equal

  7. India: Market & non-market access • Land tenure history & reform implementation • Award of property rights to colonial occupiers • Reforms: Intermediary abolition, land ceiling, tenancy reform • Implementation lagging; many evictions • Impact of reform • West Bengal: Effective tenancy registration; positive impact • Nation-wide: Positive impact on growth, poverty reduction • But: Effect decreases with age of legislation; can become negative • Reason: Tenancy laws undermine land access through rental • Current policy issues and directions • Recognize rights by registered tenants, making them permanent • Implement ceiling legislation (e.g. Andhra Pradesh) where possible • Divestiture of government land • Liberalization of land rental markets to provide land access

  8. Bolivia • Historical background • Huge inequalities from colonial days • Reform in the 1950s had limited success • Inter-regional inequality remains a huge issue • Land regularization to increase land access • Large-scale land grabbing in the lowlands • INRA law (1996): Secure title in return for giving up illegal land • Only very limited effectiveness • A mix of mechanisms • Willing buyer willing seller, supported by Bank • More effective implementation of existing laws (reversion) • Goal: Quick redistribution & productive development • Need to carefully monitor

  9. Philippines • Land reform and its context • Tenancy reform (1970s) highly successful; w. green revolution • Operation land transfer: Very mixed success • Mainly government land; corruption; way behind goals • Huge distortions for sugar continue to support large estates • Unintended side effects from land reform • Highly bureaucratic process; splitting up of plantations? • Ceiling law applied to operational holding: trap in poverty • Banks can not foreclose; no credit access & rural investment • Limited effectiveness due to overall policy context • Key issues to be resolved • How to intensify land use? • Can land tax substitute for ceiling? • Profit-sharing arrangements/buy-outs for well-run plantations?

  10. Mexico • First land reform (1917-92) • Redistributed >100 mn ha to 3.5 mn farmers in 30,000 ejidos • But: continued restrictionn on land use and rental; political tutelage • Inefficient land use; disproportionately high poverty in ejidos • Legal changes of 1992 • Strengthening of ejidos’ governance structure (assembly; statutes) • Independent registry; agrarian courts; procuraduria agraria • Strengthen land rights: systematic regularization (PROCEDE) • Make land rights transferable based on procedures • Quantitative accomplishments • Regularization of 70 mn has in 6 years • Systematic inventory of conflicts: Huge amount resolved

  11. Mexico: Impacts • Land access & rental markets • Better functioning after PROCEDE • Due to implementation, not legal changes alone • Highly positive distributional effect • More equal access to common property resources within ejido • Land sales & credit markets • No wave of land sales, contrary to fears • Limited impact on credit access, partly due to financial crisis • Non-monetary & monetary benefits • Equity through increased land access • Transparency (statutes), & conflict resolution • Positive impact on income growth through off-farm participation • IRR of 37% • Helped to make gains from land reform permanent

  12. General lessons • Put land reform into the broader context • Macro economic policy & opportunities for small farmers • Viability of farm models; capacity building & training • Identify productive people who want land rather than just assets • Program characteristics • Land and complementary assets; grant financing, working capital • Clear & transparent rules • Unconditional individual rights for beneficiaries • Multiplicity of paths to land • Decentralized implementation • Government’s role • Disseminate, provide opportunities; integrate channels • Grant element will be essential

  13. Conclusion • Land access & reform remain important issues • Basic rights approach • WDR 2006 on equity and development • Danger of growth widening pre-existing inequalities • Social peace and stability • Experience allows to distill lessons • Multiplicity of paths to access land; ability to use effectively • Programs can be successful if integrated approach is taken • Need to build on synergies • Considerable scope for learning from experience • Impact evaluation critical • Each country’s situation & experience is unique • Potential for South-South dialogue

More Related