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Land Tenure, Investment Incentives, and the Choice of Techniques: Evidence from Nicaragua

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TLDR
In this article, household data from Nicaragua are used to show that the choice of cultivation technique depends on farmers' tenure status even when techniques are observable and contractible, and that tree crops are less likely to be grown on rented than on owner-cultivated plots.
Abstract
The choice of cultivation techniques is a key determinant of agricultural productivity and has important consequences for income growth and poverty reduction in developing countries. Household data from Nicaragua are used to show that the choice of cultivation technique depends on farmers' tenure status even when techniques are observable and contractible. In particular, tree crops are less likely to be grown on rented than on owner-cultivated plots. Further evidence indicates that the result follows from landlords’ inability or unwillingness to commit to long-term tenancy contracts rather than from agency costs due to risk aversion or limited liability.

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Environmental and gender impacts of land tenure regularization in Africa : pilot evidence from Rwanda

TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluated the short-term impact of Rwanda's land tenure regularization program and found that it had a very large impact on investment and maintenance of soil conservation measures.
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Impacts of Land Certification on Tenure Security, Investment, and Land Market Participation: Evidence from Ethiopia

TL;DR: The impact of land registration on tenure security, land-related investment, and rental market participation using 900 randomly selected households and 4000 plots cultivated by the households on the household and land plots level was analyzed in this paper.
Posted Content

Land Registration, Governance, and Development: Evidence and Implications for Policy

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors review the literature on the impact of land administration interventions in specific contexts, highlighting the dependence of outcomes on the governance environment, the effectiveness of the state apparatus, and the distribution of socioeconomic power.
Journal ArticleDOI

The impact of land property rights interventions on investment and agricultural productivity in developing countries: a systematic review

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors conducted a systematic review on the effects of land tenure recognition interventions on agricultural productivity, income, investment and other relevant outcomes, and synthesised findings from 20 quantitative studies and nine qualitative studies that passed a methodological screening.
Journal ArticleDOI

Land Registration, Governance, and Development: Evidence and Implications for Policy

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors review the literature on the impact of land administration interventions in specific contexts, highlighting the dependence of outcomes on the governance environment, the effectiveness of the state apparatus, and the distribution of socioeconomic power.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Large Sample Properties of Matching Estimators for Average Treatment Effects

TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed new methods for analyzing the large sample properties of matching estimators and established a number of new results, such as the following: Matching estimators with replacement with a fixed number of matches are not N 1/2 -consistent.
Journal ArticleDOI

Property Rights and Investment Incentives: Theory and Evidence from Ghana

TL;DR: In this article, the link between property rights and investment incentives was examined, and three theoretical arguments based on security of tenure, using land as collateral and obtaining gains from trade were developed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Attitudes Toward Risk: Experimental Measurement in Rural India

TL;DR: In this article, a study was made to determine whether differences in behavior between farmers of different wealth levels are the consequence of different attitudes towards risk or of different constraint sets such as limitations on credit or on access to modern inputs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Incentives and risk-sharing in sharecropping

TL;DR: In this article, the authors formulate a simple general equilibrium model of a competitive agricultural economy, based on the risk sharing and incentive properties of alternative distribution systems, which is of interest not only for extending our understanding of these simple economies but also in gaining some insight into the far more complex phenomena of shareholding in modern corporations.
Posted Content

Power, distortions, revolt, and reform in agricultural land relations

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine how these power relations emerged and what legal means enabled relatively few landowners to accumulate and hold on to large landholdings, and discuss the main policy issues and implications of various distortions and successful and unsuccessful reforms in the developing world, including land registration and titling, land taxation, regulations restricting land sales and rentals, fragmentation and consolidation of land, redistributive land reform, and decollectivization.
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