Publication:
Land Tenure, Investment Incentives, and the Choice of Techniques

creativeworkseries.issn1564-698X
dc.contributor.authorBandiera, Oriana
dc.date.accessioned2012-03-30T07:12:36Z
dc.date.available2012-03-30T07:12:36Z
dc.date.issued2007-09-30
dc.description.abstractLand Tenure, Investment Incentives, and the Choice of Techniques: Evidence from Nicaragua Oriana Bandiera 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. 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. This finding is in line with the observation that since a tenant's effort affects tree productivity in the future, proper incentives can be provided only by offering a long-term contract that makes the tenant's pay conditional on future output. Nevertheless, models of moral hazard with either risk aversion or limited liability indicate that tenants' wealth determines the cost of providing incentives for noncontractible effort and hence the choice of cultivation techniques when these are complementary to effort. To this purpose, the remainder of the 496 THE WORLD BANK ECONOMIC REVIEW analysis focuses on the cross-sectional evidence from the sample of pure owners and pure tenants. Cross-Section Specification: Matching Estimates Nonexperimental matching procedures might yield estimates that improve over linear regression estimates in the sense of being closer to those produced by a randomized experiment. Land Ownership and Trees: Linear Probability Model Fixed-Effect and Cross-Section Estimates Cross-section Fixed effects Tree mix Variable Farmer owns plot Household wealth*1026 Farmer's age Farmer's gender Farmer's education (years) Household size Farm size*1023 Plot size*1023 Town size*1026 Average distance to market town Percent increase in probability when moving from tenancy to ownership Province fixed effect Number of observations (farmers) R2 No 86 0.08 29 Yes 1172 0.02 2668 (1.25) 0.354 (0.228 The results also show that trees are more likely to be grown on smaller farms, which rules out the hypothesis that there are increasing returns to scale to tree cultivation and that the observed difference between owners and tenants is due to the fact that owners farm larger plots. Observations are matched on the same farmer and town characteristics used in table 3 Source: Author's analysis based on data from the 1998 Nicaragua Living Standards Measurement Study survey. Since poorer tenants are more likely to be risk averse (Binswanger 1980) and because the limited-liability constraint is more likely to be binding for poor tenants, models of risk aversion or limited liability share the prediction that tenants' wealth determines the cost of providing incentives and hence effort and the choice of production techniques.en
dc.identifier.citationWorld Bank Economic Review
dc.identifier.doi10.1596/4467
dc.identifier.issn1564-698X
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10986/4467
dc.publisherWorld Bank
dc.relation.ispartofseriesWorld Bank Economic Review
dc.rightsCC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO
dc.rights.holderWorld Bank
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo
dc.subjectagricultural productivity
dc.subjectannual crops
dc.subjectconserve soil
dc.subjectcultivation
dc.subjectcultivation techniques
dc.subjectfarmers
dc.subjectfarms
dc.subjectrecycling
dc.subjecttree crops
dc.subjecttrees
dc.titleLand Tenure, Investment Incentives, and the Choice of Techniquesen
dc.title.alternativeEvidence from Nicaraguaen
dc.typeJournal Articleen
dc.typeArticle de journalfr
dc.typeArtículo de revistaes
dspace.entity.typePublication
okr.date.doiregistration2025-05-06T11:21:00.506065Z
okr.doctypeJournal Article
okr.globalpracticeMacroeconomics and Fiscal Management
okr.globalpracticeSocial, Urban, Rural and Resilience
okr.globalpracticeAgriculture
okr.globalpracticePoverty
okr.identifier.report3
okr.language.supporteden
okr.pagenumber487
okr.pagenumber508
okr.pdfurlwber_21_3_487.pdfen
okr.peerreviewAcademic Peer Review
okr.region.countryNicaragua
okr.topicAgriculture
okr.topicMacroeconomics and Economic Growth
okr.topicRural Development
okr.topicCrops and Crop Management Systems
okr.topicEconomic Theory and Research
okr.topicPoverty Reduction::Rural Poverty Reduction
okr.topicRural Development Knowledge and Information Systems
okr.topicUrban Development::Municipal Housing and Land
okr.volume21
relation.isJournalIssueOfPublicationb95cbe89-7d17-488a-afcf-746a0a4dcfea
relation.isJournalIssueOfPublication.latestForDiscoveryb95cbe89-7d17-488a-afcf-746a0a4dcfea
relation.isJournalOfPublicationc41eae2f-cf94-449d-86b7-f062aebe893f
relation.isJournalVolumeOfPublication5586d687-0acc-4416-ace0-8fcc3b13a63e
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