Journal Article

Is Land Titling in Sub-Saharan Africa Cost-Effective?

Mostrar el registro sencillo de la publicación

collection.link.102
https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/2211
collection.name.102
A. World Bank Economic Review
dc.contributor.author
Jacoby, Hanan G.
dc.contributor.author
Minten, Bart
dc.date.accessioned
2012-03-30T07:12:36Z
dc.date.available
2012-03-30T07:12:36Z
dc.date.issued
2007-09-30
dc.date.lastModified
2021-04-23T14:02:18Z
dc.description.abstract
Is Land Titling in Sub-Saharan Africa Cost-Effective? A cost benefit analysis suggests that the current system of formal titling should not be extended in rural Madagascar and that any new system of land registration would have to be quite inexpensive to be worthwhile. Indeed, establishing a modern property rights system without legally recognizing informal rights may expand the scope for rent-seeking, thus creating additional insecurity (Atwood 1990). Purchasing a titled plot without easily being able to update the name on the document exposes the buyer to the risk that a relative of the seller, sharing the family name, might subsequently claim the plot or challenge the transfer. Analyses omitted here for brevity indicate that there is no significant advantage to owning titled land in terms of a household's access to formal credit, after controlling for the household's landholdings within the mailles (such land being much more likely to be titled), and titled plots are no more likely to be used as collateral for formal loans than are untitled plots of equivalent size, after also controlling for their position in the mailles (see Jacoby and Minten 2006). At any rate, this impact, at about 7 percent, is not large (the ceteris paribus productivity effect of having a plot in the mailles, by comparison, is on the order of 30 percent), and as argued earlier should be viewed as an upper bound on the true effect. The value of land incorporates any productivity effect of titling operating through increased land-specific investment, as well as the direct effect of expropriation risk operating through the risk-adjusted discount rate, r u. Finally, market values should also reflect the extent to which titled land is easier (or more difficult) to transact. If reported plot values reflect their true market valuation and all relevant plot characteristics can be controlled for, then OLS should produce unbiased estimates of the titling effect. The findings of this study are based on a very large sample of plots and support the notion that indigenous tenure provides adequate security for farmers to undertake the limited range of investment activities commensurate with the prevailing agricultural technology. Given this potential cost, future research should strive to determine whether such negative titling externalities are indeed empirically important.
en
dc.identifier.citation
World Bank Economic Review
dc.identifier.issn
1564-698X
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/4466
dc.publisher
World Bank
dc.rights
CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO
dc.rights.holder
World Bank
dc.rights.uri
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo
dc.subject
banks
dc.subject
insurance
dc.subject
land use
dc.subject
Land Value
dc.subject
laws
dc.subject
market value
dc.subject
productivity
dc.subject
profitability
dc.subject
return on investment
dc.subject
transaction costs
dc.title
Is Land Titling in Sub-Saharan Africa Cost-Effective?
en
dc.title.alternative
Evidence from Madagascar
en
dc.type
Journal Article
en
okr.doctype
Journal Article
okr.globalpractice
Social, Urban, Rural and Resilience
okr.globalpractice
Poverty
okr.globalpractice
Finance and Markets
okr.googlescholar.linkpresent
yes
okr.identifier.report
3
okr.language.supported
en
okr.pagenumber
461
okr.pagenumber
485
okr.pdfurl
wber_21_3_461.pdf
en
okr.peerreview
Academic Peer Review
okr.region.country
Madagascar
okr.region.geographical
Sub-Saharan Africa
okr.topic
Communities and Human Settlements
okr.topic
Poverty Reduction
okr.topic
Banks and Banking Reform
okr.topic
Finance and Financial Sector Development :: Debt Markets
okr.topic
Communities and Human Settlements :: Land Use and Policies
okr.topic
Rural Development :: Rural Land Policies for Poverty Reduction
okr.topic
Rural Development :: Common Property Resource Development
okr.volume
21

Mostrar el registro sencillo de la publicación



Este ítem aparece en la(s) siguiente(s) colección(ones)