Brueckner, Jan K.Rabe, ClausSelod, Harris2018-11-122018-11-122018-11https://hdl.handle.net/10986/30842This paper explores the incentives for backyarding, an expanding category of urban land-use in developing countries that has proliferated South Africa. The theoretical model exposes the trade-off faced by the homeowner in deciding how much backyard land to rent out: loss of yard space consumption in return for a gain in rental income. Under common forms for preferences, the homeowner's own-consumption of yard space falls as land rent increases, causing more land to be rented to backyarders. With better job access for backyarders raising land rent by increasing their willingness-to-pay, the analysis then predicts that the extent of backyarding will be higher for parcels with good job access. This hypothesis is tested by combining a satellite- based count of backyard dwellings per parcel with job-access data. The empirical results strongly confirm the prediction that better job access increases the extent of backyarding.CC BY 3.0 IGOHOUSINGINFORMAL HOUSINGJOB ACCESSLAND USERENTAL INCOMEURBAN HOUSINGBackyardingWorking PaperWorld BankTheory and Evidence for South Africa10.1596/1813-9450-8636