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In 2012, Cambodia - an epicenter of violent land grabbing - announced a bold new initiative to develop land redistribution efforts inside agribusiness concessions. Alice Beban's 'Unwritten Rule' focuses on this land reform to understand the larger nature of democracy in Cambodia.
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Despite accounts of increasing large farm penetration in Africa and an active debate on the differential potential of smallholder versus large farms to satisfy Africa's food requirements, evidence on the extent and performance of different farm types remains limited. A census and subsequent representative survey of 3,000 large farms in Zambia, one of the African countries with the highest share of large farms, allows characterizing the impact of institutional arrangements on large farms' establishment and productive performance. While policies rather than exogenous price shocks seem to have driven large farm expansion, average productivity is not different from small farms and title has no impact on productivity, investment, or credit access, most likely because the transferability of titles remains limited, undermining the suitability of such land as collateral. Significant effects of title on self-reported land prices point toward land being acquired for speculative purposes, suggesting that a tax on titled land, together with improved land service delivery might be a desirable policy option.
Access To Finance --- Agricultural Productivity --- Agricultural Sector Economics --- Agriculture --- Communities and Human Settlements --- Land Administration --- Land Investment --- Land Rights --- Land Titling --- Land Use and Policies
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Land titling has been a policy priority for developing country cities for decades. In Sub-Saharan Africa and across the world, tenure formalization has been promoted as a tool to improve the quality and value of urban housing. The track record of these projects, however, has generally been disappointing. Why is this? This paper argues that project design has paid too little attention to contextual features of land markets in estimating the benefits of formalization to individual households. The paper draws on evidence from a case study city - Dar es Salaam, Tanzania - to show that in cities where broader property rights institutions are incomplete and informal sources of tenure security are strong, formal property rights may not be valued by households. This raises questions about the households' willingness to pay for regularization and suggests that complementary strategies to build trust in government and consolidate public benefits of titling will be needed to ensure that projects have a beneficial impact.
Communities and Human Settlements --- Land Tenure --- Land Titling --- Municipal Housing and Land --- Property Rights --- Tenure Formalization --- Urban Development --- Urban Housing --- Urban Housing and Land Settlements
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This paper reports on a randomized field experiment that uses price incentives to address economic and gender inequality in land tenure formalization. During the 1990s and 2000s, nearly two dozen African countries proposed de jure land reforms extending access to formal, freehold land tenure to millions of poor households. Many of these reforms stalled. Titled land remains the de facto preserve of wealthy households and, within households, men. Beginning in 2010, the study tested whether price instruments alone can generate greater inclusion by offering formal titles to residents of a low-income, unplanned settlement in Dar es Salaam at a range of subsidized prices, as well as additional price incentives to include women as owners or co-owners of household land. Estimated price elasticities of demand confirm that prices-rather than other implementation failures or features of the titling regime-are a key obstacle to broader inclusion in the land registry, and that some degree of pro-poor price discrimination is justified even from a narrow budgetary perspective. In terms of gender inequality, the study finds that even small price incentives for female co-titling achieve almost complete gender parity in land ownership with no reduction in demand.
Banks and Banking Reform --- Economic Theory & Research --- Field Experiment --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Formalization --- Gender --- Land Titling --- Macroeconomics and Economic Growth --- Markets & Market Access --- Municipal Housing and Land --- Political Economy --- Urban Development
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This paper examines the effectiveness of a variety of policy interventions that have been tried in developing and transition economies with the goal of improving women's employability and quality of work. The programs include active labor market programs, education and training programs, programs that facilitate work (such as childcare subsidies, parental leave programs and land titling programs), microfinance programs, entrepreneurship and leadership programs, and conditional cash transfer programs. Some of these policy interventions were undertaken to increase employment, some to increase female employment, and some for other reasons. All of these programs have been subjected to impact evaluations of different kinds and some also to rigorous cost-benefit analyses. Many were found to be effective in increasing women's quantity of work as measured by increased rates of labor market participation and number of hours worked. In some cases, the programs also increased women's quality of work, for example, by increasing the capacity for women to work in the formal rather than the informal sector where wages are higher and where women are more likely to have access to health, retirement, and other benefits.
Active labor market policies --- Conditional cash transfers --- Entrepreneurship programs --- Family policies --- Gender --- Impact evaluation --- Labor Markets --- Labor Policies --- Labor supply --- Land titling programs --- Macroeconomics and Economic Growth --- Microfinance --- Population Policies --- Poverty Impact Evaluation --- Poverty Monitoring & Analysis --- Poverty Reduction --- Training programs
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Despite strong beliefs that property titling and registration will enhance credit access, empirical evidence in support of such effects remains scant. The gradual roll-out of computerization of land registry systems across Andhra Pradesh's 387 sub-registry offices allows us to combine quarterly administrative data on credit disbursed by all commercial banks for an eleven-year period (1997-2007) aggregated to the sub-registry office level with the date of shifting registration from manual to digital. Computerization had no credit effect in rural areas but led to increased credit-supply in urban ones. A marked increase of registered urban mortgages due to computerization supports the robustness of the result. At the same time, estimated impacts from reduction of the stamp duty are much larger, suggesting that, without further changes in the property rights system, impacts of computerization will remain marginal.
Bankruptcy and Resolution of Financial Distress --- Banks & Banking Reform --- Commercial banks --- Credit access --- Currency --- Debt Markets --- Deeds --- E-Business --- Economic Theory & Research --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Financial market --- Information technology --- International bank --- Land titling --- Lenders --- Macroeconomics and Economic Growth --- Market development --- Mortgages --- Private Sector Development --- Property rights --- Registry office --- Registry offices --- Registry reform --- Registry systems --- Reserve --- Reserve bank --- Settlement --- Stamp duty
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Despite the literature on rural land property rights, studies on urban land property rights are rare. This paper studies the impact of an urban land titling program on firm investment. It finds that the program leads to increased investment rate for titling firms, and the positive effect holds only for politically connected firms. The effects are likely causal, because they are more pronounced for firms that are more likely to benefit from strengthened property rights. Connected titling firms experienced fewer disputes than nonconnected titling firms after the program, and the results remain robust when using instrumental variable estimation.
Communities and Human Settlements --- Corporate Governance and Corruption --- Corruption --- Investment --- Land Administration --- Land Use and Policies --- Law and Development --- Political Connnections --- Political Economy --- Private Sector Development Law --- Property Rights --- Public Sector Development --- Real and Intellectual Property Law --- Regulation --- Regulatory Oversight --- Urban Economic Development --- Urban Land Titling
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Despite strong beliefs that property titling and registration will enhance credit access, empirical evidence in support of such effects remains scant. The gradual roll-out of computerization of land registry systems across Andhra Pradesh's 387 sub-registry offices allows us to combine quarterly administrative data on credit disbursed by all commercial banks for an eleven-year period (1997-2007) aggregated to the sub-registry office level with the date of shifting registration from manual to digital. Computerization had no credit effect in rural areas but led to increased credit-supply in urban ones. A marked increase of registered urban mortgages due to computerization supports the robustness of the result. At the same time, estimated impacts from reduction of the stamp duty are much larger, suggesting that, without further changes in the property rights system, impacts of computerization will remain marginal.
Bankruptcy and Resolution of Financial Distress --- Banks & Banking Reform --- Commercial banks --- Credit access --- Currency --- Debt Markets --- Deeds --- E-Business --- Economic Theory & Research --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Financial market --- Information technology --- International bank --- Land titling --- Lenders --- Macroeconomics and Economic Growth --- Market development --- Mortgages --- Private Sector Development --- Property rights --- Registry office --- Registry offices --- Registry reform --- Registry systems --- Reserve --- Reserve bank --- Settlement --- Stamp duty
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Smallholder farmers' investment decisions and the efficiency of resource allocation depend on the security of land tenure. This paper develops a simple model that captures essential institutional features of rural land markets in Ghana, including the dependence of future rights over land on current cultivation and land rental decisions. The model predictions guide the evaluation of a pilot land titling intervention that took place in an urbanizing area located in the Central Region of Ghana. The evaluation is based on a regression discontinuity design combined with three rounds of household survey data collected over a period of six years. The analysis finds strong markers for the program's success in registering land in the targeted program area. However, land registration does not translate into agricultural investments or increased credit taking. Instead, treated households decrease their amount of agricultural labor, accompanied by only a small reduction of agricultural production and no changes in productivity. In line with this result, households decrease their landholdings amid a surge in land valuations. The analysis uncovers important within-household differences in how women and men respond differentially to the program. There appears to be a general shift to nonfarm economic activities, and women's business profits increased considerably.
Agricultural Investment --- Agricultural Sector Economics --- Agriculture --- Common Property Resource Development --- Communities and Human Settlements --- Gender --- Gender and Rural Development --- Gender Innovation Lab --- Gender Policy --- Land Administration --- Land Rental --- Land Tenure --- Land Titling --- Land Use and Policies --- Non-Farmeconomic Activity --- Resource Allocation --- Rural Labor Markets --- Rural Land Market --- Rural Land Policies for Poverty Reduction --- Smallholders --- Women
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Adding a module designed to measure land tenure-related Sustainable Development Goals indicators to the 2018 round of Zambia's labor force survey shows low transferability and high levels of tenure insecurity. Having a title is associated with greater transferability and reduced insecurity. Although demand for titles, including willingness to pay, is high, current policies limit the scope for tenure regularization and reinforce rather than reduce gender discrimination. Efforts in this direction need to be preceded by (i) procedural reform to reduce costs, streamline procedures, and make them gender-sensitive; (ii) institutional change to increase the efficiency of service delivery and ensure record maintenance; and (iii) legal change to recognize customary tenure and improve land management and transferability. Adding the Sustainable Development Goals land tenure module to ongoing surveys has the potential to provide the evidence base needed to design results-based approaches for the land sector and reliably track progress.
Agricultural Sector Economics --- Agriculture --- Common Property Resource Development --- Communities and Human Settlements --- Customary Land Rights --- Demand for Title --- Gender --- Gender and Law --- Land Tenure --- Land Titling --- Land Use and Policies --- Legal Reform --- Real and Intellectual Property Law --- SDGs --- Sustainable Development Goals --- Transferable Rights
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