Land Titles and Rice Production in Vietnam

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Standard

Land Titles and Rice Production in Vietnam. / Van Den Broeck, Katleen; Newman, Carol; Tarp, Finn.

1207. udg. Trinity College, University of Dublin, 2007.

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Harvard

Van Den Broeck, K, Newman, C & Tarp, F 2007 'Land Titles and Rice Production in Vietnam' 1207 udg, Trinity College, University of Dublin. <https://ideas.repec.org/p/tcd/tcduee/tep1207.html>

APA

Van Den Broeck, K., Newman, C., & Tarp, F. (2007). Land Titles and Rice Production in Vietnam. (1207 udg.) Trinity College, University of Dublin. TEP Working Paper Bind 2007 Nr. 1207 https://ideas.repec.org/p/tcd/tcduee/tep1207.html

Vancouver

Van Den Broeck K, Newman C, Tarp F. Land Titles and Rice Production in Vietnam. 1207 udg. Trinity College, University of Dublin. 2007.

Author

Van Den Broeck, Katleen ; Newman, Carol ; Tarp, Finn. / Land Titles and Rice Production in Vietnam. 1207. udg. Trinity College, University of Dublin, 2007. (TEP Working Paper; Nr. 1207, Bind 2007).

Bibtex

@techreport{794d54e8cfbf4dafa9692d8f1f378f33,
title = "Land Titles and Rice Production in Vietnam",
abstract = "In most of the empirical literature on land titling, the household is regarded as unitary, and land rights are found to have ambiguous effects on land allocation, investment and productivity. Using data from 12 provinces in Vietnam, we diversify land titles, and show in a household fixed effects analysis of plot level rice yields that land titles are indeed important. Only exclusively held titles have the expected positive effects, and the positive effect on yields is found in male headed households. Furthermore, a household level rice yield function reveals that exclusive user rights are inefficiency decreasing, while jointly held user rights have no efficiency effects. Finally, once the gender of the head of household is controlled for, exclusively held female titles have a greater positive effect on the efficiency of the household than that of male held titles. ",
author = "{Van Den Broeck}, Katleen and Carol Newman and Finn Tarp",
year = "2007",
language = "English",
series = "TEP Working Paper",
number = "1207",
publisher = "Trinity College, University of Dublin",
edition = "1207",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "Trinity College, University of Dublin",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Land Titles and Rice Production in Vietnam

AU - Van Den Broeck, Katleen

AU - Newman, Carol

AU - Tarp, Finn

PY - 2007

Y1 - 2007

N2 - In most of the empirical literature on land titling, the household is regarded as unitary, and land rights are found to have ambiguous effects on land allocation, investment and productivity. Using data from 12 provinces in Vietnam, we diversify land titles, and show in a household fixed effects analysis of plot level rice yields that land titles are indeed important. Only exclusively held titles have the expected positive effects, and the positive effect on yields is found in male headed households. Furthermore, a household level rice yield function reveals that exclusive user rights are inefficiency decreasing, while jointly held user rights have no efficiency effects. Finally, once the gender of the head of household is controlled for, exclusively held female titles have a greater positive effect on the efficiency of the household than that of male held titles.

AB - In most of the empirical literature on land titling, the household is regarded as unitary, and land rights are found to have ambiguous effects on land allocation, investment and productivity. Using data from 12 provinces in Vietnam, we diversify land titles, and show in a household fixed effects analysis of plot level rice yields that land titles are indeed important. Only exclusively held titles have the expected positive effects, and the positive effect on yields is found in male headed households. Furthermore, a household level rice yield function reveals that exclusive user rights are inefficiency decreasing, while jointly held user rights have no efficiency effects. Finally, once the gender of the head of household is controlled for, exclusively held female titles have a greater positive effect on the efficiency of the household than that of male held titles.

M3 - Working paper

T3 - TEP Working Paper

BT - Land Titles and Rice Production in Vietnam

PB - Trinity College, University of Dublin

ER -

ID: 164385788