Securing Property Rights in Transition : Lessons from Implementation of China's Rural Land Contracting Law
Motivated by the emphasis on secure property rights as a determinant of economic development in recent literature, we use village- and household-level information from about 800 villages throughout China to explore whether legal reform increased protection of land rights against unauthorized reallocation or expropriation with below-average compensation by the state. In addition to providing nation-wide evidence on a sensitive topic, we find positive impacts, equivalent increasing land values by 30 percent, of reform even in the short term that originated in villages where democratic election of leaders ensured a minimum level of accountability, pointing towards complementarity between good governance and legal reform. Implications for situations where individuals and groups hold overlapping rights to land are explored.
Year of publication: |
2009
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Authors: | Deininger, Klaus W. ; Jin, Songqing |
Publisher: |
[Erscheinungsort nicht ermittelbar] |
Subject: | China | Sachenrecht | Law of property | Bodenrecht | Land tenure | Bodenreform | Land reform | Entwicklung | Economic development |
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