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Land registration, economic development, and poverty reduction

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Title: Land registration, economic development, and poverty reduction


1
Land registration, economic development, and
poverty reduction
  • Gershon Feder

2
Motivation
  • Recent emphasis on institutions
  • Importance from cross-country, country- and
    firm-level studies
  • Land real estate as one of the most important
    assets
  • Differences in mortgage debt/GDP (58 US 14
    LAC, 11 MNA 22 Asia)
  • Property rights to land as a key development
    issue
  • Evolution of property rights institutions
  • Recording systems with a very long history
  • Land administration
  • Demarcation survey
  • Registration record keeping
  • Adjudication of rights conflict resolution
  • Land management
  • Objective of paper
  • Identification of channels for impact under ideal
    circumstances
  • Limitations in real world settings
  • Review of evidence on impacts of land
    registration systems
  • Implications for research policy

3
Motivation
  • Recent emphasis on institutions
  • Importance from cross-country, country- and
    firm-level studies
  • Land real estate as one of the most important
    assets
  • Differences in mortgage debt/GDP (58 US 14
    LAC, 11 MNA 22 Asia)
  • Property rights to land as a key development
    issue
  • Evolution of property rights institutions
  • Recording systems with a very long history
  • Land administration
  • Demarcation survey
  • Registration record keeping
  • Adjudication of rights conflict resolution
  • Land management
  • Objective of paper
  • Identification of channels for impact under ideal
    circumstances
  • Limitations in real world settings
  • Review of evidence on impacts of land
    registration systems
  • Implications for research policy

4
Motivation
  • Recent emphasis on institutions
  • Importance from cross-country, country- and
    firm-level studies
  • Land real estate as one of the most important
    assets
  • Differences in mortgage debt/GDP (58 US 14
    LAC, 11 MNA 22 Asia)
  • Property rights to land as a key development
    issue
  • Evolution of property rights institutions
  • Recording systems with a very long history
  • Land administration
  • Demarcation survey
  • Registration record keeping
  • Adjudication of rights conflict resolution
  • Land management
  • Objective of paper
  • Identification of channels for impact under ideal
    circumstances
  • Limitations in real world settings
  • Review of evidence on impacts of land
    registration systems
  • Implications for research policy

5
The role of the state
  • Definition and enforcement of property rights
  • Reflects broader social consensus
  • Draws on courts and judicial system in general
  • Can reduce overspending by individuals (fences)
  • Provision of information on land ownership
  • Ensure validity of info and avoid duplication of
    effort
  • Avoid costly searches by interested parties
  • Reduce scope for informational asymmetries that
    increase transaction cost

6
The role of the state
  • Definition and enforcement of property rights
  • Reflects broader social consensus
  • Draws on courts and judicial system in general
  • Can reduce overspending by individuals (fences)
  • Provision of information on land ownership
  • Ensure validity of info and avoid duplication of
    effort
  • Avoid costly searches by interested parties
  • Reduce scope for informational asymmetries that
    increase transaction cost

7
Channels for property rights impact
  • Improved tenure security higher investment
  • Less unproductive spending on securing rights
    disputes (courts)
  • Lower expropriation risk leads to more
    land-attached investment
  • Increase in net worth affects other economic
    decisions (incl. gender)
  • Efficiency-enhancing land transactions
  • Renting can entail risk to ownership
  • Government interprets it as signal that land no
    longer needed
  • Tenant wont return at end of contract period
  • Public information reduces this risk and thus
    transaction cost
  • Similar reduction of asymmetric information for
    sales transactions
  • Use of land as collateral for credit
  • Characteristics make land an ideal collateral to
    reduce credit rationing
  • Reliable information improves scope for using
    this
  • But other conditions will need to be satisfied

8
Channels for property rights impact
  • Improved tenure security higher investment
  • Less unproductive spending on securing rights
    disputes (courts)
  • Lower expropriation risk leads to more
    land-attached investment
  • Increase in net worth affects other economic
    decisions (incl. gender)
  • Efficiency-enhancing land transactions
  • Renting can entail risk to ownership
  • Government interprets it as signal that land no
    longer needed
  • Tenant wont return at end of contract period
  • Public information reduces this risk and thus
    transaction cost
  • Similar reduction of asymmetric information for
    sales transactions
  • Use of land as collateral for credit
  • Characteristics make land an ideal collateral to
    reduce credit rationing
  • Reliable information improves scope for using
    this
  • But other conditions will need to be satisfied

9
Channels for property rights impact
  • Improved tenure security higher investment
  • Less unproductive spending on securing rights
    disputes (courts)
  • Lower expropriation risk leads to more
    land-attached investment
  • Increase in net worth affects other economic
    decisions (incl. gender)
  • Efficiency-enhancing land transactions
  • Renting can entail risk to ownership
  • Government interprets it as signal that land no
    longer needed
  • Tenant wont return at end of contract period
  • Public information reduces this risk and thus
    transaction cost
  • Similar reduction of asymmetric information for
    sales transactions
  • Use of land as collateral for credit
  • Characteristics make land an ideal collateral to
    reduce credit rationing
  • Reliable information improves scope for using
    this
  • But other conditions will need to be satisfied

10
Potential limitations I
  • Weak or absent state institutions for enforcement
    of rights
  • Inability to enforce rights against individuals
    or the state
  • States commitment to desist from expropriation
    not credible
  • Inability to prevent opportunistic behavior by
    individual parties
  • Potentially dangerous if existing institutions
    are displaced
  • Corruption bad governance undermine registry
    info
  • Asymmetric access to information facilitates land
    grabs
  • Neglect and de facto elimination of secondary
    rights
  • Fraudulent records, corruption in registry
    introduce ambiguity
  • Poor will be adversely affected suffer most
  • Relative land abundance
  • Neglect of the truly scarce factor makes
    registration irrelevant at best
  • Limited (or negative) impact on investment
  • Increased rather than reduced transaction cost
    through a parallel system
  • Registration of group rights can avoid this if
  • Membership management structure clearly defined
    and transparent
  • Options for transition (e.g. via majority vote)
    available

11
Potential limitations I
  • Weak or absent state institutions for enforcement
    of rights
  • Inability to enforce rights against individuals
    or the state
  • States commitment to desist from expropriation
    not credible
  • Inability to prevent opportunistic behavior by
    individual parties
  • Potentially dangerous if existing institutions
    are displaced
  • Corruption bad governance undermine registry
    info
  • Asymmetric access to information facilitates land
    grabs
  • Neglect and de facto elimination of secondary
    rights
  • Fraudulent records, corruption in registry
    introduce ambiguity
  • Poor will be adversely affected suffer most
  • Relative land abundance
  • Neglect of the truly scarce factor makes
    registration irrelevant at best
  • Limited (or negative) impact on investment
  • Increased rather than reduced transaction cost
    through a parallel system
  • Registration of group rights can avoid this if
  • Membership management structure clearly defined
    and transparent
  • Options for transition (e.g. via majority vote)
    available

12
Potential limitations I
  • Weak or absent state institutions for enforcement
    of rights
  • Inability to enforce rights against individuals
    or the state
  • States commitment to desist from expropriation
    not credible
  • Inability to prevent opportunistic behavior by
    individual parties
  • Potentially dangerous if existing institutions
    are displaced
  • Corruption bad governance undermine registry
    info
  • Asymmetric access to information facilitates land
    grabs
  • Neglect and de facto elimination of secondary
    rights
  • Fraudulent records, corruption in registry
    introduce ambiguity
  • Poor will be adversely affected suffer most
  • Relative land abundance
  • Neglect of the truly scarce factor makes
    registration irrelevant at best
  • Limited (or negative) impact on investment
  • Increased rather than reduced transaction cost
    through a parallel system
  • Registration of group rights can avoid this if
  • Membership management structure clearly defined
    and transparent
  • Options for transition (e.g. via majority vote)
    available

13
Potential limitations II
  • Market imperfections lack of liquidity
  • Credibility of liquidation threat lack of
    viable projects in poor neighborhoods
  • Risk rationing fear of loss of collateral
  • Access to information land speculation
  • Relevance cost-effectiveness of first
    registration
  • High cost due to institutional inefficiency or
    overdone survey standards
  • Nature of rights registered (e.g. tenants in
    Uganda)
  • Range of costs from US 1 to gt US 60 per
    parcel standardization needed
  • Reversion to informality due to follow-up
    registration cost
  • Deed vs. title registration systems State
    guarantee cost
  • Transfer taxes registry overheads
  • Cost gt 5 of land value in 53 of countries gt
    10 in 24
  • Led to semi-formal systems in some cases

14
Potential limitations II
  • Market imperfections lack of liquidity
  • Credibility of liquidation threat lack of
    viable projects in poor neighborhoods
  • Risk rationing fear of loss of collateral
  • Access to information land speculation
  • Relevance cost-effectiveness of first
    registration
  • High cost due to institutional inefficiency or
    overdone survey standards
  • Nature of rights registered (e.g. tenants in
    Uganda)
  • Range of costs from US 1 to gt US 60 per
    parcel standardization needed
  • Reversion to informality due to follow-up
    registration cost
  • Deed vs. title registration systems State
    guarantee cost
  • Transfer taxes registry overheads
  • Cost gt 5 of land value in 53 of countries gt
    10 in 24
  • Led to semi-formal systems in some cases

15
Potential limitations II
  • Market imperfections lack of liquidity
  • Credibility of liquidation threat lack of
    viable projects in poor neighborhoods
  • Risk rationing fear of loss of collateral
  • Access to information land speculation
  • Relevance cost-effectiveness of first
    registration
  • High cost due to institutional inefficiency or
    overdone survey standards
  • Nature of rights registered (e.g. tenants in
    Uganda)
  • Range of costs from US 1 to gt US 60 per
    parcel standardization needed
  • Reversion to informality due to follow-up
    registration cost
  • Deed vs. title registration systems State
    guarantee cost
  • Transfer taxes registry overheads
  • Cost gt 5 of land value in 53 of countries gt
    10 in 24
  • Led to semi-formal systems in some cases

16
Evidence on impacts I
  • Governance admin. efficiency
  • Legal change improved scope for enforcement in
    democratic settings in China
  • Impact on beneficiaries attitudes and beliefs in
    Buenos Aires
  • Perceived threat of uncompensated expropriation
    reduced in Ethiopia
  • Land-related investment
  • Doubling of likelihood of soil conservation in
    Uganda
  • House renovations standards in urban
    Peru/Argentina
  • Higher level of perennials off-farm
    participation in Vietnam
  • More investment with high marginal returns for
    full title in Nicaragua
  • Higher investment in Ethiopia shortly after
    certification
  • Enforcement effort gender equality
  • Labor market participation due to less need to
    guard house in Peru
  • Lower fertility due to female empowerment via
    titling
  • More spending on education in Buenos Aires

17
Evidence on impacts I
  • Governance admin. efficiency
  • Legal change improved scope for enforcement in
    democratic settings in China
  • Impact on beneficiaries attitudes and beliefs in
    Buenos Aires
  • Perceived threat of uncompensated expropriation
    reduced in Ethiopia
  • Land-related investment
  • Doubling of likelihood of soil conservation in
    Uganda
  • House renovations standards in urban
    Peru/Argentina
  • Higher level of perennials off-farm
    participation in Vietnam
  • More investment with high marginal returns for
    full title in Nicaragua
  • Higher investment in Ethiopia shortly after
    certification
  • Enforcement effort gender equality
  • Labor market participation due to less need to
    guard house in Peru
  • Lower fertility due to female empowerment via
    titling
  • More spending on education in Buenos Aires

18
Evidence on impacts I
  • Governance admin. efficiency
  • Legal change improved scope for enforcement in
    democratic settings in China
  • Impact on beneficiaries attitudes and beliefs in
    Buenos Aires
  • Perceived threat of uncompensated expropriation
    reduced in Ethiopia
  • Land-related investment
  • Doubling of likelihood of soil conservation in
    Uganda
  • House renovations standards in urban
    Peru/Argentina
  • Higher level of perennials off-farm
    participation in Vietnam
  • More investment with high marginal returns for
    full title in Nicaragua
  • Higher investment in Ethiopia shortly after
    certification
  • Enforcement effort gender equality
  • Labor market participation due to less need to
    guard house in Peru
  • Lower fertility due to female empowerment via
    titling
  • More spending on education in Buenos Aires

19
Evidence on impacts II
  • Land values
  • Capture present value of benefit stream from land
  • 23 self-assessed in Ecuador 30 in Nicaragua,
    58 in Philippines 73 in Indonesia but only 6
    in Madagascar
  • Land market operation
  • Tendency to rent out in Guatemala (63 w. full
    security)
  • Higher propensity to rent out to non-relatives in
    Vietnam
  • Land market participation by females in Ethiopia
  • Use of land as collateral for credit
  • Significant effects in Paraguay only for larger
    producers
  • Still considerable rationing in Peru
    (foreclosure)
  • Signaling in Thailand
  • No effect in Buenos Aires
  • Credit-related benefits in developing countries
    may be overstated

20
Evidence on impacts II
  • Land values
  • Capture present value of benefit stream from land
  • 23 self-assessed in Ecuador 30 in Nicaragua,
    58 in Philippines 73 in Indonesia but only 6
    in Madagascar
  • Land market operation
  • Tendency to rent out in Guatemala (63 w. full
    security)
  • Higher propensity to rent out to non-relatives in
    Vietnam
  • Land market participation by females in Ethiopia
  • Use of land as collateral for credit
  • Significant effects in Paraguay only for larger
    producers
  • Still considerable rationing in Peru
    (foreclosure)
  • Signaling in Thailand
  • No effect in Buenos Aires
  • Credit-related benefits in developing countries
    may be overstated

21
Evidence on impacts II
  • Land values
  • Capture present value of benefit stream from land
  • 23 self-assessed in Ecuador 30 in Nicaragua,
    58 in Philippines 73 in Indonesia but only 6
    in Madagascar
  • Land market operation
  • Tendency to rent out in Guatemala (63 w. full
    security)
  • Higher propensity to rent out to non-relatives in
    Vietnam
  • Land market participation by females in Ethiopia
  • Use of land as collateral for credit
  • Significant effects in Paraguay only for larger
    producers
  • Still considerable rationing in Peru
    (foreclosure)
  • Signaling in Thailand
  • No effect in Buenos Aires
  • Credit-related benefits in developing countries
    may be overstated

22
Conclusion
  • Main findings
  • Strong tenure security investment effects under
    appropriate circumstances
  • Some effect on land markets, especially rental
  • Credit impact in developing countries more
    limited than often believed
  • Gaps in the literature
  • Strong emphasis on rural, individual (rather than
    group) rights
  • Little study of interactions (upgrading, legal
    knowledge, biz training, LUP)
  • Costs rarely compared to benefits
  • Limited emphasis on governance, land in post
    conflict, state land management
  • Scope for using ongoing interventions to assess
  • (Credit) effects in urban areas
  • Options for financing cost recovery by local
    governments (bonds)
  • Productivity/welfare/diversification effect of
    market activation
  • Impact dynamics of group vs. individual rights
  • Extreme positions on either side not warranted

23
Conclusion
  • Main findings
  • Strong tenure security investment effects under
    appropriate circumstances
  • Some effect on land markets, especially rental
  • Credit impact in developing countries more
    limited than often believed
  • Gaps in the literature
  • Strong emphasis on rural, individual (rather than
    group) rights
  • Little study of interactions (upgrading, legal
    knowledge, biz training, LUP)
  • Costs rarely compared to benefits
  • Limited emphasis on governance, land in post
    conflict, state land management
  • Scope for using ongoing interventions to assess
  • (Credit) effects in urban areas
  • Options for financing cost recovery by local
    governments (bonds)
  • Productivity/welfare/diversification effect of
    market activation
  • Impact dynamics of group vs. individual rights
  • Extreme positions on either side not warranted

24
Conclusion
  • Main findings
  • Strong tenure security investment effects under
    appropriate circumstances
  • Some effect on land markets, especially rental
  • Credit impact in developing countries more
    limited than often believed
  • Gaps in the literature
  • Strong emphasis on rural, individual (rather than
    group) rights
  • Little study of interactions (upgrading, legal
    knowledge, biz training, LUP)
  • Costs rarely compared to benefits
  • Limited emphasis on governance, land in post
    conflict, state land management
  • Scope for using ongoing interventions to assess
  • (Credit) effects in urban areas
  • Options for financing cost recovery by local
    governments (bonds)
  • Productivity/welfare/diversification effect of
    market activation
  • Impact dynamics of group vs. individual rights
  • Extreme positions on either side not warranted
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