Aller au contenu principal

page search

Bibliothèque Land lease markets and agricultural efficiency: theory and evidence from Ethiopia

Land lease markets and agricultural efficiency: theory and evidence from Ethiopia

Land lease markets and agricultural efficiency: theory and evidence from Ethiopia

Resource information

Date of publication
Décembre 1999
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
eldis:A13327

This paper develops a theoretical model of land leasing that includes transaction costs, risk pooling motives and non-tradable productive inputs. It investigates the empirical implications of land contracts using data collected from four villages in Ethiopia.The paper shows that sharecropping is the dominant contract if transaction costs are negligible, but that a rental contract may arise if transaction costs decrease with increasing the tenant’s share of output. When this is the case, the theory predicts that area operated by tenants will be an increasing function of their land endowment and that fixed rental contracts will be more likely in situations where transaction costs are higher. The paper finds empirical support for these predictions in the villages studied. It also finds that input of labour per hectare is about 25% lower on sharecropped than on other land tenure types, but that the differences in total value of inputs, outputs and profits per hectare are statistically insignificant and relatively small in magnitude.The paper demonstrates that these results support the Marshallian argument that sharecropping reduces labour effort, but also support the “New School” perspective since the magnitude of the inefficiency is relatively small. A bigger source of inefficiency (and inequity) in the study villages appears to be the limited lease market for oxen services, together with credit constraints that limit the ability of land and oxen poor households to purchase oxen.

Share on RLBI navigator
NO

Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

J. Pender
M. Fafchamps

Data Provider
Geographical focus