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Library Land Inequality or Productivity: What Mattered in Southern Vietnam after 1975?

Land Inequality or Productivity: What Mattered in Southern Vietnam after 1975?

Land Inequality or Productivity: What Mattered in Southern Vietnam after 1975?

Resource information

Date of publication
December 2016
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
MLRF:2670
Pages
300-319

Land redistribution and agricultural collective production were the key components of agrarian reforms implemented by the Vietnamese Communist Party in the south of the country after 1975. Land inequality was serious in the region under the Republic of Vietnam's regime. The new government struggled with agricultural collectivisation contributing to the decline in rice productivity. This study explains the persistence of a market-based agricultural production in the southern economy under the new political regime. Beside the economic reasons and arguments of local peasants' everyday politics cited in the literature, we argue that the de facto political power of the middle-class landowners was an important factor impeding the performance of agricultural cooperatives. It also implies that agricultural productivity was more vital than land inequality during the study period. We apply the model of Acemoglu and Robinson explaining how de facto political power helps elites to maintain their economic institutions in spite of a political change.

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Authors and Publishers

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

Minh_Tam_T._Bui, _
Preechametta, Arayah

Geographical focus