新浦京8883n平台下载
WISE
Chow Institute
User Center
Old Version
Chinese
CHINESE
EN
About
About Us
Contact US
People
Faculty Directory
Staff Dirctiory
Program
The Undergraduate Program
The Graduate Program
International Graduate Program
The Part-time Graduate Course Program
Study Aboad Program
Course Catalogue
Research
Publications
Working Papers
News & Events
News
Announcements
Academic Calendar
Seminars
Workshop & Conference
EN
CHINESE
EN
WISE
Chow Institute
User Center
About
About Us
Contact US
People
Faculty Directory
Staff Dirctiory
Program
The Undergraduate Program
The Graduate Program
International Graduate Program
The Part-time Graduate Course Program
Study Aboad Program
Course Catalogue
Research
Publications
Working Papers
News & Events
News
Announcements
Academic Calendar
Seminars
Workshop & Conference
Research
Research
Publications
Working Papers
Research
Publications
Working Papers
Publications
Location:
Home
->
Research
->
Publications
-> Content
Land titling, human capital misallocation, and agricultural productivity in China
id: 2610
Date: 20231010
Times:
Magazines
Author
Shouying Liu, Sen Ma, Lijuan Yin, Jiong Zhu
Content
Previous studies quantifying the relationship between land titles and agricultural productivity have not explored the role of human capital reallocation. This paper enhances existing literature by examining the effects of land titling on the reallocation of labor with heterogenous human capital endowments between agricultural and non-agricultural sectors. In reference to China's county-by-county rollout of the land titling program, this paper applies a difference-in-differences (DID) framework and finds that farmers with higher human capital are more likely to migrate out of villages following the completion of the titling program, which in turn causes a “brain drain” from the agricultural sector. There is a subsequent decrease in agricultural productivity and output. This productivity loss has not been thoroughly discussed in previous studies and nor considered in the policy making process. Our results indicate that future land reforms should consider the impact of land titling programs on the reallocation of human capital across sectors.
JEL-Codes
Q15; O12; O13
Keywords
Land titles; Human capital Misallocation; Productivity; China
TOP