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Consequences of Economic
Policies Concerning Land Tenure
Economic Consequences
18. Imbalances in the division of
land ownership and the policies giving rise to and sustaining them are the
source of serious obstacles to economic development.
Such imbalances and policies can
have economic consequences which affect the majority of the population. At
least five of these can be listed:
a) distortions
in the land market: political interventions in the market often directly or
indirectly favour large landholdings through indirect
subsidies, advantageous taxation and credit facilities. Such advantages lead to
further investment in land, and hence a rise in its price. As a result, small
farmers see their purchasing power for land eroded, and hence their possibility
of improving the efficiency and equity of the land market through normal trading
operations;
b) a
reduction in the country's overall agricultural production: in countries
with a less developed agricultural economy, there is usually an inverse
relation between farm-size and productivity. The production per land-unit of
small landowners is higher than that of large landowners. The production of the
large landowners, who own the greater part of the land, is less, with the
consequent reduction of the overall agricultural production of the country;
c) the pegging of farm wages
at low levels: this pegging is a result of the simultaneous rise in supply
and fall in demand for farm labour and of the absence
of conditions that would allow workers to negotiate their terms of employment
on a collective or individual basis;
d) the
lower profitability of small farms: when the profitability of small farms
is reduced, this makes the investments necessary for their development
difficult, thus creating a vicious circle;
e) the draining of savings
accumulated in the agricultural sector, which are not used productively for
investment in infrastructures and technology useful to agriculture, but are
taken out and used for consumption or in other sectors of the economy.
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