1 / 38

The Amenity Value of Agricultural Landscape and Rural-Urban Land Allocation

cordelia
Télécharger la présentation

The Amenity Value of Agricultural Landscape and Rural-Urban Land Allocation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


    1. The Amenity Value of Agricultural Landscape and Rural-Urban Land Allocation Aliza Fleischer and Yacov Tsur Department of Agricultural Economics and Management The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

    10. Rationale: Population and income growth ? Increases housing demand (urban land) Increases demand for environmental amenities (incl rural landscape) Ag landscape is public good ?? market failure and need for regulation

    11. Objectives: Analyze the role of agricultural landscape in rural-urban land allocation, allowing landscape amenity value to vary across crops Evaluate welfare loss due to market failure Study effects of population and income growth Draw policy implications

    12. Model: Urban sector: N households, derive utility from housing land (?H =LH/N), other private goods z, and crop-specific agricultural landscape (L=(L0,L1,L2,,LJ): u(z,?H,L) = up(z,?H) + ue(L) Max u over {z, ?H} subject to budget constraint gives demands z(rH,y) and ?H(rH,y). Inverting ?H(rH,y) ? inverse demand for urban land DH(?H,y):

    14. Urban sector WTP for Ag landscape Indirect utility: v(y , L) = up(z(rH,y),?H(rH,y)) + ue(L) Willingness to pay (WTP) to preserve landscape pattern L=(L0,L1,L2,,LJ), denoted wtp(y,L) is defined by v(y + wtp(y,L) , 0) = v(y , L)

    15. Conditional WTP: Conditional WTP to preserve land type j (Lj) given all other crops land allocation (L-j):

    16. Ag sector: Farmland demand NA identical farmers growing K crops Fk(xk,?k) crop k production function, MAX_{xk} xk(?k), k = 1,2,,K (prices suppressed as arguments) ?k(?k) = pkF(xk(?k),?k) - pxxk(?k), k = 1,2,,K At land rental rate r, farms demand for cropland k: ?k?(Lk/NA)=r, k = 1,2,,K Demand for Ag land: horizontal summation:

    18. Market Allocation Market equilibrium: The region size is given, thus: Market allocation:

    20. Social allocation Max: FOC: Social land allocation:

    23. Application to the South Sharon region in Israel Non-metropolitan region 10,190 ha, of which 200 ha are parks Number of households: about 70,000

    24. Agricultural Data and Land Use Distribution of the Study Region

    25. CRS technology: farmers' derived demand for land

    26. Urban land demand

    27. Urban Land demand estimation

    28. WTP data, specification & Estimation Data collected via double-bounded-dichotomous-choice elicitation method Focus groups, pre-test and face-to-face questionnaire among 350 respondents Respondent received pictures of crops landscape; confronted with scenario under which the agricultural landscape would be developed Preserving ag landscape requires a tax (at the bid level)

    29. Transforming Crops to Crop-groups based on data

    30. WTP specification (permits interaction)

    31. Descriptive stat of WTP data

    32. Estimation results (MLE)

    33. Market Allocation

    34. Social Allocation

    35. Population effect (doubling the population)

    36. Summary of empirical findings

    37. Main empirical findings: Accounting for Ag landscape reduces urban land allocation by 10 % and increases farmland allocation by about 13 % Aggregate WTPs for Ag landscape are currently about 16 % of total return to farming and will increase to 33 % with a doubling of the population Population growth calls for an increase in Ag land (contrary to market allocation)

    38. Policy:

More Related